It’s that special time of year in the Northeast, when the corn, tomatoes, beets, Swiss chard, blueberries, raspberries, and even peaches are resplendent in their ripeness. For a couple months now, we’ll have an assortment of locally produced delicacies.

But this year, I’ve noticed some new products showing up at farmers markets in Vermont and New Hampshire. Lots more sellers of chicken, for example. And more fresh chicken, in addition to the flash-frozen variety.

Also, more sellers of eggs. And not just chicken eggs, but duck eggs as well. I sampled some duck eggs, and they sure are voluptuous (see my attached photo showing a chicken and duck egg frying side by side, though granted, the chicken egg isn’t as orange as some are). The chicken eggs still strike me as tastier, though it could be I’m just more used to them.

And last but not least, I’m seeing more sellers of raw milk at farmers markets, at least in New Hampshire, where it is legal to sell raw milk at such outlets. One farmer, in his first year selling at a farmers market, told me he milks two cows, and works a full-time job as a kitchen aid at a local college; the other milks five cows and is in his second year selling at the farmers market. I like to see entrepreneurs of all types, but it’s especially encouraging to see raw milk entrepreneurs. You gotta be gutsy to push ahead in the current political environment.

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Further on the business considerations, Tim Wightman makes an important point in the numbers he presents on farmer costs following my previous post–“Bulk buying can not be utilized, and you pay through the nose for everything.” This is a truism for pretty much any artisinal food product, or any artisinal product of any type.

Because artisinal producers are committed to producing top-quality products, they use top quality ingredients, and avoid cutting corners like the big-volume producers.

In the end, consumers receive a product impossible to purchase via the factory system– milk from a particular cow or group of cows that have been fed real food and treat respectfully, or even lovingly. The result nearly inevitably has to be a more nutritious product. As Alice Riccabona captured so well in her comment about the doctors following my previous post, some people care a lot about such differences, and others don’t.

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I gave a presentation Sunday about my favorite subject at the SolarFest gathering in Tinmouth, Vermont.

A highly energetic crowd of more than 50 people showed up at 9 a.m. on Sunday, which I thought was pretty impressive (since I’d be hard pressed to be at many presentations at such an hour on Sunday). Lots of questions and comments about such things as the safety of pasteurized milk, A1/A2 milk, the future of food sterilization efforts.

When I talked about the harassment of New York raw dairy farmers like Chuck Phippen, who’s been shut down nine times for listeria contamination (even though no illnesses), a man interjected that he was a customer of Phippen’s dairy who happened to be at the farm one of those times when two inspectors from the N.Y. Department of Agriculture and Markets showed up with their listeria findings. “They warned me that I might not want to take the milk I had bought. I told them I wanted the milk and would take my chances.”  ?

In that vein (sensitivity to the regulators) my Grist article about the quickening pace of farm and food club raids remains the site’s most viewed post, five days after it went up.

In new media coverage, there’s this from NPR–educational, I suppose, for the total newbie, but disappointing journalistically. Interestingly, though, the anti-raw-milk “expert” quoted, David Acheson, was someone I quoted extensively in a post last month, seemingly offering an olive branch. The raw milk consumer, Liz Reitzig of Food Network fame, does a great job once again of explaining her reasons  for consuming raw milk and feeding it to her family.