Farmer's Market Juneau AK

Supporting farmer’s markets has many advantages for both local consumers and farmers. You save money on fresh organic produce by cutting out the middleman and reduce vehicle pollution. Farmer’s markets offer a wide variety of local produce including pesticide free fruits, vegetables, honey, meat, poultry and fish. Customers want to know where their food is grown and farmer’s markets have superior quality and freshness, unusual varieties, and give you a chance to support local agriculture. Please scroll down to get access to the farmer’s markets in Juneau, AK listed below.

Juneau Farmers Market
907- 523-2339
Juneau Arts and Culture Center
Juneau, AK
Rainbow Foods
(907) 586-6476?
224 4th Street
Juneau, AK
Kasilof Flea and Farmers Market
(907) 260-3152 Or (907) 252-1120
Corner Of Mile 111 1/2 Sterling Highway And North Cohoe Loop
Anchorage, AK
Highway's End Farmers' Market
Corner Of Alaska Highway And Richardson Higheay
Delta Junction, AK
Eagle River Farmers Market
(907) 696-4839
Eagle River Vfw Post Parking Lot
Eagle River, AK
Juneau Farmers Market
907-523-2339
Juneau Arts And Culture Center
Juneau, AK
South Anchorage Farmers Market II
(907) 354-5833
Behind Dimond Mall, In Front Of Dimond Hotel
Anchorage, AK
Anchorage Farmers Market
(907) 746-1087
1420 Cordova Street; Corner of Cordova & 15th Avenue
Anchorage, AK
Highway's End Farmers Market
(907) 895-4752
At "The Triangle" at the end of the Alaska Highway across from the Visitor'
Delta Junction, AK
Tanana Valley Farmers Market
(907) 456-3276
College Road and Caribou Way
Fairbanks, AK
provided by: Organic Food and Green Living

Farmer’s Market Finds

My closest farmer’s market runs during the summer, from 5 to 9 p.m. outside a Macy’s department store in a large suburban shopping mall parking lot. While there are numerous year-round farmer’s markets in the L.A. area, this one has a particularly festive feel, and I love traveling from booth to booth in search of ding-free produce that has just the right amount of fresh dirt clinging to it.

Last week, I bought some gorgeous summer squash—bright yellow, freshly picked that morning and not a blemish to be found. In supermarkets, and even at my local natural and organic food store, I often have trouble finding squash with such clear skin and fresh-from-the-ground flavor.

As Deb Barshafsky wrote in her 1998 Augusta essay, “Stand Buy Your Yam: The Lure of the Southern Produce Stand,” nothing beats a roadside vegetable stand or farmer’s market: “Grocery stores are clean, well-lit, well-stocked shrines to all things edible, but you don’t get somebody’s grandmother putting a piece of peach in your mouth. You do get somebody’s teenager who needs a photo album at the cash register to tell the difference between a butternut squash and a daikon radish.”

As Barshafsky points out, vegetables grow in dirt, and “handling a basket of soil-smudged crooknecks with my Keds firmly planted in Georgia red clay feels just right.” She doesn’t miss grocery barcode scanners, membership discount cards or automatic sprayers that douse supermarket veggies with water at scheduled times.

If you ...

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