05/04/10 10:16 Filed in:
Agriculture, artisan food
Last week we took a field trip to Kalona,
Iowa, to pick up supplements for the goats.
I thought that pasturing the goats and
supplementing with grain and hay during the
colder months would fulfill all their
nutritional needs, but it turns out that
this is not the case. Since goat milk has a
high mineral content, higher than cow milk,
the goats need mineral supplementation if
their diet is not rich enough in certain
elements. To fulfill these needs Christine
gives the goats blocks of salt to lick, as
well as powdered seaweed added to their
grain rations. The seaweed and salt have to
be mined and imported from coastal areas,
so this practice is not sustainable. I
would love to research ways to provide all
the necessary “extras” with locally grown
produce, herbs, and wild plants.
In addition to mineral supplementation,
Christine makes sure her herd is free of
parasites by giving them a combination of
diatomaceous earth and an herbal de-wormer.
The diatomaceous earth is benign for the
goats, but deadly to parasites anywhere in
the digestive tract. The herbal de-wormer,
which includes garlic and wormwood, adds an
extra punch, as well as extra flavor to the
grain. The goats wind up having garlic
seaweed breath, but they don’t seem to mind
and they sure are healthy!
25/03/10 10:40 Filed in:
Artisan
food
I’ve been neglecting to write about my
cheese making experiences, because I’m so
into the activity itself it’s hard to break
away and report on it. This is one of those
things I just want to dive into and keep
improving for life!
The book I’m learning from is Christine’s
cheese making bible:
Home Cheese Making:
Recipes for 75 Homemade Cheeses by
Ricki Carroll. Although the recipes
intimidated me at first, the clear writing
style and Christine’s step by step
directions made the process pretty smooth.
I’ll be sure to put this on the webstore
page, since I need to buy a copy for
myself.
The overall lesson I’ve learned is that the
basic steps of cheese making are the same
for every cheese: warming the milk, mixing
in starters and rennet, letting set,
cutting, cooking, and draining the curds,
placing in a mold, followed by pressing and
aging for hard cheeses. Soft cheeses are
less labor intensive because they do not
need the final preservative methods the
hard cheeses require.
The times, temperatures, and cultures for
all these steps can be adjusted to produce
vastly different textures, flavors, and
aromas in the resulting cheese. This is
similar to other artisan food methods like
bread making and brewing; the basic
ingredients and processes are the same,
while the timing and temperature are
variable. In this way the same milk and
cultures can be used to create a smooth,
tangy Gouda, a semisoft, sharp Monterey
Jack, and many other surprising, one of a
kind variations.
Outside of an industrial setting, it is
almost impossible to exaclty replicate the
same cheese time after time; there will
always be slight differences from batch to
batch. The hint of unpredictability
involved in making artisan foods comes from
all the variables that contribute to both
process and result. Temperature, humidity,
handling, ingredients, even the mood of the
cheese maker all combine to create the
flavor of each creation. You can take it
even further and realize that the goats who
make the milk have their own huge
contribution to the outcome. What did the
goats eat, how was their health, were they
happy? A happy goat makes happy milk, which
makes for the best cheese you’ve ever
tasted in your life!
Tags: artisan cheese, raw cheese,
unpasteurized cheese
22/03/10 21:06 Filed in:
Agriculture, artisan food
For the last several months I've been
learning to milk goats and cows. One
evening a week my daughter and I drive a
few miles into the country to visit my
friend's farm, where she operates a raw
milk dairy. Although selling unpasteurized
dairy products is illegal in the state of
Iowa, her operation is legal because
customers buy a share of the cows or goats,
instead of the actual milk. As part owers
of the animals, they are entitled to a
share of the milk, butter, clabber, and
cheese produced.
