IN ITALO CALVINO’S Invisible Cities, he describes the seaside city of Euphemia where “merchants of seven nations gather at every solstice and equinox.” He may as well have been describing Lisbon, or at least a particular square in Lisbon where, across polished limestone cobbles every other Thursday, an ancient habit unfurls. Vendors from Italy, France, Spain, Argentina, Mexico, Japan and possibly other places too arrange their goods on tables in the age-old manner. The citizens of the city arrive carrying baskets, willing to have their appetites stimulated, and the happy noise of exchange visits Largo Agostinho da Silva for an afternoon.
The idea for the market emerged from the fields of Friends of a Farmer, the Slowness vegetable garden an hour south of Lisbon led by Andy Szymanowicz. “We needed an outlet for the abundance of the farm,” says Amber Liebmann. “We were doing interesting vegetables that looked and tasted really good: heirloom tomato varietals, baby eggplants, Thai and lemon basil, different kinds of radicchio. And then there were our flowers: rudbeckias, star flowers, snapdragons, dahlias.” From assistant gardener, she has become the chief architect of the market, which she runs since 2024 in association with Magnolia, the jasmine-fringed bistro on the corner of the square.
Today, the market is a platform by which Friends of a Farmer creates connections between culinary artisans, ethical farmers and the general public.