Index of Farmer's Market Online® Guides
Farm Kitchen
Breads
Chocolate
Coffee
Corn
Curry
Raisins
Spices and Culinary Herbs
Tea
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Home & Garden
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In Season
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Aloe Vera
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Blood Orange
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Egyptian Walking Onions
Figs
Garlic
Grapefruit
Kale
Kohlrabi
Pawpaw
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Pumpkin
Shelling Beans
Sour Cherries
Meats & Fish
Turkey
Nuts & Grains
Chestnuts
Plants
Air Plants
Azaleas
Bigleaf Hydrangea
Bonsai
Bronze Dutch Clover
Camellia
Carnivorous Plants
Catnip
Chestnut
Christmas Cactus
Cranberry
Easter Lily
Gentian
Heuchera
Mint
Orchids
Ornamental Cabbage
Ornamental Grasses
Pasque Flower
Pawpaws
Pinyon Pine
Poinsettia
Roseroot
Salvia
Sneezeweed
Voodoo Lily
Zinnia
Specialty Foods
Spices
Carrots
Carrots weren’t always the vibrant orange we know today; in fact, the root vegetable originally grew in shades of purple, white, and yellow.
According to a popular legend, the carrot got its modern hue from Dutch growers in the 17th century paying tribute to William of Orange, a key figure in the Dutch fight for independence.
Domesticated carrots originated with farmers in an area now known as Afghanistan more than 1,000 years ago. Historians believe these early farmers began to breed carrots to enhance their carotenoids, or pigments. Whether this was done to increase nutrition, to reduce the veggie’s inherent bitterness, or another reason is not known. These early modifications gave carrots a yellow hue, and hundreds of years later, Dutch cultivation deepened their hue yet again, turning them from yellow to dark orange.