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Village Squire, 1976-04, Page 5Covent Garden Market - a place for food and people who like food Sketches by Ron Walker You might call it a hidden treasure that probably a lot of Londoners, let alone people in the rest of western Ontario have never found. Probably people have been to the parking lot that rises above Covent Garden Market in London but have never visited the market itself. But for the food lover it's a little piece of paradise. The name Covent Gardens summons up thoughts of the famous English marketplace and though it doesn't have the same fame or even the wide publicity of markets closer to hand such as the Kitchener market, it's still an interesting place to visit, and a real centrepiece for those in London area looking for a different kind of shopping experience from the anticeptic world of big -city supermarkets. Which is not to say that the market isn't clean. The true Anglo-Saxon personality of London is perpetuated in the market in the regard for cleanliness and neatness. Those who think the clutter of an old world market place is great, will miss it in the orderly rows of the market, but those who would rather be certain their food is well cared for will be regvarded. Still, there's a good deal of colour in the market. It's a blur of activity on a Saturday as people of all ages, all walks of life, all races and nationalities pick their way through the heaps of produce, handcrafted goods etc. that line the long aisles of the market. There is variety there, not only in the food offered but in the faces. It's the kind of place that makes an artist smile. There are old, weathered faces behind some of the counters, faces that don't just sell food, but know from long wearying hours in wind and sun the intimate details of how food begins there in the warm black earth. This isn't just a commodity these faces are selling. It's a product of love. For so many urban dwellers who are so isolated from the production of food that they think milk comes from a plastic bag not a bag of skin, it's an educational experience to be here rubbing shoulders with people who really know and care about food. The contrast with the shopping cart. wide aisles and glass -eyed checkout girls is extreme. And the items on sale thernsek es. %%hat a difference. There they are. in open sticking cardboard cartons. fresh eggs. not only white eggs but brown. Marr consumers probohh didn't know brown egg esen eyisted There are red apples green apples %ellow VILLAGE SQUIRE.' APRIL lire. 3