Monday, September 6, 2010

Baking and Lots of It

We have been baking. ALOT.  Mostly muffins.  They are easy?  How easy? Easy enough that you shouldn't bother buying the baking mix.   It takes exactly 5 minutes to mix up the batter.  I use the recipe on What's For Lunch At Our House's website : http://bentolunch.blogspot.com/2010/04/muffin-recipe-from-yesterday.html  I have been following the blog for about a year and started making the Corn Dog Muffins first.  Corn Dog Muffins?  Chop three hot dogs, throw them and a handful of shredded cheese into a bowl of Jif Corn Muffin Mix.  Bake. Done. Yum (if you like corn dogs, which I do!)  Anyway, we have made homemade blueberry muffins and we also made a batch of zucchini and carrot muffins.  You can also halve the batter once you have mixed it, and make half a batch of one type and half of another.  So easy and as I have learned from Shannon's blog, they freeze easily. You can put anything in these muffins....chocolate chips, berries of any kind, etc. and have a great result everytime. 

You can also find the recipe for the zucchini bars we made the other day here : http://www.betterrecipes.com/blogs/daily-dish/2010/08/03/garden-fresh-zucchini-bars/
However, I would leave the cinnamon OUT of the frosting.  Or just forego the frosting all together.  The bars are great and moist on their own, and I thought the frosting gave it kind of a cinnamon roll like flavor, which wasn't what I was going for. 

Here are my helpers making the bars. Rose is sifting. I have learned that SIFTING IS IMPORTANT and if a recipe calls for SIFTED FLOUR, it means to sift it BEFORE you measure it!

Happy muffin making!

Sunday, August 1, 2010

I Can't Believe Summer Is Almost Over!!

Summer has just flown by, so here is short photo essay of what has gone on around here....
Rose actually posed for a picture

Luckie, our "rescue" mare from the winter, finally filled out and started to look beautiful.

Wyatt played in the sandbox
 
Hilda and the rest of the crew ate and got a nice grass bloom

Rose and Wyatt played on the swing

Captain has done absolutely nothing useful

The end.

Georgia Cooking in Colorado Kitchen

For my birthday I got the cookbook Georgia Cooking in an Oklahoma Kitchen by Trisha Yearwood.  My favorite song by Trisha, Believe Me Baby I Lied, circa 1996 was one of the first country tunes I ever heard.  And I have never looked back.  Except when I listen to Tupac or Pink or Daughtry. But I digress.  Her cookbook is awesome.  You don't have to be a cook to cook most of the stuff in it.  None of it is intimidating.  Caveat, very little of it is good for you. 

The first thing I cooked out of this book was Chicken Broccoli Casserole (or Chicken Divan for you southern folk) and Braden really liked it.  Rose refused to try it.  She is a picky little thing.  
Next, I made sausage balls.  I used some home grown Italian sausage, homemade biscuit mix, and cheese.  Seriously, DON'T buy biscuit mix. You are saving yourself the trouble of measuring baking powder, flour, and salt and you have added preservatives.  So, just make it yourself! Anyway, sausage balls involve mixing the three above ingredients and baking the 1 inch balls.  My Aunt always used to make these for holidays and parties.  I didn't really like them when I was younger when my tender palate couldn't even handle the spice of sausage.  Now, I can at least handle that.  These were yummy and would be good for breakfast, brunch, or appetizers anytime.

So, if like me you aren't great in the kitchen, go get this cookbook and start cooking.  I am going to try some of the desserts next.




Friday, June 11, 2010

The Morphing of a Varnish Roan Appaloosa


Our miniature gelding, Doodle, is just 2 years old and I want to chronicle his coat color through the years.  The varnish roan pattern of an appaloosa is very interesting.  I like coat colors and their variations in general. While I am not a huge fan of the appearance of the appaloosa horse, their coats are quit interesting. These varnish roan horses change color every year until at 8-10 years old they are at their final coloration. Doodle's mother, LHR Sizzlers Sweet Sixteen, is 11 years old demonstrates the varnish roan pattern above as an 8 year old and as a 10 year old (right) Although the 10 year old picture leaves some lighting to be desired, you can see her stifle and the spot on the point of her hip are obviously lighter.

