I was there a good chunk of the time. My wife was manning the Tomato Mountain Organic Farm tent, which was, lucky for her, actually a table inside--last your this market was on a gorgeous day if I remember, oh to live in Chicagoland. That bad weather seemed to have little effect on the local locavores. My wife sold out on all the carrots she had and nearly all the spinach she had. When I went shopping, I bought 3 kinds of sweet potatoes fro Henry's Farm, two Asian types and one traditional (or Southern, I guess one person's traditional is another's exotic!). I also got delicata squash from Lake Breeze Organics, some parsley from the guy who grow indoors in Evanston, and romesco from Nichols. I was hoping there'd be some laggard peppers but no luck. Still, there was tons of stuff and tons of proof that the eat local season should not generally close at Halloween.
The winter market duty this year in Evanston is kinda being split between Ecology Center, where there's been a market the last 2 years and Immanuel Church. From what I heard yesterday, a fair amount of the vendors will do both markets. That's what Tomato Mountain is doing--the Condiment Queen should have spinach and carrots all winter. I ran into Chef Sarah Stegner yesterday, who is a member at Immanuel Lutheran. She told me that she is going to run the cafe for the market this winter, so that's another reason to get out and support the farmers who are supporting your efforts to continue to eat local.
Think Yiddish, Dress British - Advice of Evil Ronnie to me.