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This is the second installment of an ongoing series with a focus on small independent farms and creative use of farmland. We hope it serves as a reminder that the food grown and raised in Lancaster County is both diverse and extraordinary and that the people tending the land have stories worth telling. Join us in saluting our neighbors. On a recent 90-degree day, Drew Spitzer hands me a sun-kissed strawberry that is almost hot to the touch. It might be the best thing Iâve eaten in a million years. His 8-by-40-feet plot of strawberries is popping with rubied fruit, one of several seasonal crops that heâs growing expressly for Horse Inn. Joining the berries on this quarter-acre parcel in Strasburg are bok choy, head cabbage, cardoons, celtuce, multiple lettuces, snow peas, hakurei turnips and radishes, to name a few. ....
Dozens of patrons gathered at Huberâs West End Market on Sunday afternoon to say goodbye to the city storeâs longtime owners. The market, located at 501 West Lemon Street, was purchased last month by Adam and Tracey Davis after more than 60 years of ownership by the Huber family. Friends Sam Hoover, 13, and brothers Collin, 14, and Benjamin Gibbel, 10, all of Lancaster, were enjoying the free food and music Sunday to mark the Huber familyâs departure. âIâm not really sure what itâs going to be like (under new ownership),â said Hoover who usually walks to the store multiple times a week to grab snacks and drinks. âIn a way itâs disappointing, but Iâm also excited.â ....
After more than half a century of serving generations of customers, the Hubers will be stepping away from their namesake Lancaster city market. While the family that started and then expanded Huberâs West End Market will be saying goodbye with free hotdogs and live music from noon to 3 p.m. Sunday, the grocery store at 501 W. Lemon St. wonât be going away. The circa-1920 building was bought earlier this month by Adam and Tracey Davis, who plan to renovate it and then have Horse Inn owners Matthew and Starla Russell operate it as West End Market, keeping it a small grocery store, but expanding its offerings. ....
This story contains links that will take you to our archives site on newspapers.com. This content is free for LancasterOnline subscribers who are logged in. Click here for more information about how to subscribe. Huber s West End Market in Lancaster city will be changing hands at the end of the month, marking the end of a run for the three-generation family owned business. Matthew and Starla Russell, the owners of the acclaimed Horse Inn restaurant, will be the new operators of the market. Here s a look back at the history of Huber s West End Market, as told by LNP|LancasterOnline s newspaper archives. ....