Tuesdays & Saturdays

May thru October | 8AM - 1PM

August Walking Tour

This video gives you a tour of the Woodstock Farmers Market and all of the wonderful products we have available for purchase each week.

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Produce

The Market is full of the freshest fruits and vegetables, grown locally by the farmers you purchase directly from.

Meats

We have several farmers offering the best natural meats including beef, chicken, turkey, pork, and even goat. We also have fresh eggs.

Soaps & Body Care Products

There are several vendors offering natural soaps, spa and body care products.

Crafts & Services

We have hand-crafted items including fiber products, jewelry, musical instruments and woodworking. Knife sharpening, too.

Baked Goods

Fresh baked breads, cookies, cakes, pies and pastries with many seasonal flavors are always around every corner.

Plants & Flowers

Several vendors offer fresh cut flowers, perennials, annuals, vegetable plants, herbs, and trees.

More Products

We even have wine, cheese, kettle-corn, pierogi, chocolates, pickles, granola, tie-dye clothing, honey, jams, natural cleaning products & more.

The Market Is Open

The Market is now open for the 2012 outdoor season on Tuesday & Saturdays from 8am-1pm at the Historic Woodstock Square.

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Fun Facts & Tips

Fact: The movie Groundhog Day starring Bill Murray was filmed at the Woodstock Square.

Tip: Wear comfortable Shoes!

Market Vendors

We have vendors surrounding the Historic Woodstock Square on all four sides as well as throughout the park in the center of the Square. We are a Producers Only Market, meaning everything you purchase is grown or produced directly by the vendor you are purchasing from. For more information about our vendors, click the picture.

#1 Market in Illinois

We are so proud to be able to say we were voted the #1 farmers market in the state of Illinois in 2011 in the American Farmland Trust annual contest. We also placed 6th in America for medium-sized markets. We are so grateful to all of our Market visitors who supported us in the contest. For more information about the contest, click the picture.

Live Music

Every week we feature musical performances from local artists. The music styles range from country to pop to jazz. Many are solo performances but we also have several full bands. We've had performers from as far away as Germany play for us at the Square. For more information about our musical performers, click the picture.

 

What's New

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We provide regular updates on the activities at the Market including pictures and video on several social media sites. Please follow us on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Pinterest, and LinkedIn.

Click Here for the Current Newsletter

CurrentNews

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The Pie Eating Contest winner was Barbara Wheeler! 2nd Place winner was Thomas Coates. Congratulations to you both and a big thank you to all contestants for participating.

 

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Fun Facts About the Food We Eat

 
  • Lettuce is a member of the sunflower family
  • In the US, lettuce is the second most popular fresh vegetable.
  • Apples are a member of the rose family.
  • The name asparagus comes from the Greek language and means “sprout” or “shoot”
  • Asparagus is a member of the Lily family and is related to onions, leeks, and garlic.
  • Pumpkins were once recommended for removing freckles and curing snake bites!
  • Americans are eating 900% more broccoli than we did 20 years ago.
  • A hive of bees flies over 55,000 miles to bring you one pound of honey. A honey bee can fly 15 miles per hour.
  • Honey bees must visit 2 million flowers to make one pound of honey.
  • Each honey bee makes 1/12th teaspoon of honey in its lifetime.
  • It takes a combine 9 seconds to harvest enough wheat to make 70 loaves of bread
  • One bushel of corn will sweeten more than 400 cans of pop
  • There are about 600 kernels on each ear of corn.
  • Farmers grow corn on every continent except Antarctica.
  • Each American consumes, on average, 53 pounds of bread per year.
  • A family of four could live for 10 years off the bread produced by one acre of wheat.
  • Soy crayons have been created to replace toxic petroleum-wax crayons and are easier to use, brighter in color, and less expensive to product.
  • One acre of soybeans can produce 82,368 crayons.

SHOPPING TIPS

IT PAYS TO GET UP EARLY – Get to the Market when it opens to find the best selection and the freshest produce.
BRING YOUR OWN BAG – Bring your own canvas shopping bag or basket from home.
TRY SOMETHING NEW – Buy something you haven’t tried before. The Farmers’ Market is the perfect place to learn about new foods. Vendors will be happy to advise you on how to select and prepare it.
BRING A COOLER – Put a cooler in your car to keep food items cool when you buy at the market. They’ll stay fresh while you visit the unique shops and restaurants on the Woodstock Square.
ASK QUESTIONS – Make sure to ask questions of the vendors when you see unfamiliar produce. Vendors and farmers love to share their knowledge and can even give you recipes and cooking tips.
DRESS COMFORTABLY – Wear walking shoes and dress appropriately for the weather.


MARKET GLOSSARY

Organic: Organic farming relies on developing biological diversity in the field to disrupt habitat for pest organisms, and to maintain and replenish the soil. Organic farmers are not allowed to use synthetic pesticides or fertilizers.

Certified Organic: The US Department of Agriculture (USDA) is responsible for managing the National Organic Program, which was implemented in October 2002. Organic farming avoids the use of most artificial inputs, like synthetic pesticides and fertilizers and bans the use of animal by-products, antibiotics and sewage sludge among other practices. Any food product (except fish) using the word organic must be certified as such by an official USDA accredited certifier.

Hormone-Free: There is no government or official definition for this term except on meat and poultry products as defined by the US Department of Agriculture. Use of the term “hormone free” is considered “unapprovable” by USDA on any meat products. Meat and poultry products carrying the “no hormones administered” claim imply that the animal must not have received any added hormones during the course of its lifetime.

Free-range: Free range (or free roaming) implies that a meat or poultry product comes from an animal that was raised in the open air or was free to roam. Its use on beef is unregulated, and there is no standard definition of this term. The term “free range” is only regulated by the USDA for use on meat poultry products. USDA requires that birds have been given access to the outdoors but for an undetermined period each day. “Free range” claims on eggs are not regulated. To learn more about what is meant by this term, customers should ask the farmer about their specific practices. Free range (or free roaming) is a general claim that implies that a meat or poultry product, including eggs, comes from an animal that was raised in the open air or was free to roam.

Heirloom: Heirloom varieties, also called farmers’ varieties, traditional varieties or landraces, have been selected and developed by farmers through years of cultivation and seed saving for the next season. Farmers hand them down through generations. These varieties are often specifically suited to a certain climate and soil type, and have been selected for flavor, pest resistance, productivity, and even beauty. Heirlooms are typically very genetically diverse and variable.

Transitional: Farmers need to practice organic methods for three years on a given piece of land before the products grown there can be certified organic. “Transitional” means that the farmland is in the midst of that transition period towards organic certification.

 

 

 

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