April at the Farmers Market: Your Guide to Spring's Peak Season

April at the Farmers Market: Your Guide to Spring's Peak Season

6 min read
Farmermarket.us

April at the Farmers Market: Your Guide to Spring's Peak Season

There's a shift that happens at farmers markets in April. The tentative early-spring stalls — still half-stocked with root vegetables and storage crops from winter — give way to something electric. The tables fill up. The colors pop. The smell of fresh-cut greens hangs in the morning air. April is when the local food season truly begins, and the timing couldn't be more important.

If you've been meaning to get back into the habit of shopping at your farmers market, April is the moment. Here's what to look for and how to make the most of everything hitting peak season right now.

Asparagus: April's Crown Jewel

Nothing announces spring quite like fresh asparagus, and April is its peak month in most of the country. Unlike the year-round supermarket asparagus that's traveled thousands of miles from Mexico or Peru, locally grown asparagus at your farmers market was likely harvested within 24 to 48 hours of reaching the stall.

The difference is immediately obvious. Fresh asparagus should have tightly closed, slightly purple-tinged tips and stalks that squeak when you rub them together. It should smell faintly grassy and sweet — not musty. Once you taste asparagus this fresh, roasted simply with olive oil, lemon, and sea salt, it's hard to go back.

Look for both thin and thick stalks at your market — thin ones are perfect for quick sautéing or eating raw, while thicker stalks hold up beautifully on a grill or roasted in the oven. Ask your farmer how long the harvest window lasts in your area; in many regions it's only four to six weeks, making these genuinely seasonal weeks you won't want to miss.

Green Garlic: The Underrated Spring Find

One of the most overlooked treasures at spring farmers markets, green garlic looks like a thick scallion and tastes like young garlic — mild, fresh, and slightly sweet without the sharp bite of cured bulbs. It appears at markets for just a few weeks in spring before the plants mature into the garlic heads you'll see later in summer.

Use green garlic anywhere you'd use regular garlic or scallions: chopped into vinaigrettes, stirred into eggs, blended into compound butter, or folded into mashed potatoes. The entire plant is edible — white bulb, green stalks, and all. If you spot it, grab a bunch (or three). It keeps in the refrigerator for a week and freezes well if you blanch it first.

Snap Peas: Sweetness by the Handful

Sugar snap peas are arriving at markets now in the South and in California, with northern markets seeing them through May and into June. Unlike shelling peas that require work to eat, snap peas are entirely edible — pods and all — and need little more than a quick rinse.

They're at their absolute best eaten raw, straight from the bag, as a snack. But they also shine when barely cooked: two to three minutes in a hot pan with butter and a pinch of salt, or tossed into a stir-fry at the very end. The key is restraint. Overcook them and you lose the snap, the sweetness, and the whole point.

At the market, look for pods that are bright green, firm, and slightly plump. Avoid any with yellowing edges or wilted stems — those have been sitting too long.

A colorful farmers market display overflowing with spring vegetables, fruits, and root crops

Early Strawberries: Worth the Wait

If you live in California, the Gulf Coast, or the Southeast, you may already be seeing the first strawberries of the season at your local market. For much of the country, they'll start trickling in by late April and peak in May and June.

Locally grown market strawberries are a revelation compared to the commercial varieties bred for long shelf life and uniform appearance. Look for smaller berries with a deep red color all the way through (not white at the center), an unmistakable floral fragrance, and a flavor that tastes like actual strawberry — concentrated and sweet with a hint of acid. They won't last more than two or three days in the refrigerator, so buy what you'll use quickly and plan around them rather than the other way around.

A simple way to celebrate the first strawberries: slice them, toss with a little sugar and a squeeze of lemon, let them macerate for 20 minutes, and spoon over plain yogurt or vanilla ice cream. Nothing else needed.

What Else Is Showing Up Right Now

April markets are also a great time to find:

  • Radishes — crisp, peppery, and available in beautiful varieties beyond the standard red globe, including watermelon radishes and French breakfast radishes
  • Spring onions and scallions — sweeter and more tender than storage onions
  • Baby spinach and lettuces — early spring greens are exceptional right now, before the heat of summer turns them bitter
  • Herbs — chives, cilantro, and flat-leaf parsley are coming in strong
  • Overwintered carrots and beets — still excellent from last season's storage

A Few Tips for April Market Shopping

Go early. The most popular spring items — especially asparagus and strawberries — sell out quickly. Arrive in the first hour if you want the best selection.

Bring cash and reusable bags. Many small farm vendors still prefer cash, and spring produce is delicate enough that sturdy reusable bags protect it better than plastic.

Ask your farmers what's coming next. They're the best source of intel on what will be ready in one to two weeks. Building a relationship with your regular vendors pays dividends all season long.

Shop hungry — then make a plan. April markets have a way of filling your basket before you've made up your mind. That's fine. The beauty of seasonal eating is letting what's freshest drive your cooking for the week, rather than arriving with a rigid list.

Why April Matters

In 2026, local food demand is growing across the country. The USDA announced over $26 million in new funding this March to support farmers markets, roadside stands, and CSA programs — a sign of how central these community markets have become to the food system. More markets are opening, more farms are participating, and more shoppers are recognizing what they get when they buy directly from the people who grow their food.

April is the beginning of that season. Your farmers market is open, fully stocked, and waiting. Go this weekend.


Find farmers markets near you at Farmermarket.us — search by city, state, or zip code to discover what's open in your area.