Community Corner
Bountiful Veggies: D & J Farm Joins Ossining Winter Farmers Market!
Ossining Winter Farmers Market overflows with beautiful fresh produce from D & J Farm, Mead Orchards, and Migliorelli Farm.
Down to Earth Markets is so pleased to bring D & J Farm to the Ossining Winter Farmers Market for the rest of the winter season! Enjoy their bountiful greens, root vegetables, and creative prepared foods made on the farm.
The winter market also features fresh fish, pasture-raised meat, chicken, and eggs, pickles, breads and baked goods, prepared foods to go, and much more.
AND we are indoors through the month of March! Enjoy all your favorite foods at First Presbyterian Church, 34 S. Highland Avenue (a.k.a. Route 9). The church (pictured above) is located right across from Ossining High School and the entrance is on Main Street. The market is open on Saturdays, from 9 am to 1 pm.
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Allow us to introduce you to D & J Farm...
Some of the best produce in the Northeast is the result of not one -- but two -- jewelry heists. In the early 1980s, Davie Yen of D & J Organic Farm, was a purveyor of fine jewels, selling in high-end markets around the United States. He had come to the U.S. from Taiwan, where he studied as a “generalist” and started on the path towards pure silver and gold. His goods came with a sparkling price tag, too, and after the second time his inventory was robbed by thieves, he decided to return to college to study...hydroponics. “I wanted to get a new skill,” Yen explains, “and at the time, hydroponics were totally new.”
Find out what's happening in Ossining-Croton-On-Hudsonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Today Yen, and his wife, Julie, grow all year around on their 3-acre farm that includes 10 greenhouses, each 24 feet by 100 feet. They also farm the land surrounding their greenhouses, and altogether, their harvest includes specialty salad greens to fava beans, sugar and snow peas, bok choy, squash, and much more.
Over the years, Yen found that the traditional hydroponic system did not suit him. “It used too many chemicals,” he says. He’s committed to organic methods of growing because “it’s good for human beings and good for the Earth. We don’t want to destroy the Earth.”
He continues to learn new methods of growing, and recently concluded a five-year study on 700 acres of indoor farming on an island near Shanghai, China. “I’ve finally made the system my way, using all fresh water and no chemicals,” he shares.
Their farmers market customers deeply appreciate their commitment. In Julie’s words, “We come to the farmers market whether it’s hot or cold out, and people often say to us, ‘I‘m so glad you’ve come.’ This makes us even more encouraged to continue. It keeps us trying to do our best.”