When her son, Doodle, was born in April of 2007 I immediately discerned he was an appaloosa because he had characteristic mottling of his muzzle and vertical tiger stripes in his feet.  Here is the cute little bugger at about 2 weeks old.

Doodle is also a unique silver dapple.  He is not a typical bay.  His stockings have maintained the mottled appearance and his mane and tail are not black.  His tail is almost a gold color with some black mixed in, and his mane is a mix of black, grey, and gold.   The photo below shows his unique tail color.


                                             
As a yearling, Doodle still looks to be almost entirely a silver dapple.  You can discern in the photos he does have some minor flecking over his rump. I am apparently short any quality photos of him from last year. YOu can see well in these photos though that he doesn't have the black points typical of a bay horse, but his front legs and tail have more of a golden hue to them



As a 2 year old, in 2010, the molt is on!  He looks like he has some sort of fungus! He changed dramatically when shedding off his winter coat (which is not quite through, but I got impatient and wanted to do this blog)  It is hard to believe in a few years he will look just like his mother, except for his baby blue eyes!
                                       
and finally, the finished product. LHR Sizzlers Sweet Sixteen in 2010 at an 11 year old.  Her coloring should not change much more throughout her lifetime.

Thursday, April 22, 2010

An at home bento....

I haven't been posting much lately.  My new camera is broken, and my "old" camera has somehow pissed off my laptop to the point they will no longer communicate with one another.  So I had to convince my desktop computer I needed to upload some pictures.  One of them happened to be this "at home" bento we made the other day.  Somehow, we have completely lost our nice stainless steel pico lunchbots boxes.  I am sure they will be found someday (under a seat in the car, maybe?)

Rose put all the grapes on their picks and had a great time doing it.  She had strawberries, bananas, peppers, a piece of turkey, cornflakes, and grapes displayed in a big piece of tupperware until I can find some more bento gear to replace my temporarily misplaced lunchbots.




In other news:
The work has started on our new house in Berthoud, though it doesn't look like we will actually get to move in until July. 

Rose's very first horse show is May 2nd. She will be riding Daisy in the leadline class.  Stay posted to hear how that goes!

The first horse show of the year was the Rocky Mountain Paint Horse Association Paint - O - Rama in Denver.  I took my mare, Miss Bonita Dry, at the last minute.  Braden had the day off and we didn't have plans, so I figured I shouldn't pass up the opportunity which is a good thing because now I will be missing the Memorial Day show to attend a wedding.  I have never shown Bonita but she warmed up nicely and was unconcerned with the atmosphere.  For those of you who aren't horse folks I show my horses in an event called reining.  It is basically work you would do with a cow, but without the cow.  You are judged based on your horses talent to do the manuvers, but even moreso on the obedience of the horse to your cues. In the novice amateur class, I placed 6th out of 6th.  Obedience went out the window when Bonita kicked out at my leg twice and took the incorrect lead starting in a cicle. Really? She is 13 and has done this plenty. It was not a pretty moment and I was so shocked instead of flying change (changing in motion) I completely stopped and started again.  Like the judges didn't notice THAT.  I usually run the novice amateur class very reserved, because I have a good chance at winning it so I just take it easy and do the pattern nice and corect and don't try to get any "bonus" points. On this day, I saw I had some competition so I decided to run the pattern really hard and ask alot of my horse and it, obviously, did not work out. In the amateur class, I usually have less of a chance of placing well, so I usually go out there and run it really hard.  I changed my plan after the results of the previous class. I took off my spurs.  I didn't ask her to run as fast, spin as fast, or stop as hard. And you know what? We won.  Out of 10 entries, of at least a few who were World Show competitors in the recent past and most whose horses were plucked directly out of their stall at the trainers barn and brought to the show.  Not out of their owners backyard, out of shape, still hairy from winter, and ridden sporadically.  Needless to say, I was very happy with our run, we earned 9 APHA points which puts us 1 point away from Register of Merit I am hoping we can earn that at the next show in June.

