Just a few months after opening Harana Marketโ€™s original Woodstock location in the fall of 2020, owners Chris Mauricio and Eva Tringali knew they were going to need a bigger space. โ€œPeople always say that you need three to five years to see whether a new business is actually going to make it,โ€ says Tringali, โ€œbut the response was so immediate that we knew even then that we needed to start searching for our next home.โ€ In early December, after almost two years of community fundraising and build-out, the second iteration of their beloved Filipino deli and Asian market opened on Route 209 in Accord.

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Haranaโ€™s new home, the spacious 2,500-square-foot barn on Route 209 that has previously been home to everything from a gym to a pizza restaurant and a barbecue joint, offered Mauricio and Tringali an opportunity to dramatically expand their footprint.

Their original location, a 100-year-old general store perched on a sharp curve on Wittenberg Road, was known for its precarious parking situation and tiny 800-square-foot interior that only accommodated a few customers at a time. Despite its physical constraints, Mauricio and Tringali grew Harana (the Tagalog word for serenade) into a warm-hearted community hub that รขย€ย‹รขย€ย‹celebrated the homestyle Filipino recipes handed down to Mauricio by their grandmother and served as a safe โ€œthird placeโ€ for Queer, Trans, AAPI, and BIPOC communities in the Hudson Valley.

A Community-Supported Expansion

The couple began fundraising last summer, and through a generous loan from a local Filipino family, a silent auction, a GoFundMe fundraiser, and a HaloHaloween event at neighboring Skate Time raised over $30,000. To bring Harana 2.0 to life, they partnered with Ora Ferdman of Accord-based Fora Construction. โ€œOra, our Earth angel, reached out to us over email and said, โ€˜Hey, Iโ€™m a neighbor and a builder and I want to help you with this project,โ€™โ€ says Tringali. โ€œNone of this would have happened without her.โ€

Credit: Photo by Casey Seo

After almost a decade of working for general contractors on residential and commercial projectsโ€”over five years in the areaโ€”that have included Hotel Kinsley and Lola in Kingston, Ferdman, a designer and third-generation builder, opened her own firm last year to focus on building trans, queer, POC, and women-run community spaces in the Hudson Valley.

Credit: Photo by Jason Bover

Inspired by photographs from Mauricio and Tringaliโ€™s visits to the Philippines, Ferdman worked closely with the couple to design a space that felt like home and honored the heritage of Haranaโ€™s lutong bahay (homestyle) Filipino food. Next to the front door, Ferdman hand-paintedย the Tagalog words โ€œKain Tayoโ€ (Letโ€™s Eat) in bright turquoise, a color that is carried throughout the dining space and the custom banquet that runs along the back wall and in the lacquered countertop of the DJ booth, which fills the space with music in a nod to Haranaโ€™s namesake.

Credit: Courtesy Harana Market

In addition to the banquet, two-top tables that Ferdmanโ€™s team fabricated from salvaged wood provide seating for almost 30 inside, and there are a handful of picnic tables in the large front yard for when the weather is nice. In the coming months, Ferdman will also be hand-painting murals in the interior, and working with Mauricio and Tringali to build-out the propertyโ€™s 1,000-square-foot outbuilding for Haranaโ€™s community events. โ€œThis project has been so collaborative,” Ferdman says. “It really felt like we were supporting each other throughout the process.”

Menu Mainstays Hold Strong

Inspired by generations-old family recipes, Mauricioโ€™s hand-rolled lumpia, impossibly crispy patis citrus fried chicken, garlicky arroz caldo, and fiery tofu sisig put Harana Market on the map as a food destination quickly, earning accolades from the New York Times as a must-visit new restaurant in the Catskills and a recent nomination for best chef in New York State from the James Beard Foundation.

At the new location, Mauricio and their team will continue to offer all of Haranaโ€™s classic, seasonally rotating dishes, as well as a few new menu items including a $7 silog rice bowl and the option to make rice plate entrees family style and receive a larger portion with no rice. BYOB is also welcome, and there is now more shelf space for their selection of Asian pantry items such as gochujang, fish sauce, dried and frozen noodles, and sweet treats, as well as Indigenous housewares and imported foods from independent makers and vendors.

โ€œThatโ€™s part of the magic for me when I go to work everyday,โ€ says Mauricio. โ€œWeโ€™re not only creating space but access to ingredients that make people feel closer to home.โ€

Credit: Photo by Jason Bover

Running a Mission-Driven Business

From day one of their Wittenberg location opening, the couple has imbued their business with a โ€œrising tides lift all boatsโ€ ethos, focusing on fostering a supportive, inclusive environment that creates positive impact for their team, customers, and their community.

Credit: Courtesy Harana Market

Longtime Harana customers may notice the prices have increased on each menu item by a few dollars, an intentional move to a gratuity-included system that helps provide Harana staff with a living wage. Their food equity programs, which includes a pay-it-forward gift wall that invites visitors to give or take prepaid meal vouchers, and a โ€˜Chosen Familyโ€™ meal program where every Sunday LGBTQIA+ people eat free, will also continue at the new location, in addition to a slate of new events and programming.

โ€œBeing mission-driven and family-owned gives us an opportunity to directly contribute to the type of world we want to live in,โ€ Tringali says. โ€œWe get to choose what our priorities are and make business decisions in support of that.โ€

Harana Market
5125 Route 209, Accord
Thursday-Monday, 11:30am-6:30pm
Haranamarket.com

Ashleigh is a writer, beginning farmer, and advocate for all things Catskills. As Chronogram Media's Branded Content Editor, she works with clients to share their stories with readers through engaging...

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