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Radical Seasonality

GO BEYOND FOUR SEASONS

Each fruit and vegetable has its own season, with subtle shifts that happen every day. Follow their microseasons to unlock flavor at every stage.

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In season today

  • Baby Artichokes

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    • Grower

      Judy & Jeff

    • Location

      Santa Maria, California

    • Seasonality

      May - August

  • Baby Rainbow Beets

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    • Grower

      David

    • Location

      Thermal, California

    • Seasonality

      January - March

  • Collard Rabe

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    • Grower

      Diane & Samer

    • Location

      Rock Tavern, New York

    • Seasonality

      April - May

  • English Peas

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    • Grower

      Chris

    • Location

      Lompoc, California

    • Seasonality

      March - May

  • Fava Beans

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    • Grower

      Lily & Max

    • Location

      California

    • Seasonality

      March - July

  • Fava Greens

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    • Grower

      Christina

    • Location

      Chester, New York

    • Seasonality

      March - June

  • Fiddlehead Ferns

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    • Forager

      Trent

    • Location

      Northern California

    • Seasonality

      March - May

  • Goosetongue

    sea plantain laid out on a grey background
    • Grower

      Foraged

    • Location

      Washington

    • Seasonality

      May - June

  • Green Almonds

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    • Grower

      Various

    • Location

      California

    • Seasonality

      April - May

  • Green Asparagus (Jumbo & Colossal)

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    • Grower

      Roscoe

    • Location

      Stockton, California

    • Seasonality

      March - May

  • Green Asparagus (Local)

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    • Grower

      Angela

    • Location

      Wyoming, Delaware

    • Seasonality

      April - June

  • Green Garlic

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    • Grower

      Simon

    • Location

      Chester, New York

    • Seasonality

      May - June

  • Kinome Leaf

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    • Grower

      Ken

    • Location

      Delmar, Delaware

    • Seasonality

      May - November

  • Local Salad Mix

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    • Grower

      Simon

    • Location

      Chester, New York

    • Seasonality

      Year Round

  • Outdoor Rhubarb

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    • Grower

      Ray

    • Location

      Washington

    • Seasonality

      April - June

  • Purple Asparagus

    purple asparagus stalks
    • Grower

      Jim & Deborah

    • Location

      Esparto, CA

    • Seasonality

      April - June

  • Radicchio Masera

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    • Grower

      Simone

    • Location

      Padua, Veneto

    • Seasonality

      January - February

  • Ramps

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    • Forager

      Sam

    • Location

      Ohio

    • Seasonality

      March - May

  • Red Spring Onions

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    • Grower

      Javier

    • Location

      Carlsbad, California

    • Seasonality

      February - June

  • Spruce Tips

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    • Location

      Wild, Pacific Northwest

    • Seasonality

      May - June

  • Sugar Snap Peas

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    • Grower

      Chris

    • Location

      Lompoc, California

    • Seasonality

      March - May

  • White Spring Onions

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    • Grower

      Javier

    • Location

      Carslbad, California

    • Seasonality

      February - June

  • Wild Morels

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    • Grower

      Foraged

    • Location

      Wild, California

    • Seasonality

      March - April

Featured This Week

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EARLY

Komatsuna
Grown by Ken in Delmar, Delaware

Ken’s Komatsuna is in. Also known as Japanese mustard spinach, these thick, tender leaves have a mild flavor with a slight peppery kick. While the greens can be found year-round, we hold off until now, when the flavor is at its best.

Ken reports that this Komatsuna crop is growing beautifully, thanks to gentle spring warmth and sunshine. Temperatures in the fields are starting to warm up, but evenings remain cool, which keeps plants growing slowly and allows them to develop higher sugars that balance out the peppery kick.

Ken grows a wide variety of Japanese vegetables and is one of only a few doing it on the East Coast. Across 35 acres, he grows 30 varieties of Japanese vegetables, carefully selecting seeds and trialing new varieties each year.

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PEAK

English Peas
Grown by Domenico in Campania, Italy

​A combination of heavy rains, winds, and nematode pressure has stunted the growth of California’s English Peas this season. While we await the local season, we’ve turned to Domenico in Campania, Italy. This is a grower we’ve worked with for years because of his exceptional care for produce. His peas are consistently well-sized, tender, and intensely sweet.

Right now, these English Peas are the sweetest we’ve tasted yet, as Domenico has moved the plants to open fields, allowing sunshine to concentrate the sugars in the pods.

​Back in 2011, we tracked down Domenico via a truly incredible White Peach. What we found was a dedicated Campanian grower, whose orchards and fields lie between Naples and Caserta. He grows typical regional varieties in the traditional way: open field, minimum intervention, and with outstanding attention to detail. His fresh Peas are the Verdone variety, grown from saved seeds passed down through three generations of his family.

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LATE

Hawaiian White Ginger
Grown by Ben and Collette in Kilauea, Kauai

Make the most of Ben and Colette’s Hawaiian White Ginger before we transition to their Yellow Ginger in the coming weeks. Their White Ginger is sweeter, mellower, and more delicate than other gingers.

Committed to the health of people and the land, Collette and Ben switched from growing fruits and vegetables to growing roots like turmeric and ginger, taking advantage of ideal soil and climate conditions. They grow an acre of each crop each year, using cover crops and sea minerals to enhance their fertile soils, and allowing the soil to rest for 3 years between crop cycles.

​Colette and Ben’s mission is to provide people with good food that promotes a healthy life. They are committed to paying their workers fair wages and offering housing and insurance to their full-time employees. Collette says the biggest challenge of farming on Kauai is providing adequate, affordable housing for workers — while this takes a chunk out of their business’s bottom line, they do it because they feel it’s right. The relationships they build with those who work on their farm lead people to return year after year, and the skills they develop are reflected in the quality of their product.

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Go Deeper

Voir tout

We exist to fix the food system.

People are more cut off from the origins of their food than ever. This makes flavor, nutrition and farming practices that protect the planet, almost impossible to find.

By working directly with growers, we create a more sustainable way forward for farming. By giving everyone the tools to understand the power of our food choices, we empower everybody to become drivers of change.

Now is the time for action. Join the food system revolution.

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Go beyond four seasons

Each fruit and vegetable has its own season, with subtle shifts which happen every day. Follow their microseasons to unlock flavor at every stage.

WHAT’S IN SEASON?

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Know where your food comes from

We know the name of the person behind everything we source. Recognize their growing artistry to find out exactly where your food comes from (and why that matters).

MEET THE GROWERS

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Make your diet diverse

Our growers work with varieties chosen for quality and nutrition, not yield. By selecting their crops you keep heritage seeds in play, add to ecosystem biodiversity and preserve unique flavors.

GO #OFFTHEPASS

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