I would post pictures, but unforunately my scanner does not want to talk to my computer either, so when they work out their difference we'll get them up.

Monday, April 12, 2010

Spring is here.....

And in my world that means one thing.  Horse sex. And lots of it. You think breeding horses is easy? Think again.  I have come to the conclusion that we humans have done a fabulous job interfering with nature.  We have stallions that have erectile dysfunction and mares who can't figure out if they want to be bred or not.  It makes for interesting adventures trying to convince two creatures under not so natural circumstances that they should in fact copulate when and where we tell them.  Mr. Handsome pictured above decided last year to take out his frustrations of human interference on his ladies, or at least I can only assume that was the issue.  So now he is outfitted with a muzzle I call his Hannibal mask so he cannot ravage the girls with his teeth.  This frustrates him even further.  The books will tell you a stallion is ready to breed anytime, anyplace. Not when a muzzle has been applied, or when your supper is burning is the oven or you have to leave for the pediatrician in 15 minutes, 10 minutes, 5 minutes...JUST DO IT ALREADY. 

Here is to a successful breeding season to all of my friends in the business and to a nice spring consisting of just regular old birds that chirp and bees that buzz for the rest of you.

Thursday, March 18, 2010

OK, back to sustainability and DAIRY

So we have talked about the dog so I guess I need to get back to sustainability.

I have been told by more than one person if you are going to put your money anywhere when it comes to food put it into milk.  Not just milk of course, but milk and milk products we all eat a lot of like yogurt and cheese.  This really didn't matter to me at first.  I don't drink milk. I just don't like it.  Now I have a 3 year old that likes milk. I am not sold on the health benefits of milk so I don't over do it.  I haven't drank any milk since I was weaned from the bottle around a year old.  I have never broken a bone despite some falls from interesting angles and high places and I have pretty decent teeth.  I ate your normal amounts of cheese, yogurt, and ice cream and I have always loved leafy green vegetables which are a great source of calcium so no one ever worried too much. Through research have come to learn that we humans really weren't meant to drink milk much past the time all of our teeth grow in so about age 3. Being smart humans, we figured out how to nurse all of our lives off of a creature other than ourselves.  When you think about it that way, milk isn't nearly as pleasant sounding now is it?  I have also done research on the benefits of raw milk.  There are many, including greater availability of vitamins, minerals, and beneficial bacteria than in pasteurized milk. 

When Rose was younger and drinking a lot of milk, I bought organic milk. It cost about $5.50 or more per gallon depending on where I purchased it.  At a gallon a week that is $22.00 a month.  The biggest supplier of organic milk to major markets is Horizon, www.horizondairy.com. Although Horizon is a big fish and a big corporation, they do employ family farmers following USDA organic guidelines to provide their milk and I think they do a pretty good job for as big as they are and when you think about it $22.00 a month isn't a bad deal until you compare it to $8.00 a month I could be spending on Wal-Mart's Great Value brand milk.  

Then you get to  learning about USDA organic guidelines.  A cow must be fed organic feed (check) a cow must be allowed 120 days of pasture each year (check). Wait, ummm, where is the cow the other 8 months of the year?  In a feedlot, being cycled through a huge milking barn, just like any other dairy cow being milked for Wal-Mart's milk except the cow is being fed organic feed and if it is given any antibiotics or medications it must be removed from the organic herd for a longer period of time than just the withdrawal period of the medicaiton. Happy cows?  Maybe. Happier cows than those stuck in a feed lot situation all of their lives like a typical dairy cow. Trust me that cows in California are not any happier than cows in Colorado like the commercial leads you to believe.

