6 Makers · 1 Box · Ships Monthly

Sixty years in every jar.

A collective of farmers and food makers over sixty who jar, smoke, cure, and bottle what they've spent decades perfecting. Each box is packed by hand, wrapped in tissue, and sealed with a note from the maker.

40+

Makers in the collective

60+

Years average experience

12K

Boxes shipped last year

Glass jar of amber tupelo honey with wooden dipper resting across the lid

Tupelo Honey

Wewahitchka, FL

Smoked trout fillet on brown parchment paper with herbs and lemon slices

Smoked Trout

Ozark Mountains, MO

Stone-ground white grits in a cloth bag tied with twine on a wooden surface

Stone-Ground Grits

Demorest, GA

The Founder's Table — 6 Makers, 1 Box

Tupelo HoneySmoked TroutStone-Ground GritsBlackberry PreservesPecan Praline ButterCured Country HamPickled OkraSorghum SyrupTupelo HoneySmoked TroutStone-Ground GritsBlackberry PreservesPecan Praline ButterCured Country HamPickled OkraSorghum Syrup
The Makers

Pull back the tissue.

Each scroll reveals the next maker — the jar, then the story, then the note they'd write if they had your address.

Amber tupelo honey in a tall glass jar with a handwritten label and cork stopper
Founder's Table

Tupelo Honey

Elderly beekeeper in protective suit tending to wooden hive boxes in a Florida river basin

Earl Dupont

Age 74 · Wewahitchka, FL

Earl has kept bees in the Apalachicola River basin for forty-one years. He works during a three-week window each spring when the white tupelo trees bloom — the only honey in the world that never crystallizes.

Floral, almost buttery. Faint green apple on the finish. Nothing else tastes like it.

Smoked trout fillet on brown parchment with sprigs of dill and sliced lemon
Founder's Table

Smoked Trout

Older man in waders standing in a clear Ozark stream holding a fly rod

Ray Hollingsworth

Age 73 · Eleven Point River, MO

Ray guided fly fishers on Ozark streams for thirty years before he started smoking the catch himself. He cold-smokes over apple and hickory for eighteen hours, brining with nothing but salt, brown sugar, and time.

Silky, not dry. Woodsmoke that lingers without bullying the fish. Flake it into scrambled eggs.

Coarse white stone-ground grits in a muslin cloth bag tied with natural twine on a wooden mill floor
Cellar Collection

Stone-Ground Grits

A woman in her sixties standing next to large granite millstones in a working grist mill

The Lattimore Family

Age 68 · Demorest, GA

Four generations of the Lattimore family have milled corn on the same granite stones since 1952. Their daughter finally put their own name on the bag three years ago. The stones run slow and cold to preserve the germ.

Earthy, sweet, deeply corny. Needs nothing but butter and salt. Cook them low and slow — they'll tell you when they're done.

Dark purple blackberry preserves in a round jar with a gingham cloth lid and handwritten paper label
Cellar Collection

Blackberry Preserves

An older Vietnamese American woman smiling while holding a basket of freshly picked blackberries

Mabel Tran

Age 71 · Sequatchie Valley, TN

Mabel picks wild blackberries from the same hollow her grandmother showed her in 1969. She puts up sixty jars each August — no commercial pectin, just fruit, cane sugar, and a squeeze of lemon.

Jammy and seedy the way preserves should be. Deep fruit flavor with a slight tartness that keeps it honest.

and there's still more in the box…
Braided loaf of sourdough bread with scored pattern on a wooden cutting board

Sourdough Starter Kit

Doris Beaumont, 66 · Ste. Genevieve, MO

Jar of pickled vegetables with colorful vegetables visible through the glass

Bread & Butter Pickles

Harold Kim, 69 · Vidalia, GA

The basic Porch Box includes 3 makers. The Founder's Table includes all 6.

See what you're missing
The Tiers

Three boxes, one decision.

The Porch Box is a sample. The Founder's Table is the reason we exist.

Porch Box

A taste of the collective.

$42/month

3 makers included

  • Tupelo Honey — Earl Dupont
  • Stone-Ground Grits — Lattimore Family
  • Blackberry Preserves — Mabel Tran
  • Smoked Trout — Ray Hollingsworth
  • Sourdough Starter Kit — Doris Beaumont
  • Bread & Butter Pickles — Harold Kim
  • + 4 rotating seasonal makers
Start with the Porch Box

Cellar Collection

For the serious pantry.

$138/quarter

10 makers included

  • All 6 Founder's Table makers
  • + 4 rotating seasonal makers
  • Handwritten maker notes
  • Recipe card from each producer
Build the Cellar Collection
Upgrade Your Box

Swap in three more makers.

You're one step away from the full table. Here's exactly what changes.

Your Current Plan

Porch Box

$42

/month

  • Tupelo Honey — Earl Dupont
  • Stone-Ground Grits — Lattimore Family
  • Blackberry Preserves — Mabel Tran

Upgrade To

Founder's Table

$78

/month

  • Tupelo Honey — Earl Dupont
  • Stone-Ground Grits — Lattimore Family
  • Blackberry Preserves — Mabel Tran
+ 3 more makers
  • Smoked Trout — Ray Hollingsworth
  • Sourdough Starter Kit — Doris Beaumont
  • Bread & Butter Pickles — Harold Kim
MonthlyQuarterly

Cancel or pause anytime. No fees. Ships the 15th of each month.

From the Table

What people say when the box arrives.

I bought the Founder's Table for my father-in-law, a retired chef who's seen everything. He called me the day it arrived and said the smoked trout was the best thing he'd tasted in ten years. That call was worth every dollar.
Nigerian American woman smiling warmly in an outdoor setting

Patricia Okafor

Gift-giver, Chicago, IL

Founder's Table
I read Earl's story before I opened the honey. Then I spent twenty minutes just smelling it. My grandmother kept bees and I hadn't thought about that in years. It's not just food — it's someone's whole life in a jar.
Latino man with short dark hair and a friendly expression

Marcus Delgado

Home cook, Austin, TX

Porch Box
My food writing students don't understand provenance until I put a Harvest box in front of them. The Lattimore grits alone turn into a two-hour conversation about what fourth-generation really means.
White woman with silver-streaked hair and reading glasses pushed up on her head

Dr. Constance Webb

Food studies professor, Athens, GA

Cellar Collection

The box that started it all is still just the beginning.

Upgrade to Founder's Table →