Tomatoes of all varieties are star of the show
One of the most anticipated fruits of the summer is the tomato. That’s why the Historic Lewes Farmers Market hosts a Tomato Festival each August to celebrate the summer harvest season.
The Aug. 4 festival featured a cooking demonstration by Kindle chef Ian Crandall, a heaviest tomato contest and a guessing game to pick the number of tomatoes in a jar. The market’s vendors had plenty of tomatoes for sale.
Crandall, with the assistance of Daniel Rede and Megan Ernakovich, prepared tomato carpaccio with arugula and caper dressing, a tomato mocktail and no-cook tomato sauce with chevre cheese flatbread.
Heaviest tomato winners were: 1. Hattie Allen of Hattie’s Garden, pineapple bicolor heirloom, 1 pound, 11 ounces; 2. Kathleen Mass, Cherokee, 1 pound, 8 ounces; 3. Tom Greenwood, Cherokee purple, 1 pound, 7 ounces; 4. Craig Brady of Stag Run Farms, heirloom, 1 pound, 4 ounces.
The Historic Lewes Farmers Market is open every Saturday from 8 a.m. to noon through Sept. 28 at George H.P. Smith Park. The fall market takes place from Oct. 5 to Nov. 23 at the Lewes Elementary School parking lot. A Wednesday market from 8 to 11:30 a.m. takes place through Sept. 4 at Crooked Hammock Brewery along Kings Highway.
For more information, go to historiclewesfarmersmarket.org.