Oh, and you do know that a cow has to have a calf to make milk, right? Usually a dairy cow is milked for 9-10 months and then allowed to dry up for a few months before she calves again.  This "dry" period is when a cow in an organic dairy is probably turned out to pasture. Back to the calf.  Cows that are going to calve soon are separated into different pens.  They calve.  Their little bitty cute as a bugger calf may be allowed to nurse some colostrum from its mama, or it may just be whisked away.  The calf will be tethered what looks like, or what IS, an oversized igloo dog house within site of other calves but allowed no contact with them.  It will be provided with ample food, water, and milk.  The heifers will be kept as replacements.  The bulls will be sold as soon as possible to anyone willing to buy them and raise them for meat or whatever they desire.  Nature's way, yes?

So where am I going with all this?  Raw milk.  In Colorado and most states, you must OWN a cow to drink milk from it that is raw or unpasteurized.  So these farms sell shares in the cow.  You actually co-own the cow.  In most co-ops, you pay $40.00 or so per month for 1 gallon of milk per week.  Yes, $40.00!!!!  I am not saying it isn't worth it, but compared to $8.00 or even $22.00 per month that is insane.  But now you are dealing with dairies where the cows have names, the staff are bottle feeding and oogling each calf that has been removed from the mother, that is if they have even removed them for the cow is perfectly capable of producing enough milk for her offspring and plenty of humans as well. Your milk is given to you in glass containers providing the nostalgia everyone looks for these days in addition to the sustainability of glass container.   Live in Colorado? Find out about it www.rawmilkcolorado.org

My newest idea is the family dairy cow.  Our own family milk bar could provide us with milk to drink, make cheese, yogurt, and ice cream. Would I like one? Yes. Is it feasible? I am not sure.  A cow must be milked twice a day each and every day for 9 months or more per year to stay in full production and her udder doesn't care if it is 20 below or 100 degrees and sweltering, it must be milk and the milk must be properly handled and stored and you will have a date with every 5 o'clock or 6 o'clock of this world for as long as you plan to milk a cow. You need to buy the equipment.  You need to buy the COW.  A halter broke, friendly cow you can milk by hand an run you $1,500 and up.  Heifer calves to raise up gentle and breed yourself? Virtually unheard of, and if they are at the sale barn you can assume there is something wrong with them. After you buy the equipment your initial investment is going to be at least $2,000 and then your monthly upkeep of lets say, $25.00 per month to feed your lactating wonder. I don't even want to do the math to see how long it would take to break even.   So the moral of this story is:

Wal-Mart Great Value Milk - Great value.  For you.  Not for the cow in a concrete barn or her calf in little hut in the throes of mid-west or Colorado Winter

Horizon or other "big ticket" organic companies - Great value for the product. Better for the cow. Still not so good for her calf in the little hut.

Raw Milk - If you are really serious about this sustainability stuff, do your research and join a raw milk co-op in your area and see how you like it.  Most of them have a starting fee, but it will be refunded if you choose to leave the co-p so you don't have much to lose. You can tour the dairy and meet the cows that are giving you your milk and their little doe-eyed dears that came into this world to give it to you and even give one a bottle.  Cute.

A dairy cow in your back yard - Only if you are crazy.  I am a little, so don't be surprised if you see Bessie in the front pasture when you come over next spring.

Sunday, March 14, 2010

Our sick pooch

Our rottweiler, Teddy, didn't seem quite right last Sunday.  He was just lethargic and had no appetite.  This was very unlike him, so off to the emergency clinic we went.  They did some blood work on him which showed he was anemic and had an extended clotting time.  They asked us if we thought he could have gotten into rat poisoning.  I couldn't say for sure that he hadn't, so they started treating him with Vitamin K. He was also running a fever, so started on antibiotics for that.  His condition didn't really improve or get better through Tuesday, and we took him in to see his regular vet for a follow up.