During this two week period, I’m doing an
internship officially titled “artisan dairy
apprenticeship”. It involves the milking
I’ve been doing for the past several
months, but with lessons in cheese making,
animal care, barn chores, and media about
the bacterial processes, culture, and
nutrition of raw milk dairy. Can I just
say, I love internships! Being outside,
especially in the spring, rather than
stuffed into some boring classroom is just
the best way to learn.
The first part of the new things I’m
learning is how to care for the goats
hooves. Goats have cloven hoofs that grow
slowly, but continuously. If they are
living in a climate with sandy or rocky
soil, as well as walking a lot to move from
pasture to pasture, these get worn down. On
Christine’s farm, the goats graze in
pasture, but don’t walk very far, so their
hooves need to be trimmed several times a
year.
Trimming a goat’s
hooves is, indeed, exactly what
you would picture. It reminds me of
clipping a dog’s toenails, but with
more surface area, kicking, and
manure. Good dirty fun. Pictures soon
to come...
Tags: raw dairy, unpasteurized
dairy, goats, cows, milking,
cheese
For me as a child shopping meant a monthly
trip to the commissary on whichever
military base we were living on at the
time. My mom would stock up on paper
products, canned fruits and vegetables, hot
dogs, ground meat, margarine, American
cheese, milk, and black and white boxes of
generic macaroni and cheese. She would
round out her purchases with a bunch or two
of bananas and a vat of chunky,
hydrogenated peanut butter. These trips
were supplemented with visits to the local
grocery store where we would stock up on
canned biscuits, Cheetos, soda, fried
chicken, and the occasional treat for
dessert. We also ate out frequently at
diners, buffets, and fast food restaurants.
When we went for a visit to my grandparents
house in Missouri, I had fresh green beans
for the first time in my life. My reaction?
“These taste like dirt, grandpa!” I was
completely unused to the complex, rich
taste of fresh produce. I can understand
why parents have such a difficult time
getting their children to eat healthy food
because I started out that way too,
preferring packaged items with artificial
flavors to real, whole foods.
Looking back on that time, it’s hard to
find the logic in our families food
choices. My mom is a registered nurse, so
she took nutrition classes. She never let
us have sugary breakfast cereal, and candy
was a rarity in our home. So why was sugar
so forbidden while all these other junk
foods poured into our house? It’s hard to
say, really... I guess it comes down to
this: like anyone else, my mom was doing
the best she could. I do remember pot
roasts with onions, potatoes, and carrots.
There must have been some fresh green
veggies too, just not often enough to be
memorable.
In the eighth grade I broke away from my
families food traditions and became a
vegetarian, a decision that saved me from
the struggle with weight faced by so many.
At first I was a “french fry vegetarian”,
eating the standard American diet, just
without the meat. Over the years I’ve
gained more and more knowledge about the
pitfalls and consequences of this kind of
food, and I’ll never go back.
The thing that got me to make meal plans
and shopping lists was a job as a personal
chef. Before that I would wing it, buying
ingredients for a meal or two, then making
whatever else I could from what was in the
pantry. I would stop by the store a few
times a week for essential ingredients I
had forgotten, and this time added up.
So, I got a notebook just for menus and sat
down with my
cookbooks once a
week to pick which recipes I would
use. As I chose my recipes I wrote
down which ingredients I would need,
and how much, sometimes checking back
to see if I already had an item. This
created a flow where one week’s extra
ingredient would fold over into the
next week’s recipes; I soon had the
contents of my fridge and pantry
memorized so I didn’t overbuy any
particular thing. Except coconut milk,
for some reason I would buy a can
every single time I went to the
store...
I began to adapt and skill built upon
skill; I would finding sale items and
remember which recipes I could use them in,
decide on the fly whether or not to change
the plan or save the find for next week. I
suddenly knew what everything cost, and
jumped on sales, stocking up for the
future. What follows are all the little
things I’ve learned along the way about how
to find organic and local food at it’s
freshest, cheapest, and greenest. Shoot me
an e-mail with any tips you want to share
and I’ll add them to the site!