The Arizona Republic

Produce market supplies holidays

New York’s Hunts Point feeds over 30 million

- Bobby Caina Calvan

NEW YORK – It was the wee hours of the morning, and the docks at New York’s largest produce market were bustling in the cold. The holidays were inching closer, and sacks of onions, potatoes and carrots were flying off the shelves.

Amid the whir, buyers and sellers were finalizing deals on tomatoes, mangoes and lettuce. Trucks stood ready to haul away the bounty – a cornucopia of fruits and vegetables destined for supermarke­t produce aisles, household refrigerat­ors and, eventually, millions of mouths across the Northeast during the gluttonous holidays.

“This time of year is our busiest. We have Thanksgivi­ng, we have Christmas and New Year’s. All of these are very big family and big eating holidays,” said Stefanie Katzman, the executive vice president of S. Katzman Produce, one of the country’s largest and oldest produce dealers, which operates at the Hunts Point Produce Market.

The market is a sprawling collection of wholesaler­s that make it the nation’s busiest distributi­on center for fruits and vegetables, responsibl­e for more than 60% of the daily stock for New York City and feeding over 30 million customers, according to another Hunts Point wholesaler, E. Armata Inc.

“Our market as a whole does about three times as much business as normal on a day like today,” Katzman said while leading a tour Tuesday morning of her company’s cavernous warehouse, which extends a quarter-mile and has room for produce across nearly two football fields.

In one huge room, the whiff of onions filled the cold air. In another, the scent of berries wafted through the room – although Katzman’s biggest seller, strawberri­es, was in short supply because of inclement weather that wreaked havoc on the growing season.

“Our market is really unique. It’s kind of like the stock market, but a little bit more intense. Because our ‘stocks’ are perishable, we can’t hold on to them for too long hoping they go up in value,” Katzman said.

Not only can the place be likened to a stock market, but it is also a Grand Central Station of sorts with delivery trucks in and out of the Bronx facility.

In all, Hunts Point’s wholesaler­s distribute 2.5 billion pounds of produce a year, with about 30 million pounds having moved on Tuesday alone.

The produce ends up at places like Whole Foods, high-end grocers and specialty markets, as well as smaller mom-and-pop outlets.

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