Ohio Cooperative Living's 2023 Holiday Gift Guide

When stockings are hung by the chimney with care, they cry out to be filled with made-in-Ohio gifts that help Santa not only enchant everyone’s nearest and dearest but also give a boost to entrepreneurs and artisans throughout the state. We’ve found a selection of items that are useful, unique, and, in some cases, downright ingenious.

American Classic Snack, Wadsworth

Using locally grown corn and ingredients such as homemade caramel and toffee, American Classic Snack Company has produced handcrafted, small-batch popcorn snacks for more than 30 years.

American Whistle, Columbus
Beagle Bay Knot Works, Huron
D.B. Yummers, Washington Court House
Firelands Adventure Tours, Sandusky
Four Eyes Ceramics, Cincinnati
Ohio Stoneware, Zanesville
Pantless Jams, Toledo
Phoenix Bats, Plain City
Sweet Fire Sugar Bush, Glenmont
Sylvan Craft, Dalton
The Cobbler Candle Company, Berea
The Green Cottage Makery, Hartville
Unnatural Ohio, Fremont
Wittich's Candy Shop, Circleville
ZerOz, Columbus

American Classic Snack Company, Wadsworth

Using locally grown corn and ingredients such as homemade caramel and toffee, American Classic Snack Company has produced handcrafted, small-batch popcorn snacks for more than 30 years. While Buckeye Blitz is a year-round favorite generously coated with peanut butter and chocolate, the company’s palate-pleasing treats also include Bear Claw with Cashews, Beer Cheese + Bourbon, Caramel Apple, and Pumpkin Pie Crunch. 877-745-7207; orders@americanclassicsnackcompany.com; www.americanclassicpopcorn.com.

American Whistle Corporation, Columbus

American Whistle is the nation’s only metal whistle manufacturer, using exclusively made-in-the-USA materials to annually produce more than a million solid brass whistles. Ideal for stocking stuffers, the whistles are available with a variety of finishes and stamped images, and American Whistle owners Dominic and Kelly Davirro operate a factory store and give family-friendly factory tours that will blow you away. 614-846-2918; custserv@americanwhistle.com; www.americanwhistle.com.

Beagle Bay Knot Works, Huron

Everything is knotty and nice at Christine and Randy Crawford’s nautical-themed shop in downtown Huron. Using centuries-old mariners’ knot-tying techniques, the seasoned Lake Erie sailors cleverly transform rope and cord into lifestyle items for land and sea. They make Star Knot ornaments and crowned knot Candy Cane ornaments in Christmas colors, and their Manila rope wreaths look shipshape in any decor. 330-465-0890; beaglebayknots@aol.com; www.beaglebayknotworks.com.

D.B. Yummers, Washington Court House

Currently owned and operated by Brian Detty and his family, D.B. Yummers dates to 1991, when it started producing barbecue sauce as a fundraiser for local FFA chapters. The company’s barbecue sauce won a blue ribbon at an Ohio State Fair rib cook-off. Besides the original Sweet & Smokey Barbecue Sauce, the Dettys offer Mildly Spicey sauce and Island BBQ sauce laced with crushed pineapple. 740-505-4021; info@dbyummers.comwww.dbyummers.com.

Firelands Adventure Tours, Sandusky

Stumped by what to get those hard-to-buy-for folks on your list? Consider a gift certificate for an edifying and enjoyable outing with Jim Ervin and Dick Ries of award-winning Firelands Adventure Tours. Guests ride in an 18-passenger, ADA-compliant bus on their way to experiences that range from meeting winemakers to exploring lighthouses to leg lamp scavenger hunts during Holiday Lights excursions. 419-734-9283; info@firelandsadventuretours.com; www.firelandsadventuretours.com.

Four Eyes Ceramics, Cincinnati

Working from her home studio, Jenny Rush designs and crafts boldly colored, statement-making ceramic earrings, necklaces, and bracelets from U.S.-sourced clays and metals. Her geometric Big Arch, Cutout Dangle, and Mini Dome earrings are perennial bestsellers, and customers love that they’re thin, lightweight, and comfortable to wear.
jenny@foureyesceramics.com; www.foureyesceramics.com.

Ohio Stoneware, Zanesville

Ross and Tiffany Pattison run one of the nation’s last commercial potteries, and their 100% American-made product line includes bakeware, kitchenware, fermenting crocks, planters, pet bowls, and piggy banks. Festive holiday plates, mugs, and serving pieces are hand-decorated with designs like Gingerbread, Red Truck, Buckeye Snowman, and Red Cardinal. They’re available online or at Ohio Stoneware’s factory retail store. 740-450-4415; info@ohiostoneware.com; www.stonewareoutlet.com.

