Food + Drink Emma Vendetta Food + Drink Emma Vendetta

Where to Pick Your Own Berries Around Nashville

May

Green Door Gourmet

Website | Phone | Email

Call for availability.

20 minutes from downtown Nashville | 7011 River Road Pike, Nashville, TN 37209

For $10 per person, you get to pick your own quart of certified organic strawberries (though you’re welcome to pick more for increased charge). Arrive close to 5 pm for the extra bonus of entertainment after your sunset harvest at their Pickin’ Party or visit on a Saturday morning from 9 am - 1 pm throughout May.


June

Kelley’s Berries

Website | Phone | Email

June - September: Daily from 7 am - 6 pm

30 minutes from downtown Nashville | 631 Beckwith Road Mount Juliet, Tennessee 37122

Kelley’s has it all: strawberries in May and June are replaced by blackberries and peaches in July. Blueberries are ripe toward August with raspberries close behind.


July

Stoney Creek Farm

Website | Phone | Email

July: Wednesday and Saturday 8 am - 1 pm, Sunday 1-5 pm

30 minutes from downtown Nashville | 4700 Coe Lane, Franklin, TN 37064

Stoney Creek offers not only blueberries and blackberries but also herbs and flowers that you can pick yourself! Get some berries for a snack and put together your own farm-to-vase bouquet.


August

Breeden’s Orchard

Website | Phone | Email

July - October: Thursdays 4-7 pm, Fridays - Saturdays 8 am - 12 pm.

30 minutes from downtown Nashville | 631 Beckwith Road, Mount Juliet, Tennessee 37122

A local farm with decades of history and new ownership, Breeden’s offers peaches and apples for picking. Apple cider donuts return on September 1st and are the perfect way to kick off the fall season.

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Food + Drink Emma Vendetta Food + Drink Emma Vendetta

Tennessee Summer Treats

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Jackson offered me a choice: we could either go on a date in the morning on Friday or in the evening. And no, they weren’t the same plans. And no, I couldn’t pick both because he has to save some date ideas for later, greedy girl.

I picked the morning date.

Then I picked in the morning!

Be ready at 7 he said. And wear close toed shoes.

Jackson took us to the new Frothy Monkey in East where Post East used to be (RIP but also thank you for the wine glasses and drink dispensers at that one yard sale. I’ll always remember you). They’re still working out some kinks service knowledge wise, but the food is tasty as ever.

With our quinoa bowl and oatmeal in tow, we hopped back into the car. We winded our way through the Southern countryside, passing farms and small homesteads and the occasional bait-tackle-beer-breakfast stores.

We were first to arrive at Kelly’s Berry Farm.

This tender acreage off the pike past Lebanon was bursting with berries. We arrived at the tail end of strawberry season, "so you’re really going to have to look,” the farmhand warned us. But we struck rich in blueberry season and even gathered first fruits from the thornless blackberry bushes.

We decided to pick in the order that would leave our backs stretched out properly by the end. These are the kinds of things you have to think of when you’re nearly 30 and no one warned you that joints start yelling at 26 these days. Strawberries low to the ground, hiding in the shade of the plant’s large leaves. Blackberries from knee to waist height. Blueberries raining down from above my head.

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Up next: sharing all the ways we used the berries. We gathered 6 pounds of strawberries, 4 pounds of blackberries, and 10 pounds of blueberries. Yup.

We highly recommend Kelly’s Berry Farm whose products are also available at farmers markets throughout Nashville.

xo

em

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