Artisan Organic Food Panama City FL

Herbs and spices are not fumigated or irradiated-no shortcuts. When the finished product is a sauce or dressing, it means the design or formulation is done with good taste in mind, without the use of artificial preservatives or flavors. The product is treated in a way that respects the wholesome ingredients and packaged with care.

Bay County Farmers Market
(850) 769-2645, (850) 785-0524
2230 East 15th Street; at the Fairgrounds
Panama City, FL
Zen Garden Market
(850) 234-1651
707 Richard Jackson Blvd.
Panama City Beach, FL
The Green Marketplace at Adamson Road
(321) 536-1410, (321) 637-0491
2295 Adamson Road; Green Marketplace
Cocoa, FL
Blue Lake Citrus Products, LLC.
(863) 299-3755
PO Box 1849
Winter Haven, FL
Cocoa Farmers Market
(321) 917-0721
605 Florida Avenue; Corner of Orange Street and Florida Avenue
Cocoa, FL
St. Andrews Waterfront Market
(850) 872-7208
3151 West 10th Street (U.S. hw 98, turn south on Beck Ave., then turn right
Panama City, FL
Daabon Organic U.S.A. Inc
(406) 556-4645
1110 Brickell Ave #204
Miami, FL
Bradenton Old Main Street Market
(941) 322-2446
Old Main Street; between Manatee Avenue and Barcarrota Blvd.
Bradenton, FL
Downtown Market
(727) 842-8066, (727) 849-2664
Historic District; Nebraska Ave. 1 block east of Grand
New Port Richey, FL
Riverwalk Market
(850) 626-6246
On Willing Street downtown; One block South of US Highway 90
Milton, FL
Data Provided by:
 
provided by: Organic Food and Green Living

The Artistry of Artisan Organic Foods

"Here in western Massachusetts, we are blessed," says Mark Lattanzi.

He's referring to the bountiful food:

  • The dedicated farmers who grow organic crops.
  • The organic cider produced by West County Cider in the town of Colrain, which has received national media attention.
  • The rosemary, eight-grain, rye and country breads made from organic flours at El Jardin Bakery , an artisan baker in an inner-city Latino neighborhood, which operates as a community-development project and small-business training program.
  • The old-time, traditional pickle maker who produces delectably fermented cucumbers, sauerkraut and kimchee.

As campaign director for the South Deerfield-based Community Involved in Sustaining Agriculture , a regional local-foods campaign, Lattanzi is well versed in the artistry of artisan foods.

"Artisan-created foods like farmstead cheeses, hard ciders and wood-fired bread, among many, are created by hand, in small batches, by people who often grow the ingredients themselves," Lattanzi tells OrganicAuthority.com. "They raise the cows, milk them and make the cheese. They plant the apple trees, tend them, harvest the apples and make the cider. These thoughtfully created items contain the unique taste of the place they were made. A cheese from western Massachusetts is not going to taste like a cheese from Iowa or France or Italy. I think that consumers who appreciate unique and complex flavors gravitate toward artisan foods."

Superior taste is, indeed, what distinguishes organic artisan foods from their mass-market counterparts. Artisans are committed to using the finest ingredients in the world, such as organic balsamic vinegar and sheep's-milk Pecorino Romano cheese from Italy, organic extra virgin olive oil, and organic ginger puree from Kauai, according to John Troy, the CEO and "organic taste wizard" at The Wizard's Cauldron , Ltd., an organic micro-saucery headquartered in Yanceyville, North Carolina.

"It begins with heirloom seeds, fertile soil, conscious handling, and processing without the use of manufacturing aids and chemicals," Troy tells OrganicAuthority.com. "Herbs and spices are not fumigated or irradiated-no shortcuts. When the finished product is a sauce or dressing, it means the design or formulation is done with good taste in mind, without the use of artificial preservatives or flavors. The product is treated in a way that respects the wholesome ingredients and packaged with care."

But the concept goes beyond taste for many shoppers, who recognize that multinational corporations have hijacked our food supply, pumping it full of chemicals, fats and sugars-all of which contribute to skyrocketing obesity rates and impaired health. Consumers-particularly those who live an organic lifestyle-are taking back the nutritional and environmental streets, choosing to support individual food producers and small-scale collectives that promote sustainable living.

"The human touch is being removed from many of our food...

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