The blood work came back similar, except this time he was more anemic than he had been Sunday.  Sparing you all the details of how his diagnosis came to be, his veterinarian has decided he has a condition called Immune Mediated Hemolytic Anemia.  Basically, the body decides its red blood cells are the enemy and starts to attack and kill them.  The treatment for this is a) suppress the immune system as much as possible.  This is done by use of steroids b) if red blood cell values continue to decrease, a blood transfusion may be necessary.  There are other steps to the treatment, but these are the main ideas.  With treatment, dogs have about a 50% chance of remission.  Without treatment, they will certainly die.  Age, physical condition, etc. seem to have nothing to do with how well a dog will do with this disease. The odds are just as good for a  young dog to survive it as the old, a dog with other health conditions may do better than a dog that is 100% healthy otherwise.

So here we are.  I'm embarassed to say how much we spent just to come to a diagnosis, and now we have to treat the disease.  He is taking steroids and an anti-rejection drug used in human transplant patients to suppress immune response.  And what caused this disease, might you ask?  Well, that is kind of up in the air among some professionals.  Some breeds are more predisposed to it than others.  Not rottweilers though.  Sometimes, the dog's immune system goes hay wire when attacked by another infectious agent and the dog gets IMHA as a secondary problem.  But most of the time, veterinarians are seeing this as a vaccine reaction to the vaccines we normally give our dogs to keep them healthy. Teddy can never receive another vaccine, he will have a medical waiver for rabies vaccine/tags that are required in our county.

Now I have to decide if vaccinating my other dogs is worth it.  Sure, I don't want my dogs getting parvo but I have to weigh my risks.  One out of four of my dogs was afflicted with this potentially fatal disorder from a vaccination.  It may seem drastic, but I am choosing NOT to vaccinate any more of dogs, current or future, after their initial puppy series and 3 year rabies after initial rabies. 

If you have a dog, especially a cocker spaniel or schnauzer or other breed that seems to have some genetic predisposition to this disease, do some research about IMHA and make your own decisions about the risks and benefits of vaccinating your dog every year.  Ask your vet. I should have. I do my own vaccines. I found out that my particular vet clinic has decided to recommend vaccinating with a regular 7-way vaccine once every 3 years due to the increasing incidence of this disorder.

Thanks to
Pets Emergency 
www.petsemergency.com
and Dr. Archer whose last minute decision to give Teddy a steroid injection might have saved him from a blood transfusion
and
Wellington Veterinary Clinic
http://www.wellingtonvets.com/
and Dr. Tracey Jensen for her wonderul care of Teddy during this adventure!  Wellington Vet clinic has provided excellent care for our personal pets and many foster kittens from Weld County Humane Society over the last 4 years and has been a great resource despite seeing NONE of them on a regular basis, since we do all routine care ourselves.

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

A Bento on the go!

We have been on the go since Sunday morning, as one of our dogs is very ill and we spent most of the day Sunday at the emergency clinic with him.  I will do a post about what is going on with that in the next day or so, because the information applies to anyone that owns a dog.  For now, here is a slightly prettier bento then the one I prepared for Rose the other day.  She had diced hot dogs, Annie's organic cheddar bunnies, banana slices, and some panda cookies. 

Thursday, March 4, 2010

Biscuits, the ultimate comfort food

I have been sick the last 4 or 5 days, so nothing really sounds good to eat. The plus is since I am not that hungry and can't really taste anything, I think I have lost a couple of pounds.  Yesterday, biscuits sounded good.  I have been semi-successful in crafting biscuits in the past so I thought I'd try a batch.

My master helpers and I whipped up a batch of these heart shaped biscuits.  Rose thought they were cake and wanted icing and sprinkles on hers. What could it hurt? She ate every bite.  Later, my neighbor Tonya stopped by to look after the horses she is keeping here and she came in for a taste test.  She thought chocolate icing sounded pretty good too, so she had one a la Rose and also one with just butter and gave it a thumbs up both ways. I thought they were a little lacking in the salt department, but that may be because my taste buds are on hiatus. Once taste buds return I'll probably make them again and find they are as salty as hard tack made with sea water.

