Brothh Journal
Profiles, guides, and honest notes from the people growing, baking, and building the things worth buying direct.
Brothh is a directory for the people who actually grow, raise, bake, and build the things worth buying. No middlemen, no mystery supply chains, no packaging dressed up like a farm. Just real producers you can reach directly.
Showing 9 of 16 articles
Some of the best marketing in the grocery business is built around the word 'local.' It shows up on cartons of eggs from a thousand-mile supply chain, on bread baked in a factory, and on honey blended from four continents. The word has been stretched so thin it means almost nothing.
The best way to know what you are eating is to ask the person who grew it. Most farmers are happy to answer — in fact, a farmer who bristles at honest questions is telling you something important.
The sticker price on a jar of local honey is usually higher than the supermarket version. That part is true. But once you account for what you are actually paying for in each product, the math gets more interesting.
Starting a small farm is easy. Starting a small farm that pays the bills is much harder. The difference between the two is not land, and it is not grit. It is product mix, margins, and where you sell.
The Hendricks family has been farming the same 200 acres in Lancaster County since 1998. What started as a modest vegetable operation has grown into one of the region's most respected organic farms, supplying restaurants, farmers markets, and direct-to-consumer customers across Pennsylvania.
Not all honey is created equal. The difference between raw, unfiltered honey from a local beekeeper and the processed product on supermarket shelves is enormous in terms of flavor, nutrition, and environmental impact.
A short weekly note with new producer profiles, buying guides, and seasonal tips. No spam, no fluff.
October is one of the best months to buy direct from local producers. From winter squash and root vegetables to fresh-pressed cider and late-season honey, the fall harvest offers an incredible variety of products at peak quality.
The Willamette Valley is known for its wine, but the region's producer ecosystem extends far beyond vineyards. From artisan cheesemakers and craft bakers to sustainably raised livestock and handcrafted woodwork, the valley is home to some of the most talented makers in the Pacific Northwest.
Farm-fresh eggs are one of the easiest entry points to buying local. The difference in quality is immediately visible: deep golden yolks, firm whites, and a richness that supermarket eggs simply cannot match.