Cancel

    Open app

    Search

    Upper Campfield Market Hall

    4.3 (3 reviews)
    ModerateFarmers Market

    Upper Campfield Market Hall Photos

    Recommended Reviews - Upper Campfield Market Hall

    Your trust is our priority, so businesses can't pay to alter or remove their reviews. Learn more about reviews.
    Yelp app icon
    Browse more easily on the app
    Review Feed Illustration

    12 years ago

    Helpful 1
    Thanks 0
    Love this 2
    Oh no 0

    12 years ago

    Helpful 4
    Thanks 0
    Love this 1
    Oh no 0

    12 years ago

    Helpful 1
    Thanks 0
    Love this 1
    Oh no 0

    Verify this business for free

    Get access to customer & competitor insights.

    Verify this business

    West Didsbury Makers Market

    West Didsbury Makers Market

    4.0(2 reviews)
    5.6 kmWest Didsbury

    It was a pleasant visit to West Didsbury Makers Market, situated at Withington Community Hospital,…read morea few Sundays ago. The Makers Market can be found at various sport around Manchester on specific days of the month, and on the last Sunday of the month, it can be found here. As well as a variety of stalls selling homemade trinkets, and artwork, it had a couple of food vendors that are regular attendees at many streetfood / food market events across Manchester, such as Wallace and Sons, who sell one of the most delicious Pork Baos I have ever tasted, and What's Your Beef, who do an amazing Fiery Chorizo Burger. It also had a few other food options, so plenty to offer. Other stalls, included cheese vendors, pie sellers, chutney & marmalade makers, so again, plenty of variety, and sure to be something there for everyone. Especially The Weird & Wonderful Cheese Co, who have such a variety of "weird & wonderful" cheeses, from spicy cheese to fruity cheese. I recommend this, and be warned, you will probably walk away with half wheel of cheese when you visit. Definitely worth a stroll around when it is next on in West Didsbury..

    I've been coming to Withington community hospital for Physio sessions recenetly but made a trip…read morethere for a very different reason last saturday. West Didsbury makers market captures the essence of all that is West Didsbury. It's the kinda place Northern Quarter folk will probably end up in their late 30's? Think Vegan prams and dogs doing yoga? Kidding aside this is a great little market, a slightly bigger version of the Levenshulme market, with local vendors showing off their produce. It's an eclectic mix of everything from animal charity stands, to hand made basket stalls and ofcourse plenty of foodie offerings. There's also live music and plenty on offer for those with a sweet tooth. Most of all the appeal lay in the sensational weather on offer. If anything it's worth just to come here soak up the sun and atmosphere. That's precisely what we did. To be honest despite all the delicious foodie stuff on offer I actually only bought some cakes. The place was far too busy for a sit down/enjoy your food scenario and our eventual decision to eat at Pomegranate turned out to be the right one. On a sunny day this place is ideal to enjoy an afternoon, followed by a meal at pomegranate and some drinks somehwere on Burton road. So come check it out, you won't regret it :)

    Photos
    West Didsbury Makers Market
    West Didsbury Makers Market
    West Didsbury Makers Market

    See all

    Real Food Market - Prices and ingredients for Cupcake Palace cupcakes.

    Real Food Market

    4.6(5 reviews)
    1.2 kmPiccadilly
    £££

    Held twice a month in Manchester city centre, Real Food Market sees the North West's farmers…read moredismount their tractors to give Manchester's pasty-faced masses a taste of real nutrition as Mother Nature intended. (I've uploaded over 30 photos, so do have a look!) There are about thirty market stalls in all - hot takeway foods for you to eat on a bench in Piccadilly Gardens, plus apple tarts, fudge, cupcakes, cheeses, preserves and crafts to take home. (As a vegetarian, I didn't pay too much attention to additional non-vegetarian food, but there are stalls in this category which can boast having been featured several times on local television.) I paid £2.50 for a container of Carrot & Coriander Soup the size of a small bucket, mopped up with a Caribbean style vegetarian patty, £1.50. The soup was great, the patty OK. From the Caribbean stall I would be more likely to skip the patty next time and try the Caribbean vegetable curry on rice & beans. Or try something else from the soup stall. Plus, check out Trove Foods, which sells homemade jams and marmalades in recycled jars. http://www.trovefoods.co.uk/home I took home jars of Seville Marmalade and Carrot & Almond Jam - delicious stuff, and a lovely young couple run this business together. Here's a summary of the rest of the stalls and again, do check out my photos as that will give you a good idea: * Hot foods: fresh soups (Carrot & Coriander, Smoked Sausage & Butterbean, Roasted Red Pepper & Tomato, Leek & Potato), BBQ chicken, burgers and big piles of juicy fried onions. Caribbean patties (including vegetarian) plus curried goat, jerk chicken or vegetarian curry with rice & beans. Samosas, spicy chickpea wraps, seekh kebabs. * Sweet foods: patisserie (apple or apricot tarts), homemade sweets and fudges, home baking, cupcakes by Cupcake Palace, retro macaroons. * For your kitchen pantry: Trove Foods homemade marmalade, jams, and spicy sauces and pickles; Mrs. Kirkham's artisan cheeses. * Crafts: bags, African crafts and jewellery, enamelled tableware. I am still quite a Manchester Markets newbie, but I would say the Real Food Market is neck-and-neck with the Arndale Market Food Court and definitely worth timing a visit to town on the second or fourth weekend in the month to catch it. It's all good retro, low carbon, tasty fun - Real Food Market FTW!

