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Five Seasonal Recipes Using Local Produce Available Right Now in Dublin

From Wicklow strawberries to Fingal courgettes, July's farmers' markets are overflowing — here's how to actually cook what's in season.

By Dublin Wellness Desk · Published 3 July 2026, 10:14 pm

3 min read

Five Seasonal Recipes Using Local Produce Available Right Now in Dublin
Photo: Photo by Markus Winkler on Pexels

Dublin's summer produce window is short and, right now, it's wide open. County Wicklow strawberries are at peak sweetness, Fingal new potatoes are hitting stalls at roughly €2.50 per kilogram, and the first outdoor courgettes of the season appeared at the Temple Bar Food Market last weekend. For anyone serious about eating well without paying premium prices for imported goods, the next six weeks are the best opportunity of the year.

The timing matters more than it might seem. Bord Bia's 2025 consumer survey found that 61 percent of Irish adults said they wanted to eat more seasonally, but fewer than a third could correctly identify which Irish vegetables are in peak supply during July. That gap between intention and knowledge is exactly what keeps people reaching for Spanish tomatoes in Tesco when the real thing is growing forty kilometres away in Rush, County Dublin.

What's Actually in Season This Week

The five recipes below are built around produce you can pick up this weekend. The Temple Bar Food Market, which runs Saturdays on Meeting House Square from 10am to 4pm, and the Leopardstown Farmers' Market on Fridays carry nearly everything listed here. For those north of the Liffey, the Glasnevin-based Botanica Urban Farm sells direct via its weekly Thursday collection scheme, with boxes starting at €18.

1. Wicklow strawberry and basil salad with goat's cheese. Halve 400g of fresh strawberries, tear a handful of basil, crumble 80g of St Tola soft goat's cheese from Clare — stocked at most good Dublin delis including Fallon & Byrne on Exchequer Street — and dress with a teaspoon of balsamic and a crack of black pepper. No cooking required. Ready in four minutes.

2. Fingal new potato and spring onion frittata. Boil 500g of scrubbed new potatoes until just tender, slice and layer into a cast-iron pan with a bunch of spring onions softened in butter. Pour over six beaten eggs seasoned with sea salt, cook low for eight minutes, finish under the grill for two. Serves four for under €5 total at current market prices.

3. Courgette, mint and lemon ribbon pasta. Use a peeler to ribbon two medium courgettes, toss raw into freshly drained spaghetti with a generous squeeze of lemon, a fistful of torn mint, olive oil and a handful of Parmesan. The heat of the pasta does the work. Total prep: twelve minutes.

4. Roasted beetroot and walnut hummus. Beets from the Liberties-based community growers at Granby Row Urban Garden are available at the Phibsborough Community Market each Saturday morning. Roast three medium beetroots at 200°C for forty-five minutes, blend with a 400g tin of chickpeas, two tablespoons of tahini, garlic and lemon. The colour alone justifies the effort.

5. Broad bean and Clonakilty black pudding toast. Blanch 300g of podded broad beans for ninety seconds, slip off the grey skins to reveal the bright green inner bean. Toss with lemon and olive oil. Slice and pan-fry Clonakilty black pudding — widely available at SuperValu and independent butchers across the city — and pile both onto thick sourdough from Bread 41 on Pearse Street. Breakfast or lunch, it doesn't matter.

Making the Habit Stick Beyond One Weekend

The practical obstacle most Dublin cooks cite is not motivation but routine. Building a weekly market stop into Friday or Saturday morning — rather than treating it as a special occasion — changes the dynamic entirely. Bord Bia's Origin Green programme maintains a searchable map of verified Irish producers at origingreen.ie, which is useful for tracking down specific growers between market visits.

Prices will shift over the next fortnight as supply increases. Courgettes, currently around €1.80 each at specialty stalls, typically drop toward €1.20 by late July when outdoor crops fully come in. Buying then, blanching and freezing extends the season into October. The Irish Nutrition and Dietetic Institute, based on Merrion Road in Dublin 4, publishes free seasonal eating guides each quarter — worth bookmarking for the autumn transition. For anyone with specific dietary needs or health conditions, a registered dietitian remains the right first call before overhauling an eating pattern.

Topic:#Wellness

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