 

So here is the easy recipe:
2 cups flour
2 tsp. baking powder
1/2 tsp. salt 
3/4 cup milk
4 Tbls. butter

Dice the cold butter. I used salted butter.  Salt is good, I like it. I rarely by unsalted butter. As Ina always says (www.barefootcontessa.com), cold butter is the key to anything flaky (crusts, pastries, etc) Sift the flour, salt, and baking powder together.  Cut in the butter chunks. Rose did this, she liked stabbing at the stuff. Slowly add the milk.  I used my hands to mush it all together. Oh, you are supposed to pre-heat the oven, right?  400 degrees.  Now that you have flour all over your oven knob, roll out the dough on a floured surface.  Me? I hate rolling pins, so we just used our hands to push it out to about 1/2 inch thick.  Cut out your biscuits and you are ready to roll.  I got 11 heart shaped biscuits and one random dough ball out of it. 12-15 minutes in the oven. 

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Rose's Lunch

I was reading a Parenting magazine this fall when a saw a little blurp about a blog and had an inkling to check it out. The blog was www.wendolonia.com. For some reason, her cute little lunches she packed for her son to take to preschool just seemed so cool. So I started doing some research on Bento lunch packing, which is a traditional japanese style of packing to go. There are many interesting types of food that that japanese use, and some folks get really fancy in their crafting of Bento lunches. You can see what I mean here www.hapabento.com/.

Not wanting to devote my life to making lunch, but still intrigued I ventured on my quest to create some Bento lunches for Rose. Much like those on Wendolonia, they are simple and not too artsy. The goal of the Bento lunch for me is to be fun and visually pleasing. Visual pleasing = color. Color = lots of fruits and vegetables. Bento boxes = reuseable = sustainable. I pack a Bento for Rose many days when we will be out for lunch. Today, I packed one at home. It isn't the prettiest. Rose had apple slices, peaches with sprinkles, 2 baby carrots, 2 miniature peanut butter hearts on multi-grian bread, and the "scraps" from the hearts. Rose at everything but some of the peaches and 1 apple slice. I think that is pretty successful for a pre-schooler for lunch.

I use a stainless steel Lunchbots container that is the perfect size for a pre-schooler. LunchBots Pico Stainless Steel Lunch ContainerLunchBots Pico Stainless Steel Lunch Container
I hope to add some Hello Kitty and other themed Bento boxes. I purchased some silicone baking cups to use as dividers. That is what the peaches and apples are housed in. I also have some pics for food like grapes or ham cubes, but I didn't use those today.  Today I couldn't get too pretty because Wyatt was very fussy from having his shots yesterday afternoon and I had to do most of the lunch preparation with him in my arms, but I will post more Bentos in the future.

Thursday, February 25, 2010

Sustainability : On Beef, Pork, and Venison


Photo: Our happy charolais cows on pasture and hay, about 30 days prior to slaughter.
If you live in Colorado, you have probably seen a Confined Animal Feeding Operation (CAFO) somewhere along the way. This is in effect assembly line meat. The animals are kept on dirt lots with no shelter from the sun, wind, or snow. They are fed a grain based diet. What is wrong with this picture? Cows, pigs, goats, and sheep are grazers and browsers and all are nomadic. They cannot fulfill their natural desire to graze and roam in these confinement situations. In addition, these confinement situations are a management nightmare when it comes to waste. These animals are meant to fertilize the ground they trod upon and spread it with their own "engines." Lets not forget all the grain that is grown in this country that is fed to meat animals. Nearly 80% of the grain grown in this country is used to feed animals to produce meat, which is extremely inefficient (I'll blog another time about the feed and seed industry)

I am not a vegetarian by any means. I like chicken, pork, beef and venison...pretty much in that order. I refuse to feed my family commercially produced meat. It contains antibiotics required to keep animals healthy in filthy confinement operations. It also contains hormones purposefully injected or implanted into the animal for optimum growth and production.

