This is most odd. Nina Planck claimed to have been brought up along with Vermont farmers' markets and later exported the whole idea to the UK and encouraged the growth of the London Farmers' Markets Association which now provides me with multiple sources of high-quality raw meats including wild game meats. Without her, my life would be miserable as I'd have had to spend extra hours hunting up organic food-sources re expensive direct delivery from farms. I view her as a saint. Perhaps she knew of other farmers' markets in the Northeats which were of a higher standard re variety.
That is strange indeed. I found a Website for a Nina Planck (
http://ninaplanck.com/index.php?page=about) and she claims to have been born in Buffalo, NY, raised in Virginia, and to currently live in Greenwich Village, NYC. No mention of Vermont or New England. Is this the same Nina Planck?
She says that she was "Tempted by England’s finest producers of roast beef and raw milk cheddar, Nina wondered about the advice most Americans get about diet. After a few dutiful— and unhealthy—years in the vegan, vegetarian, and non-fat wilderness, she came home to real food, and she explains why in Real Food." So instead of her bringing quality pasture-fed meats to London, it appears London's quality meats convinced her that meat was OK to eat.
Here again, Planck claims it was England (London) that convinced her to try "real food" and save her health:
http://www.feelgoodeats.com/whole-foods-information/feelgood-bookshelf-real-food-by-nina-planck.html. So even though she brought "farmer's markets" to London, London convinced her that eating meats was OK if they were higher quality than what was available back in the states. Unfortunately, most of the healthy eating crowd in the Northeastern US still hold to the views she had when she grew up in Buffalo, NY and Virginia--that vegetarianism is best, and that organic whole-grain cookies sold at farmer's markets are "healthier" than the grassfed meats sold in a few health food stores or directly by the farmers or over the Internet. I care less about whether a food is organic than that it is meat or animal fat and was raised on biologically appropriate foods.
Here are some of the links where her site led me for foods like what she claims she buys:
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www.LocalHarvest.org, which I was familiar with, lists the Burlington, VT Farmer's Market as one of the top rated (I've been to that market and I've provided photos above that reveal it's nowhere near as good as those in the Phillippines or other Old World-style markets). Here is one of the reviews: "Amazing local food, including a very good choice of prepared foods." PREPARED foods? What the hell? If I wanted prepared foods I could go to the supermarket.
One of the few meat vendors at the Burlington Farmer's Market, Jericho Settlers Farm, boasts of how they are "grilling breakfast sandwiches (pork sausage, egg, VT cheddar cheese on a muffin) and 100% grassfed hamburgers." Whoopee! So I can go to the so-called "Farmer's Market" and buy a grilled grassfed hamburger or go to my local health food market and get raw grassfed ground beef for less money, and it costs less than the small amounts of raw ground beef sold at the Farmer's market, and I can get most of my other shopping needs done at the health food market. Which do you think I'm going to do?
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http://www.foodroutes.org/story.jsp?id=1493 This site pushes veggies and instead of directing where to get pasture-fed meats, and criticizes meat eating, as here: "When the pig is slaughtered, at about 5 months of age, he'll become sausage or bacon that will sell cheap, feeding an American addiction to meat that has contributed to an obesity epidemic currently afflicting more than two-thirds of the population.
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www.eatwild.com, which I was also familiar with, lists Back Beyond Farm, which states: "Our pigs are not fed ... meat or meat byproducts." WTH? Why not? In addition to plants, the diet of wild pigs includes "mice, birds eggs, snakes, lizards, worms, beetles and centipedes and carrion" (
http://www.britishwildboar.org.uk/profile.html).
Verdict: the local health food markets here are far superior to any farmer's market I've seen in this country. The farmer's markets I've seen tend to sell lots of trinkets and tourist crap, baked goods, honey and/or maple sugar products, kettle popcorn and maybe some burgers, along with a smattering of fruits and vegetables and one or two meat offerings--and many sell no meats at all. They seem more designed for tourists than for locals. I have no idea why anyone in the US would claim claim that farmer's markets are a great source of healthy foods--especially when it comes to grass-fed beef and suet and meats from older types of livestock like bison and deer. I've yet to see one example of this. However, I think our standards in this forum are far higher than those of most people, who have no idea what real food is.
I hope for your sake, Tyler, that London's farmer's markets are more like the markets in the Philippines than in Vermont.