Pinata Store by the OKC Farmers Market Is More Produce Than Party Supplies

Exterior of Pinata Store near the Oklahoma City Farmers Market with a sign for fresh fruits, vegetables, and roasted peanuts
Pinata Store in Oklahoma City’s Farmers Market District is a small produce stop near the historic OKC Farmers Market with local plants, seasonal fruits and vegetables, Oklahoma-made salsa, mushrooms, sweet corn, and other rotating finds.

I’ve walked past plenty of places in Oklahoma City where the name tells you exactly what to expect. Pinata Store is not one of them.

Potted basil plants outside Pinata Store with an open sign and produce displays near the entrance
Fresh basil plants sit outside the open storefront, giving the shop more of a produce-stand feel.

Tucked into the row of garage-style storefronts beside the Oklahoma City Farmers Market, Pinata Store sounds like it ought to be full of party supplies. What I keep finding instead is fresh produce, plants, Oklahoma-made goods, and the kind of seasonal odds and ends that make a small market stop more interesting than a grocery run.

I’ve been coming here for years, and it never feels exactly the same twice. That is part of the point.

Large display of vine-ripe East Texas tomatoes for sale at Pinata Store near the OKC Farmers Market
A table of vine-ripe East Texas tomatoes makes the produce focus hard to miss.

On this visit, I saw marinated mushrooms from Oklahoma City, baby sweet corn from Edmond, Oklahoma-made salsa, fresh fruits and vegetables, and a spread of plants ready for somebody’s porch, backyard, raised bed, or “I swear I’m going to garden this year” phase. Around here, that phase usually starts strong right after a nice Saturday morning and gets tested by July.

A small stop in a real food district

Pinata Store sits at 311 S Klein Ave in Oklahoma City, right by the Historic Oklahoma City Farmers Public Market. This part of town has been tied to local food and distribution for a long time. The public market dates back to 1928, and the Farmers Market District still has that useful mix of produce, plants, restaurants, breweries, food trucks, and old buildings doing new things.

Jars of sweet baby corn and marinated mushrooms on shelves inside Pinata Store
Inside, the shelves include jarred goods like baby corn and marinated mushrooms.

That context matters. Pinata Store does not feel like a polished specialty grocer trying to look rustic. It feels like a practical little market that belongs where it is.

The shelves and displays change with what is in season and what local growers and makers have brought in. That might mean sweet corn one day, salsa another day, mushrooms, roasted nuts, candies, tomatoes, beans, or whatever happens to be sitting there looking like it came from somebody who knows what they are doing.

The plants are the thing I always check

Jars of Oklahoma’s Tornado Salsa displayed on shelves inside Pinata Store
Oklahoma’s Tornado Salsa is among the shelf goods inside the store.

The produce is reason enough to stop, but the plants are what I always end up looking over.

The owner brings in plants he has started himself, and I’ve found everything from small seedlings to larger garden-ready plants. What stands out is the price. Compared with the big box garden center routine, Pinata Store can feel like you found the old-school version of buying plants, before every tomato start got treated like a boutique lifestyle object.

There is something satisfying about buying a plant from a person who actually started it. You are not just grabbing a plastic pot off a rack. You are buying into the local growing loop a little bit, and that is the kind of thing the Farmers Market District still does well.

Make it part of a Farmers Market stop

Pinata Store works best as part of a loose afternoon in the district. Go browse the OKC Farmers Market, wander the area, then duck into Pinata Store to see what is on hand that day.

That “what’s on hand” part is important. This is not the place I’d describe by a fixed shopping list. It is better as a check-in. Maybe you leave with salsa. Maybe you leave with sweet corn. Maybe you leave with a few plants and the sudden confidence that this will be the year your garden behaves.

If you are already near the market, it is an easy add-on. On my visit, it also paired well with a bite from Shaq Vegan Dogs nearby, which is exactly the sort of little OKC errand combination that makes more sense once you are standing there.

Pinata Store is one of those places I like because it is useful without making a big production of itself. Fresh produce, local products, plants, seasonal finds, and a location that still feels connected to Oklahoma City’s food roots.

Not everything in town needs to be shiny to be worth noticing. Sometimes the good stop is sitting in a garage row by the market, under a name that sends you in the wrong direction on purpose.

Interior of Pinata Store with long produce displays, fruit bins, and a shopper browsing
The interior is lined with produce cases and bins of fruit, more market than party shop.
Bins of white, yellow, and red onions for sale inside Pinata Store near the OKC Farmers Market
Onions of several varieties fill the produce case inside the shop.

Details

Links

Share the Post:

Related Posts