Our cows are happy cows. They eat grass, like they were made too. They aren't fed ANIMAL BY-PRODUCTS, which are frequently fed to feedlot cattle. Cattle are HERBIVORES folks. My cattle have a clean place to lie down, room to run around, and a shelter from blowing snow or driving rain. Rarely do they need antibiotics, because they are not in a stressful and filthy environment. Some people tell me our beef tastes different than meat they buy at the supermarket. I think our meat tastes BETTER. It is also lower in fat. I know my cow was happy and healthy and EXACTLY what it ate from the time it was born until the day it died.

We eat a lot of pork. I like sausage and pork chops. Not together. But anyway. I haven't gotten the courage to venture into raising pigs, but I think I will try this year. I buy my pork from a family farmer in Sidney, NE. They keep 10 sows, and feed them an all-natural diet. I pay $3.00 per pound for my pork, vacuum packed and delivered to my door. You can't beat that.

Braden hunts for deer and elk each year. With the cost of the tag to the D.O.W and processing fees, venison and elk meat end up costing about $2.00 per pound. I am only in favor of hunting if you plan to eat your kill. Or, if you want to trophy hunt, cough up the money to have the animal processed properly and donate the meat to a worthy cause or a friend or neighbor in need. Lets not be wasteful people.



So, if you live in town and can't raise your own meat, how can you go farmer direct?

1) Purchase a chest freezer. Cattle are usually sold by the 1/4, 1/2, or whole. A 1/4 cow will be approximately 100 lbs. of meat. This will feed your average family of four eating beef a few times a week for a year. In Colorado, you will pay anywhere from $3-$6 per pound for the meat, but this is for ALL CUTS. So basically, you are getting roasts, t-bones, and ribeyes from the same price per pound as ground beef. The price range varies between producers and their practices. We charge our friends and family $4.50 per pound.

2) Go to Craigslist. Click on the "Farm and Garden" section and type "beef" "pork" or "hog" into the search engine. If there isn't any, post a wanted ad. Here are some of the terms you might run into:
A) Live Animal, or "On the Hoof" means you are paying by the pound for the weight of the live animal. You will most likely also pay the processing costs directly to the slaughter house and be able to provide your own cutting instructions and wrapping instructions. Market price is currently about $.90-$1.00/lb on the hoof for beef. Then, you will pay a processor a fee to slaughter the animal (usually between $40-$60) and by the pound for cutting and wrapping. Your average 1,000 pound cow will hang at about 650 lbs. and result in about 425 lbs. of meat for your freezer.

B) Hanging Weight means you are paying by the pound for the weight of the live animal with the limbs removed (below the knee), head removed, and viscera. You will need to ask the producer if they have included the costs of slaughter and packaging in this price. Sometimes they have, sometimes they haven't. If they have included all costs, you are probably going to be paying around $2.50/lb for hanging weight for beef, as of the date I write this.

C) By the 1/4, 1/2, or whole. The meat will be cut, wrapped, frozen and ready to deliver. Typically you end up with about 1/3 ground beef, 1/3 roasts, and 1/3 steaks. Depending on the type of beef (organic, all-natural, grass fed, etc) and your area, it will cost anywhere between $3.00-$8.00 per pound. This is a good route to go, since the per pound cost won't change.

Obviously, these specs will be different for a sheep, goat, or hog and usually they are only sold by the half or the whole, not by the 1/4.

3) Call your local Cooperative Extension office.
http://www.csrees.usda.gov/Extension/
Nearly every county in the country has a Cooperative Extension office. Ask for the Livestock Agent. If they are worth the tax dollars you are paying them, they should be able to provide you with names of producers in your area.

Hopefully this will get you started on your quest to find local meat that is both of better quality and nutrient value than anything you can find in the supermarket.

