AN ORGANIC FARM AND CSA IN THE FINGER LAKES REGION, NEW YORK

CSA: Community Supported Agriculture

Join our CSA: click here or call (607) 589-6149 for details
We offer shares in garden products AND Farm Kitchen Organic Bakery

We are now offering a farm kitchen bakery share, it operates like a CSA share except instead of produce, with this share you receive baked goods! The Humble Hill Farm kitchen is certified by the New York State Dept. of Agriculture and Markets. We make organic, whole grain, naturally sweetened baked goods featuring seasonal ingredients such as blueberries, zucchini, apples, carrots, and more. All baked goods are sweetened with maple syrup and agave nectar. Detailed ingredient lists are available for each item.

The share will vary week to week. Blueberry muffins, apple pie, cornbread, a loaf of oatmeal sandwich bread, peach pie, each week is a treat! We have been making Organic, Whole Grain, and naturally sweetened baked goods for many years. We use the highest quality organic ingredients in our all our baking. The share is meant to serve 1 to 2 people. We are working on creative packaging solutions to make our bakery share zero waste.

What is CSA?
CSA is Community Supported Agriculture.

Members join the CSA before the growing seaso by purchasing a share ($300 - $500). This gives the farmers support by providing upfront capital to produce local food. In return the community investors get a share of the harvest, which is an assortment of seasonal farm products every week during the growing season. Every CSA is operated differently but that¹s the basic idea.

What we love about the CSA model is the connection to our customers and the potential for sustainable growth of the farm operation. We know where the food we grow will end up; it takes a lot of the guesswork out of marketing produce. Currently we still do sell at the farmers market because we love the experience of market day! This year we are also offering a farmers market shoppers card for folks who like the idea of supporting local farmers, but are unable to commit to a CSA share. It works like a debit card; customers pay a certain amount ($100 or $200) and shop at the market booth at their convenience. Each time you shop the amount is deducted from your balance.