David Hammond wrote:
Cinnamon Girl wrote:
Whether the non prepared food vendors survive is what we are curious about also. At this point, I agree, they may have a tough time of it. On the other hand, something shelf stable, like spices, has a huge advantage in the fact that it does not go to waste. Spices have a one year shelf life. What happens to those beautiful cases of fish that were flown in at 4 in the morning when the case is still pretty full at the end of the day? At the Milwaukee Public Market, we eventually lost a really fantastic butcher, because he ended up throwing away hundreds of $$ of meat at the end of every day. I imagine the folks at the nearest foodbank are going to have a higher quality food pantry than they ever imagined.
I'm guessing the fish vendor and others at the French Market is going to gauge public response and adjust inventories accordingly. If there's lots left over at the end of the day, he can cut back, but I'm guessing there are many (like JeffB, above) who are tickled to have fresh fish available "on the way home."
I think this is a very interesting question/problem. I wrote a while back about the Milwaukee Public Market at the
Local Beet, and how it had moved away from being a shoppers market. Someone from the Market commented on that post and essentially admitted they had to roll with the times.
As I've already noted upthread, I think people want to see carcasses and vats of guts to make them feel "market-y" even if they have no notion of buying this stuff. Really, how do these markets balance the fact that people expect to see certain things but then have little need to buy them.
Well, for one thing, maybe they can dip into all of those TIF funds to subsidize nose-to-tail. For another thing, they can publicize the market more for ethnic groups. We have a lot of Mexicans in Chicago. They've been known to buy a cow foot or two. Want to sell real meat. Get the customers there who already buy that way.
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Think Yiddish, Dress British - Advice of Evil Ronnie to me.
The Local Beet's very big list of 2013 Farmer's Markets