Sustainability : On eggs and happy hens

Do you know how the eggs you buy in the supermarket get to you? We won't go back to the chicken and the egg but we'll start with the chicken. She starts laying at about 5 months of age. So, she is crammed into a cage about the size of a filing cabinet drawer with 8-10 OTHER HENS. For comparison, pretend that you are living in an average size elevator with 10 other people. Seriously. Horrible. The hens are afforded food and water but in most instances NO natural light. They are fed antibiotics in their feed due to the large number of pathogens in these poorly ventilated facilities. They spend the next 7-10 months in these horrible conditions until the hen is no longer producing an egg each day and then she is transported, in an entirely inhumane manner, to be slaughtered and not surprisingly in an entirely inhumane manner. You'll find that I will repeat myself a lot when it comes to these matters. Please look at this page on wikipedia for more information on the battery cage operation

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battery_cage

Now, the eggs are washed and cleaned of the natural protective coating put on the egg by the hen when she lays it to prevent bacteria from entering it, sorted packaged, and sent to your supermarket. This process can take 2 WEEKS OR MORE. So much for "fresh eggs" on the shelf. But, I digress.

My chicks start out in a nice spacious brooder here on the farm.

At about 3 months of age, they are let out in the yard and live there ALL OF THEIR LIVES. I can't lie, sometimes that life isn't as long as it could be due to some pesky predators like foxes, coyotes, and owls. But we try to keep them safe. Most hens will produce eggs for many years, just not as efficiently as a younger hen. A hen can live from 8-10 years.

I pick up my eggs twice daily

I wash my eggs just prior to using them, only if they are dirty.
In this photo, the egg in the middle is a grade AA EXTRA Large egg from Sam's Club. The white one on the right was laid by a White Leghorn and the brown one on the right was laid by a Rhode Island Red. Unfortunately, I couldn't capture in the photo the "sheen" that is on the eggs laid by my hens vs. the "matte" appearance of the supermarket egg.

On average, it costs about $7/month to maintain 10 hens. We eat about 18 eggs a week (yes, I know that is excessive for 3 people, but I bake alot too) so if we were buying them at the supermarket we might be spending approximately $6.00, assuming eggs are $.99 per dozen.

So why would we have our own flock for eggs? After all, we are paying MORE to maintain them AND we have to care for them twice per day every day in all sorts of weather.

-Hens are cute. They are great for kids to feed and care for, as their care is uncomplicated.
-Our hens are happy. I get satisfaction knowing that our girls are happy, healthy, have companionship, room to roam, scratch, sunshine, and fresh air.
-The eggs are better quality. They are tastier and larger than supermarket eggs.
-Hens are excellent garbage disposals. They will eat all types of vegetarian food scraps like bread, pasta, and of course fruits and vegetables. Just put a "trash bowl" on your counter and take it to them each morning.

Should you by farm fresh eggs from your neighbor or co-worker that might have them available for $2.50 or more a dozen when you could be buying them at the store for $.99? Of course! No one is going to get rich selling eggs, so you can assume that most folks are doing it because they enjoy tending to a happy flock and selling eggs to happy customers. The eggs will be of better quality and last longer in your fridge (several months!) than supermarket eggs. And best of all you will be supporting sustainable operations instead of battery operations that are unhealthy and abusive for the chickens. It is the least you can do for the hen that is providing your breakfast.

Wyatt is 6 months old today


Wyatt is 6 months old today! He sprouted 2 pearly whites at the same time. Here he is decked out in his, er, my favorite organic cotton onsie. Is that why it is my favorite? Of course not, it is because it has a zipper instead of all those peskie buttons. He is sitting atop the tie blanket I made for him last week. You all can do this too

http://www.customscrapbookmaker.com/crafts/fleece-tie-blanket-instructions.htm

All you need is fleece, some scissors, and a rainy or snowy afternoon. I made 2 of these for Rose, one for Wyatt, and one for my niece for her upcoming birthday. Domestication without a sewing machine. Love it.