Want a bottle of Maryland wine to go with the fresh vegetables and locally raised meats you buy at an area farmers' market?
Local markets hope to fulfill that wish this season after passage of legislation by the Maryland General Assembly to allow wineries to join other local merchants in touting their goods.
The legislation would allow wineries to obtain up to 12 special event permits annually to use at farmers' markets in Baltimore County, with up to six being able to be used at the same market.
Wineries would not be able to sell wine by the glass, however.
The bill passed the House of Delegates, 139-0, and the Senate, 47-0.
It still needs to be signed by Gov. Martin O'Malley. That could take place May 10 or May 19, according to an email from Shaun Adamec, a spokesman for the governor.
State Sen. Ed Kasemeyer was out of town and unavailable for comment, but his administrative aide, Paula Wolf, said she discussed the matter with him.
She said Kasemeyer felt that it was a "wonderful opportunity" for wineries to be able to showcase their product to a "broader segment of the community at the farmers' markets."
Susan Rayner, director of marketing at Boordy Vineyards, in Hydes, said the winery has been approached by the Arbutus market.
"We're very excited about this bill," she said. "It's about time that everybody realized that wine really is agriculture.
"We're farming. We're good for the (Chesapeake) Bay," she said, noting that runoff is minimal from vineyards and not as harmful as the runoff from other industries.
"Wine goes better with the food that is grown in its region," Rayner said. "I think people are finally understanding that food and wine go together."
Cynthia Yingling, a Pennsylvania farmer who is treasurer and market master of the Catonsville Wednesday Market, said she hopes to attract wineries this year once the bill becomes law.
The market on the parking lot of Bloomsbury Community Center on Bloomsbury Avenue is held weekly, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m., from May 4 to Nov. 23.
Since wineries can only obtain a certain number of permits, Yingling said a several could get together to share a spot throughout the season.
She said the wineries will add "another dimension" to the market.
"It's a local product, agricultural product, that should be made available," she said. "It adds variety to a market."
Teal Cary, executive director of the Greater Catonsville Chamber of Commerce, which hosts the Catonsville Sunday Farmers' Market, said she plans to invite wineries to participate this year.
"We were waiting to make sure the bill was going to pass," said Cary, who sent a letter to the General Assembly that her organization supported the legislation earlier this year.
"It's a wonderful way to educate the public about the wineries here in Maryland," Cary said.
Hopefully, residents will discover local wines they enjoy then request them in local liquor stores, she said.
"When I think about our Sunday market, because of the variety we have, you can come and shop for a beautiful Sunday dinner," said Cary about the market, which starts its second year May 15.
The Sunday version is from 10 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. at 730 Frederick Road in downtown Catonsville.
"It just enhances our market really," she said. Cary said market visitors can buy a wide variety of vegetables, chicken, beef, pork, bison and dessert.
"And hopefully, a bottle of wine," she added.
Setting the stageTerry Nolan, former president of the Arbutus Business and Professional Association, said the association is waiting to hear from the 42 wineries it invited to participate in the new Arbutus Farmers' Market.
The Arbutus event is scheduled to have its soft opening June 9 and its grand opening June 16. The markets will be held 2-6 p.m. Thursdays on the parking lot at the Arbutus Volunteer Fire Department's hall off Southwestern Boulevard and will run until the end of October.
Nolan said wineries will be part of the marketing strategy for the new market, which will run until October.
As commuters make their way home from the nearby MARC train station, Nolan said he imagines placing the wineries in a row along Linden Avenue so that the passerby will see stacks of wine boxes and stop by.
"Once the people come into the market for that purpose, they then can see that there is marvelous produce available, that the caterer at the fire hall is selling crab cakes to die for, as well as excellent cream of crab soup," said Nolan, referring to Catonsville resident Julie Eveland's catering business, For Real Meals by Juls, at the hall.
The venue will also be a great market development tool for the wineries themselves by introducing their wines to lots of new people, Nolan said.
"Particularly in this market, which is the target audience for high-value-added items such as wine," he said.
Allowing 12 additional special events permits for wineries to use at farmers' markets in their respective counties in Baltimore, Carroll and Frederick counties this year follows similar action taken in Prince George's and Montgomery counties last year, according Kevin Atticks, executive director of the Maryland Wineries Association, an industry trade group.
"We're excited to have this expanded ability for wineries to connect their wines to other local products," Atticks said.
Wineries can now use their 12 special event permits statewide, plus 12 additional permits for farmers' markets in each of the counties that has passed the legislation, he said.
The move addresses the problem wineries faced of having many more opportunities than they were allowed to participate in, Atticks said.
While many markets wanted to include wineries, they also wanted vendors who could make a more regular appearance or rent a booth at the market, he said.
He said that, based on his conversations with market managers, they are happy to have the wineries come in any capacity.
"It still leaves open the question of when are we going to fix this law?" he asked, noting wineries in Pennsylvania and Virginia do not face similar restrictions.
Hide