đź«™ YOUR KITCHEN ALREADY MAKES THE PRODUCT. NOW LET IT MAKE INCOME.
You have jars on the shelf, baked goods on the counter, and a homestead producing more than your family can use. This book shows you how to turn that surplus into a real, legal, small-scale income — without a commercial kitchen, a business degree, or quitting what you already love.
🌿 WHAT’S INSIDE:
✅ Cottage food law by state — how to find your rules, register correctly, and sell with confidence
✅ Product audit for home producers — sort your pantry into sellable, almost-ready, and not-yet piles
✅ Food safety for home kitchens — hygiene routines, temperature rules, jar sealing, and allergen labeling
✅ Pricing that pays you — ingredient costing, labor value, overhead, and setting a real shelf price with margin
✅ Cottage food label requirements — required text, allergen disclosures, batch notes, and low-cost print options
✅ Farmers market setup for beginners — choosing the right market, table rhythm, and a first-day checklist
✅ Farm stand and CSA add-on sales — low-effort, recurring income from your existing customer base
✅ Online cottage food sales rules — what is legal, local pickup workarounds, and simple payment tracking
✅ Seasonal production planning — batch scheduling, harvest calendars, and protecting yourself from burnout
✅ Home bakery record keeping — simple income and expense tracking, inventory notes, and tax basics
✅ Homemade jam and preserve labeling — tested methods, shelf stability checks, and safe acidity guidelines
✅ Scaling a cottage food business — signals to grow, the true costs of expansion, and how to make staying small sustainable
✅ Customer relationships and local marketing — product storytelling, repeat buyers, loyalty, and community partnerships
👤 WHO THIS IS FOR:
This book is written for homesteaders, hobby farmers, home bakers, and rural makers who want to start a cottage food business from what they already produce. If you make preserves, baked goods, dried herbs, or fermented foods and want to sell legally at a farmers market, farm stand, or through your local community — this is your starting point. No commercial kitchen required. No prior business experience needed.
💰 One good product. One clear label. One place to sell. Start there — and let the homestead pay for itself.









