Tag Archives: family farms

No Stone Unturned

Being so far from relatives, it’s rare that we get to see them. Being at my husband’s family home this year brought many changes.

Of course the kids are growing up, us and the grandchildren. There were battery-powered cars (my husband’s as a boy) being driven and a helicopter that he broke, his nephew’s birthday present.

The rough stone flooring throughout the living areas is gorgeous, and was hand-placed by Jim’s folks. They also had granite countertops installed and a new, more efficient ell (with corbels) where people can sit and where a buffet can be served. It’s beautiful.

This home was hand-built over 30 years ago on land that has and will change dramatically over the next few years as it is flooded, not the house, to provide water for the Dallas metroplex.

I’ve spoken of Jim’s mom’s frugality. That is a trait to be treasured and I measure myself against it every day and fail. Jim’s parents built a fantastic house that has lasted decades. Now the river will be forever dammed (see Bio channel) and they’ve bought land a ways away.

Right now, I know that asparagus will show up next Spring near the front walk, and a Cardinal will sit on the fence post. Not much of a herd left, sold during the drought, so there won’t be cattle looking in at me through the bathroom window.

Years have been spent on house plans, with minute changes every time. I envy that. We are mobile. Perhaps we are too mobile. We are stable job and relationship-wise but are able to move without kids changing schools or even our own furniture, as it is in air-conditioned storage elsewhere. My husband lived in that home since he was about six years old. My family moved, often, as my dad moved up the corporate ladder.

What is really cool is to have his family as mine, too, an inherently stable dairy/ranch family who instilled those values in my husband. And they encouraged his college education and then let him go where his brain took him, away from the farm.

These are folks who make improvements for a home they’re going to sell. At least they get to enjoy them, and we enjoy flying in for a visit every once in a while.

Tonight it’s my ten minute lasagne (check the blog) but with my own bolognese sauce, nearly defrosted and ready to assemble. The bolognese is a riff on Silver Palate, the strangest concoction I’ve seen for a one-hour sauce but it cooks down and works. Cheers! Dee

 

The Family Farm

I grew up in Concord grape country.  We also had a lot of apples, and dairy cows back then.  From age 8-10 we lived by a dairy.  My husband grew up on a dairy in TX and when I asked what his holiday traditions were he said “milked cows.”

Now with the severe drought in Texas his family, who now raises beef cattle because one man (his dad) can’t keep up with 150 dairy cattle alone; sold off 75% of the herd because the grass and water were drying up.

The Farm

There are people who don’t have sons and daughters dying in a war we never needed to fight.  There are people who don’t understand that the bread and butter, milk and meat, that are put on our tables are still somewhat provided by family farms who embody quality over quantity.

I urge you to grow your own food or buy locally.  Years ago I was shocked when my sister called to get a turkey for thanksgiving.  Now, well, Nanny does Thanksgiving every year but I’d think nothing of buying a local turkey.  My problem is capon, as no-one has it and I’ll have to have one delivered for Christmas.

The sole family farm I could find went out of business last year.  No info yet as to sourcing new product but I’m on the case and will let you know.

One of the first times, perhaps just after we were married, we went “home” to Jim’s folks I asked for milk because I was making individual omelets for everyone.  She said she had some powdered milk in the pantry.  I asked “don’t you have 150 cows out there that were just milked this morning?”  And she answered that she no longer has two growing boys at home so doesn’t need to keep two gallons of milk in the frig at all times.

A valid point, from a savvy and thrifty woman that I love.  Back home, you “make do.”  If you don’t have a lemon for the vinaigrette you want to make, punt with whatever’s there because it’s not worth a 45-minute trip to the grocery store.

I once asked my m-i-l what she does when Joe doesn’t want to eat leftovers.  Nothing.  Jim, my husband always says “let’s go out.”  That’s the difference between city dwellers and family farmers.  Jim’s mom has a chest freezer that would feed them for at least a month.  She has to buy everything on sale and freeze it, and when we visit, we eat well.

All I can say is that farm subsidies are not geared to the right people, the family farmers, and that they’re hurting this year especially due to drought.  Everyone swoops in for a hurricane (except FEMA) or tornado but a slow death isn’t news-worthy.  Willy Nelson cares.  That’s a start.

These are proud people.  Be careful how you try to help out.  But try, nonetheless.