    I love food, and I love local produce even more, so I was really pleased to hear about this…read morebi-monthly market held in Piccadilly Gardens. People are looking more and more to their local producer, knowing they're getting eco-friendly quality straight from the source, and I'm all for it. You can pretty much get anything here, great fresh breads, conserves, meats, dairy, speciality cheeses, pies, pickles, ales, puddings. It's an epicurian's paradise and always puts a smile on my face. It runs Friday and Saturday on the 2nd and 4th weekend of the month between 10-6pm.

    Photos
    Real Food Market - Trove Foods sweet chilli dipping sauce and marmalade.

    Trove Foods sweet chilli dipping sauce and marmalade.

    Real Food Market - Trove Foods free samples.

    Trove Foods free samples.

    Real Food Market - Cupcake Palace display.

    See all

    Cupcake Palace display.

    Have A Banana Trading

    Have A Banana Trading

    4.3(7 reviews)
    1.0 kmOxford Road Corridor
    £

    This little fruit and veg stall is located just in front of the small park next to Man Met Uni…read moreacross the road from their Union building. Although it looks like a transient stall, it has been in this location for at least the past 5 and a half years. The best deal here is the 5 fruit for £1 offer. I think it used to be 6, but times are hard! This includes apples, bananas, oranges etc and you are able to mix and match. More exotic fruits such as grapes are obviously more expensive but still cheaper than the supermarkets. They also sell bags of avocadoes, peppers etc for around a pound a pop, though you will have to eat them within a couple of days or share them out amongst your housemates as they won't last as long as supermarket produce. They don't sell much exotic produce - you'd be better off heading up to Worldwide in Rusholme for that. As the stall is situated on the busiest bus route in Europe it is probably recommended to wash your produce before you eat it, though I've had many an apple from here on my way home, and I'm still alive.

    You know how Ronseal claims to 'do what it says on the tin'? Well, what it says on the tin is…read moresomewhat separate to the name of the product. Referred to as Oxford's Road's 'Mixed Fruits Stall' by most, I didn't realise it was called the Have a Banana Trading Co until our beloved stall was under threat due to developments at MMU. 2,415 people joined a Facebook group to help save it, and saved it has been. Not bad, huh? Shows how popular it is. I constantly walk past this stall on Oxford Road in a rush to get to the Aquatics Centre, but as I didn't have to rush back today, I took a moment to browse. I'd been drawn in by the two for £2 on their punnets of blueberries, an offer which seemed to be a longterm one, and then proceeded to be (fruit)bowled over by the value. Tenderstem broccoli, our favourite, a quid a pack. Six crunchy Braeburns, or six sweet Pink Ladies, or six of any variety of apple it seemed, bagged up and ready to go, £1. Bananas, a generous bunch, £1. I spent a mere £6 and I've returned with enough fruit and veg for the week. Surrounded by students whose diets may consist of alcohol, nicotine, caffeine and the occasional kebab, we all know an affordable place like this is appealing to a market just crying out for a bit of vitamin C. You can get a great deal of fresh grocery shopping done here, and you know it's locally sourced and ethically sound. It might be on a busy street but it's soooo cheap and incredibly convenient. The vendors are lovely and friendly, always happy to be there in all weathers (and we know Manchester can have some harsh weathers), and they tweet too! https://twitter.com/#!/bananastall Shop local, buddies!

    Withington Street Markets

    Withington Street Markets

    4.0(2 reviews)
    4.9 km
    ££

    The great thing about the Manchester Street Markets is a) they take place in my neighbourhood…read more(they're all South Manchester suburb-based), and b) you can always get something a little different at each of them. After checking out Northenden's offering I was delighted to see the familiar faces of The Butterfly Cupcakery and I recognised the awesome Mint & Garlic who I'd met previously at one of the Farmers Markets at Piccadilly Gardens. So what else to do at such a gorgeous market but shop? There were tasty-smelling fresh soups, a butcher and a fishmonger, preserves and cheeses as well as cakes, and as well as this you can get some bags, gifts and suchlike. Bex and I treated ourselves to a choccy brownie and a slab of carrot cake respectively from Butterfly, then I did a wee bit of shopping from Mint & Garlic next door. My swag included three large, delightfully turquoise duck eggs (I've never had duck eggs before and am looking forward to making them into a quiche this week!), a punnet of strawberries that smelled incredible and tasted even better, a sweet potato whereby I was advised that you should always go for the long, thin ones as they harbour the most sweetness, and a vine of plum tomatoes whose rich depth of flavour made for brilliant roasting. There's a really lovely vibe to Copson Street so early on a Saturday morning, and a great eclectic mix of student types, young professionals and locals. I'm definitely going to be coming back here for some more grocery shopping, I was muchly impressed.

