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Carolyn
Lester Snyder started her farm stand as a young girl over forty years
ago, under the magnificent chestnut trees next to her grandmother
Winifred Lester's house on Three Mile Harbor Road. Carolyn's father,
Albert Lester, who inherited the 20-acre, 250-year-old Round Swamp
family farm, built her a small red stand to peddle her goods, and
she'd wait for someone to stop for a cucumber or a few ears of corn.
"We were a poor family," Carolyn remembers, "but my
grandma Lester's table always looked like a gourmet feast. I don't
know where all that food came from. There was always a tablecloth.
Milk was served in pitchers. Homemade relishes, chutneys, mustard
cauliflower, bread-and-butter picklesthe kind we still do todayaccompanied
every meal. There would always be roasted chickens or ducks or turkeys
or pork, all raised on the farm. Stewsmaybe of chicken and potatoes
and dumplingsor samp {a local corn dish of hominy, bean, and
ham or pigs' feet} were kept on the coal stove for hours. Beans, baked
with salt pork, were usually part of the meal. Tall crocks of salt
pork were kept in the root cellar with the canned fruits and vegetables.
I never saw a baked potato on Grandma's table. It was always scalloped
or mashed. And everyday there were pieslemon meringue, peach,
beach plumor cakes, yellow with chocolate frosting, set to cool
by the window." |
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When
Snyder's father died in 1968, she knew she had to carry on: "I've
always been sure, in my heart and soul, that the farm market would
continue." By the early '80s, her fisherman husband, Harold Snyder,
had faced the reality that the commercial fishing in the Hamptons
was in serious trouble, and had turned to farming instead (though
he still manages to help supply the farm's fish market). Today the
Snyders live in Grandma Lester's house. There is a swimming pool where
the apple tree used to be, and the farm stand, now used to ice fish,
has been joined by seven buildings and 14 family members in the country
market know as Round Swamp Farm.
Tall, red headed, and grandmother of four, the 54 year-old Snyder
looks an unlikely matriarch. But she has forged a role at the market
for her sisters Dianna and Claire, her daughters Lisa and Shelly,
their husbands, and their children. Today the produce of Round Swamp
Farm, and the fruit of that produce (carrot cakes and zucchini breads,
chutneys, sweet and hot pepper relishes, pickles and salsas, fruit
jellies and jams, cobblers, pies and muffins), together with the Round
Swamp fish market (stocked by Harold and Charlie Niggles, Lisa's husband),
support six households. "They take pride in it because it's all
theirs," Snyder explains. "The Lester legacy is driving
all of them." |
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