A living market
Beneath tall wooden posts and corrugated iron roofs, women in red aprons and felt hats arrange baskets of corn, herbs, and a rainbow of potatoes: deep purple, cherry red, golden yellow. Coins jingle as couples, mothers with children, and men carrying baskets meander past the stalls, looking for just the right ingredients. The smell of rain on dust mixes with savory fried corn kernels, coffee, and soup simmering across the cobbled street in a modest food hall, where vendors serve breads, stews, and pastries all made from local produce. One stall offers homemade wine. Another has brown sugar chipped from heavy loaves, sold by weight.
“This fair is about more than money,” says Josselyn Vega. She brushes soil-stained fingers against her apron and sweeps her long black braid behind her shoulder. “It’s about sharing, about caring for our land so that our families and our customers are well-fed. Here, I see happiness. I see peace.”
Vega is the president of a collective of 120 women farmers who created the De la Mata a la Olla agroecological fair. Held every Monday and Thursday in Latacunga, the fair’s name means “From the Plant to the Pot.”
“Our produce doesn’t go through middlemen,” Vega says proudly. She has a soft face made for smiling and bright, brown eyes that shine with pride as she looks over her own stall, which is laden with lettuce, tomate de árbol, onions, carrots, kale, and zucchini. “It comes straight from our farms — fresh, direct, and alive.”