    In the pecking order of Manchester street markets, I would rank Withington's market on the second…read moreSaturday of each month below Chorlton, Castlefield Artisan and the twice-monthly Real Food Market in Piccadilly. However, all the stall are proper artisan, local flavour stuff, which puts this little capsule market ahead of some of the grosser and commercialised elements of the Christmas Markets, for example. It's OK, but there aren't really enough stalls at this one to make it worth a special trip. So more of a market for the Withington locals, unless you have become hooked on the goods from one of the stalls and need your weekly fix. And there are definitely worse things addicted to than Dough-It-Yourself artisan pizza bases, Traditionally Cheesy artisan cheeses (with vegetarian cheeses clearly marked), Trove Foods baked goods and jams and a few others. Plus at least one Withington community organisation stall, which I think I would find pleasantly mumsy if I was a student living in the area! :-) But if you only make one visit in the month to the south Manchester street market circuit, then Chorlton on the third Saturday is your best bet. Disclaimer: Be aware that street markets and street food are undergoing something of a revival, and that an obvious next step for Manchester markets would be for more of the stallholders who show at the Chorlton and other markets to roll up to Withington for one day in the month. So - keep an eye on things, and also 'Be the change you want to see in the world' and all that, if you are a market fan!

    Chorlton Street Market

    Chorlton Street Market

    4.0(1 review)
    3.9 kmChorlton
    ££

    Held on the third Saturday of each month, Chorlton Market is worth a visit in its own right as the…read morebiggest and best on the South Manchester Street Market circuit. And although the newbie Castlefield Artisan Market just shades Chorlton in terms of the quality of the stalls (as I'm vegetarian YMMV) and has the benefit of the outstanding canalside location, Chorlton Street Market is still number one for me as a 'must do' trip. Because the Chorlton suburb is 'Bohemian Like You' and there are lots of other great businesses right next to the market. A case in point was the three-course lunch I put together for myself on my most recent visit to Chorlton Market. First up, a deep-fried Brazilian savoury 'apim' - imagine a croquette the size and shape of a sweet potato, but made from processed cassava flavoured with chives, filled with mozzarella and covered in breadcumbs - £2.95 (see photo). Next up, an almond & raspberry tart from Trove, £1.70 (see photo). Ending with split pea and rosemary soup to go from Unicorn, probably £1.50 or so. At a total cost of just over £6, that is one interesting, fresh and high quality meal, I can tell you! Trove I have already reviewed under the business listing for their Levenshulme café. But the Brazilian business is a stand-out street food offering. They call themselves 'Brazilia Snacks, Manchester's first Brazilian Pasteleria'. Basically, it is the old story - English guy goes to Brazil, falls in love with a Brazilian beauty and persuades her to come back to England with him. And, boy, can she cook Brazilian food! However, he was telling me that the Brazilian taste is for tons of salt and sugar, so they have nicely toned down their offerings to be more in tune with the English palate. They mould the croquettes and other savouries the night before, but cook them on the spot in front of you - ace tasting! Even sticking to the stretch of Manchester Road between the swimming baths and the library/market, you have Crema, Unicorn, Barbakan (polish deli, and they cook sausage and veg curries out the front on Saturdays), Tea Hive, Marble, take your pick. And lots more stuff at the market which isn't for me as a lacto-vegetarian, but might be for you - Pudding & Pie Café with traditional pies straight off the farm, another stall based around Spanish tortilla and soups, mini-pasties over there, cupcakes, cheeses, you name it. (Actually, almost all those business do have something for me, such as Pudding & Pie's cheese and potato slab pie - and you would need to be a farm worker to finish that thing!) Four stars because I feel this is just the beginning. Now that Manchester Markets have established the street markets, I would expect even more exciting new stallholders to feel it worth their while to participate. And then some stalls that do really well moving into permanent premises - Tea Hive is a graduate of the south Manchester Street Markets, I think.

    Photos
    Chorlton Street Market - Apim - cassava and chive croquette, mozzarella centre, breadcrumb coating - by Brazilia Snacks.

    Apim - cassava and chive croquette, mozzarella centre, breadcrumb coating - by Brazilia Snacks.

    Chorlton Street Market - Almond & raspberry tart by Trove of Levenshulme.

    Almond & raspberry tart by Trove of Levenshulme.

    Chorlton Street Market

    See all

    Upper Campfield Market Hall - farmersmarket - Updated May 2026

    Loading...
    Loading...
    Loading...