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Food

The farmers' market foodies set out their stall

We meet two women who are on a mission to improve the way Israelis eat.

May 27, 2011 10:00
Farmers’ markets provide Israelis with the best home-grown produce

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Israelis are no strangers to outdoor markets; every city has a shuk where a vast number of people do their daily shopping. Yet until recently farmers' markets were a foreign concept. Michal Ansky and Shir Halpern changed that three years ago when they started Israel's first farmers' market in Tel Aviv. Today there are six across the country plus a permanent indoor market, and more planned.

"It's a magical story," explains Halpern, "neither of us planned it, we didn't think: 'Oh we're going to create this farmers' market' - it really just happened." Ansky and Halpern met at Tel Aviv University, where they studied food history. The idea of a farmers' market in Tel Aviv came to them over coffee.

Ansky, currently one of the most familiar faces of Israeli food (she is a judge on the Israeli version of MasterChef and hosts two TV cooking shows) grew up in a culinary household. Her mother, Sherry Ansky, is a well-known figure in the Israeli culinary scene with 11 cookbooks under her belt. After a BA in history and MA in communication, Ansky went to Italy to attend the University of Gastronomic Sciences in Pollenzo.

Halpern's passion for food was sparked in college when she worked at Erez Komarovsky's famed Lehem Erez bread shop and restaurant in Herziliya. "It was pretty remarkable," she recalls." "It was a revolution in terms of bread in Israel. Also it was the first restaurant to really do seasonal, local Israeli food."