Pantless Jams, Toledo

Jessica Hopkins calls her handmade jams “pantless” because they’re stripped of unnatural ingredients and contain only fruit, unrefined cane sugar, and lemon juice. She personally does everything from prepping and mashing fruit to filling and labeling jars, and her appetizing array of flavor combinations includes Peach Mango Habanero, Strawberry Rhubarb, and Blue Honey Lavender. 419-283-8470; pantlessjamsllc@gmail.com; www.pantlessjams.com.

Phoenix Bats, Plain City

Started in 1996 in a one-man workshop, Phoenix Bats now boasts a state-of-the-art facility served by Union Rural Electric Cooperative. Using USA-sourced ash, maple, and birch, it manufactures bats used by Major League players, softball teams, hitting coaches, vintage leagues, and Little Leaguers, and also makes trophy and award bats. Score one online or by visiting the factory store. 614-873-7776; customercare@phoenixbats.com; www.phoenixbats.com.

Sweet Fire Sugar Bush, Glenmont

Holmes-Wayne Electric Cooperative member Melissa Biltz and her son, Jason Blitz, work together to create Sweet Fire Sugar Bush’s products. While Jason oversees sap collection, Melissa masterminds their maple sugar-based barbecue rubs, maple sugar-coated nuts, and infused maple syrups. Their cinnamon syrup is yummy on French toast; elderberry syrup makes a great mixer; and chili pepper syrup works wonders on vanilla ice cream. 330-231-6175; sweetfiresugarbush@gmail.com; www.sweetfiresugarbush.com.

Sylvan Craft, Dalton

Craig Mast and Chris Meyer share a pair of passions: forest restoration and turning fallen trees into handsome “forest-to-table” cutting boards, live-edge charcuterie boards, and furniture. All the wood they use comes from their own forest near Fresno, thoughtfully harvested using horse-drawn equipment and other low-impact methods. 330-203-1343; info@sylvancraft.com; www.sylvancraft.com.

The Cobbler Candle Company, Berea

Chad Smith makes candles look extra-merry by decorating them with smiling Santa, elf, and snowman faces formed from cloves, peppercorns, and cinnamon sticks. His hand-dipped soy wax candles are extra-fragrant because they’re scented top-to-bottom with essential oils. He also produces snowman-faced LED candles, and his Winter Trio jar candle features the aromas of pine needles, candy canes, and red-hot cinnamon. 440-454-0571; cobblercandlecompany@gmail.com; www.cobblercandle.com.

The Green Cottage Makery, Hartville

Julie Matola’s desire for green living inspires the organic body and home essentials she hand-makes in her 130-year-old farmhouse. Featuring eye-catching packaging and subtle, nature-based scents, her preservative-free products include avocado oil lip balms that come in chunky, earth-friendly paper tubes and a whipped body butter that blends the healing properties of calendula flowers with hydrating coconut oil, shea butter, and pomegranate seed oil. 330-730-4408; julie@greencottagemakery.com; www.greencottagemakery.com.

Unnatural Ohio: A History of Buckeye Cryptids, Legends, and Other Mysteries, Fremont

A Rutherford B. Hayes Presidential Library & Museums exhibit prompted its artifacts curator, Kevin Moore, and communication manager, M. Kristina Smith, to delve into Ohio’s paranormal and unexplained phenomena. Their new book covers facts, fiction, and folklore about everything from the Dogman of Defiance and South Bay Bessie to Portage County’s UFOs and Vermilion’s Gore Orphanage ghosts. www.rbhayes.org/store.

Wittich’s Candy Shop, Circleville

South Central Power Company member Janet Wittich’s confectionary has been in her family since 1840. Wittich’s proudly hand-dips old-fashioned, preservative-free chocolates, and its unique buckeyes have peanut butter centers that are fully covered in chocolate to keep them moist, with peanut butter dots on the outside. In addition to typical milk and dark chocolate versions, Wittich’s also produces hard-to-find white chocolate buckeyes. 740-474-3313; wittichscandy@frontier.com; www.wittichscandyshop.com.

zerOz, Columbus

Lighten your Christmas gift list with ultra-slim zerOz wallets, a cool and useful option for kids, retirees, and everyone in between. Handmade in a downtown studio storefront by zerOz owner and inventor Paul Westrick and his team, the wallets consist of Italian and composite recycled leathers in a variety of colors and styles. Tip: For a customized zerOz, order by Dec. 1. info@zeroz.com; www.zeroz.com.