Local, Grass Finished Lamb
I got the last two of the four grass finished lambs that I had ordered on Thursday from Touchstone Farms, now Rappahannock Farms, LLC. Today, we ate a rack of the lamb ribs. My husband and I easily polished off the entire rack. After he finished the last rib, Todd asked "can we make another rack?" I offered to thaw one for tomorrow to which he replied "I mean now." This is still hands down the best lamb we've ever tasted.I've tried pastured, grass fed lamb from various farmers in the area and while I've had some very good lamb from other wonderful local farmers, I still have a certain loyalty to Touchstone Farms. Not only is the lamb super tender and delicious, Touchstone Farms is the farm that got me started on ordering whole animals and over the fear of using all the different cuts from one animal. Now I routinely order, in addition to whole lambs, a half cow, a half hog, a turkey or two, and between 6 to 12 whole chickens at a time. And if I ever can find a local farmer that will sell it, I would order a whole goat.
Todd and I are pretty fanatical about eating organic, grass fed, and local. Buying directly from the farmer allows me to choose farmers that grow and handle the food properly and sustainably, from what fertilizers go into the soil to whether an animal is humanely butchered. Buying local minimizes my carbon footprint and gives support to small local family farms that ensure the continuation of sustainable farming and biodiversity. And with my buying habits of whole animals and CSA shares, I've become much more diverse in my cooking, to the great benefit of our palates. Easily in the midst of growing season, we would eat in one week several types of meats and a dozen or two different vegetables.
A few tips on buying and using meats and vegetables in bulk:
- Keep a tab for at least a month on how much meat (in weight) and vegetables (in volume) you consume. Use your numbers to calculate how much meat you'll consume in a month, three months, six months, or a year. You should be able to determine from this whether your family will consume a quarter or half a cow, for example, in six months, or a year. For vegetables, calculate how much your family will consume on average in a week. You should be able to determine from this how large a CSA share to purchase.
- Invest in an upright freezer, at least 13 to 14 cu ft that can store food at sub zero.
- When you get a half or whole animal, sort the parts and stock different parts in different sections of the freezer.
- If the CSA offers different pick up days, pick a day when you know you can handle or process the vegetables that day or the day or two after. Since CSA produce are often picked that day or the day before and are picked ripe and ready, you want to make sure you take advantage of it and use the produce soon after you pick it up.
- Plan to make casseroles (like beef stew or braised meat dish) or soups towards the "end" of a CSA week. Often, we will throw the rest of what we haven't used up yet into a casserole or soup.
- Many vegetables can be successfully frozen. Leafy greens that are normally cooked can be washed, dried, and frozen, or blanched prior to freezing. Tomatoes can be frozen as is and tossed into sauces and stews later or cooked down or processed into a sauce prior to freezing. Fermenting is also a great way to preserve your vegetables. I have many a jar of delicious fermented spicy fermented radish in my fridge from all the daikons and jalapenos I got over the summer.
- Plan at least 2 to 4 days in advance for your meat dishes. Every night after dinner, I go "shopping" in my freezers (we have 2 separate upright freezers in addition to 2 fridges) and pull out something to thaw that we will eat in 2 to 4 days. I have the entire door of one of my fridges dedicated to defrosting. The meat goes into one or more of the bins in the door for defrosting, and the bin catches any leaks during defrosting and can easily be rinsed or washed. When I pull out something really big like a turkey, it goes into an empty veggy bin for defrosting.
Since we cook everything we eat and don't eat any pre-prepared or packaged foods, buying meat and produce in bulk really makes great economical sense. Once you get into a routine, you will find that you save not just in terms of the price of the food, but also in terms of time in sourcing and picking up the food.
Labels: biodiversity, bulk meat, farm, farmer, local, sustainable


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