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Five stops. None more than ten minutes apart.
This is the Saturday itinerary built around morning food – the market, the breakfast spot, the chocolate maker, and a slow afternoon that earns its dinner reservation. Reserve dinner; everything else is walk-in.
Park by the courthouse on Chicago Boulevard. Grab coffee from whatever is open and walk east toward the Farmer’s Market on Evans Street.
The market runs Saturdays, 9 to 1, roughly May through October. Eighteen vendors when the season is running strong. Walk the full loop before you buy anything. The good cider guy is always near the back, and you will miss him if you commit too early.
Spend thirty minutes. Buy what looks right. The produce is better than what you drove past on the way here.
Harvest Chocolate is a block from the market on Chicago Boulevard.
Small-batch, single-origin, tempered on-site by people who care a little too much. That is a compliment. Try the 70% bar and a sample of whatever they are making that morning. The smell when you walk in takes a second to register, then you cannot focus on anything else.
Buy a bar for the drive home and one for someone who did not come with you.
Rosie’s Tecumseh Cafe is the breakfast canon.
The eggs benedict and a corner booth. The line moves. Do not show up after 10:30 expecting to sit down immediately – that is not how Rosie’s works on Saturday. But the wait is part of the thing, and the food justifies it.
Sit by the window if you can. Order coffee even if you already had some.
You have eaten enough. Walk it off.
Evans Street and Chicago Boulevard have the shops worth the slow lap. Hopscotch Kids if you have children or know any. Patina Jewelry for the kind of thing you buy yourself and feel good about. The antique stores rotate inventory enough that regulars come back monthly.
Three blocks, no hurry. You will tell yourself you are just looking. Budget an hour.
This is the part of the day most itineraries skip. You are full, you have shopped, and dinner is not for three hours.
Evans Park is across from where the market was. Bring the coffee you should have bought at Harvest Chocolate. If you have kids, the park solves the kid problem. If you do not, a bench and a book work.
Pentamere Winery is the other option. A tasting flight and a patio. Not trying to be Napa – just a good local winery doing what it does.
Danley’s Country House is the reservation you made from Ann Arbor on Wednesday.
Worth it. The kind of dinner that makes you wonder why you do not do this more often. Sit on the patio if the weather is cooperating. The drive home after is forty minutes and you will spend most of it planning when to come back.
Park once on Chicago Boulevard. Every stop is walkable except Danley’s, which is a five-minute drive. The market is seasonal – check before you build your Saturday around it.
Total cost for two: coffee ($12), market purchases ($20-40), Harvest Chocolate ($15-25), Rosie’s ($35-50), shopping (your call), Danley’s ($80-120). Call it $200-280 for a full day, most of which is food you would have eaten anyway.
More itineraries at mitecumseh.com/category/itinerary.