Farm of the Month: Bo-Riggs Cattle Company

Bo-Riggs Cattle Company
469 South Rd
Sullivan, NH 03445
brcc@myfairpoint.net
603-352-9920
Article by Jan Sevene

What are the advantages to buying beef locally? In particular, it is the assurance your family is consuming safe and nutritious food. What is a sound way to help ensure this? According to Tiffany Briggs of Bo-Riggs Cattle Company, it is in knowing the farmer that produced it.

“What sets our product apart from other beef you buy is that you get to meet the farmer who raises it for you. You can ask any questions about how and why we do things the way we do,” Tiffany says, indicating she and husband Dana are well-qualified to answer those questions, for each has an extensive knowledge of farming, particularly dealing with cattle.

Dana is a 3rd generation farmer, having grown up on a dairy farm in Deerfield, NH. Tiffany spent many school vacations and weekends visiting her grandparents’ dairy farm. Living at home, she chose Polled Herford beef cattle as her 4-H project (Bo-Riggs also offers weaned calves in the fall – 6-8 months old – many raised by 4-H children as championship-winning 4-H projects). Her brother chose Black Angus. After the loss of her brother to a tragic farm accident in 1997, she inherited his small herd of Black Angus cows.

Since then, Tiffany and Dana have raised beef cattle for 12 years, the last two of which have involved retail sales. Bo-Riggs Cattle Company offers their 100 percent Black Angus beef (ground beef, steaks and roasts) frozen and sold by the pound. “We sell our meat retail to customers at the farm and at the Keene Farmers’ Market. We sell wholesale to the Hannah Grimes Marketplace,” Tiffany says.

Two local restaurants feature Bo-Riggs’s ground beef: Fritz, The Place to Eat in Keene, N.H. and The New England House in Brattleboro, VT.

Call or email Tiffany to plan a fall-foliage visit to the Bo-Riggs Cattle Company farm. The Briggs’s family business, including daughters Olivia and Victoria, welcomes support from customers and neighbors, for it is not just support for eating local, but as Tiffany puts it, “This support allows us to do our part in helping to maintain the rural character and picturesque views of New Hampshire.”

Other farm-direct sources:

Stonewall Farm
242 Chesterfield Road
Keene, NH 03431
603-357-7278
603-357-6018

Brookfield Farm
Holly and Christian Gowdy
460 Old Drewsville Road
Walpole NH 03608
603-445-5104
cdgowdyco@aol.com

The Milkhouse at Great Brook Farm
Cindy Westover
437 County Rd
Walpole, NH 03608
603-756-4358
cindy@gallowayservices.com

Pitcher Mountain Farm
Charles and Charlotte Faulkner
2110 Route 123 North
Stoddard, NH 03464
603-446-3350
charles.faulkner@dartmouth.edu

Farm of the Month: Picadilly Farm

By Jan Sevene

Picadilly Farm
264 South Parish Rd
Winchester, NH 03470
csa@picadillyfarm.com

Three years ago, the 71-acre former Hudson dairy farm in Winchester became Picadilly Farm. New owners Jenny and Bruce Wooster — with 10 years CSA organic community experience and with reverence to a healthy environment — set a course to practice sustainable farming methods and fair working conditions for their farm crew.  Since then, they have created their own CSA program and obtained USDA Organic Certification.

“Here,” Jenny Wooster says, emphasizing less waste and happier shareholders, “CSA customers can choose what they’d like to have in their box.” Picadilly Farms’ CSA program consists of weekly pick-ups in a “Mix and Match” system, where shareholders chose 8 or 9 items from the available harvested produce (amount determined by weather), plus access to an additional dozen or so crops — such as herbs, green beans, tomatoes, flowers, and just this year, pop corn — growing in the farm’s Pick-Your-Own Garden.

Pick-up time provides instant feedback. Continually connecting with customers, Jenny says, “We’re constantly tweaking our crop plants…we have a pretty good handle, generally, on what people want. New this year is sweet corn. Root crops are popular.”

Among the many are: carrots, beets, parsnips, potatoes, sweet potatoes, onions, daikon radishes, rutabagas, turnips, garlic, and kohlrabi. “Leeks store particularly well on a home scale,” she adds.
“They’re good chopped and frozen, or with roots stuck into a pail of sand — under the right conditions — leeks can last into January.” Winter squash is also available.

This fall Picadilly Farm is offering extended-season CSA shares of their organic produce, available at the farm or pre-boxed and delivered to Keene: four deliveries every other week, November and December.

Call or email for details, or visit http://www.picadillyfarm.com (after Sept. 15 for sign-up information) for more on what Picadilly Farm has to offer.  Eat healthy and eat fresh, while supporting our local farms.

Other farm-direct produce:

Green Wagon Farm
Bill Jarrell
Upper Court St.
Keene, NH
603-355-3258

Ingalls Farm
168 Ingalls Rd
Jaffrey, NH 03452
603-562-5775

Stonewall Farm
Chesterfield Rd.
Keene, NH 03431
603-352-0457

August Farm of the Month: Herban Living Farm

Herban Living Farm
242 General Miller Highway
Temple, NH 03084
603-878-0459

Throughout August, New Hampshire will celebrate NH Eat Local Month 2009. One of four themes promoted by this important event is “food preservation.” For those interested in learning how to enjoy that hard-earned harvest, well into our cold New England winter, on August 18th Lisa Beaudoin, owner of Herban Living Farm-and its fledgling Environmental Education Center (in its second year)-will present a workshop titled “Preparing the Harvest: What to do with it all?”

Beaudoin will cover simple techniques to store food, such as pickling, freezing, and more. What does she hope participants will leave with?  “I want them to be inspired that they’ll have the tools to put some food away for the winter. If people know how to make tomato sauce, or homemade pickles…or freeze — an easy way of food storage — with this knowledge there’s less food coming from long distances,” she says, adding,  “…eating food as close to home as possible is the most nutrient-dense and earth-friendly.  I’ve always known it to be economical.”

Befitting her whole philosophy of raising local, organic food, supporting sustainability, and giving back to the land and community, Beaudoin emphasizes an additional event (September 20th and Oct.18th) titled “Out Standing in their Field.” With each event — a collaboration between the Center and chef Mike Webb from Peterborough’s Pearl Restaurant — guests literally dine in her farm field. The fundraiser/food celebration includes a meal of chickens raised on the farm, plus other items either grown on the farm or from other local farms and the moving sound of local music.

Proceeds from the meal cover free events, as well as the farm’s food donation program.   This year, Herban Living Farm will donate approximately 10 to 15 percent of its produce to a Peterborough non-profit that serves families at risk. “A lot of people don’t know how to cook these densely nutritious foods,” Beaudoin says. “This past spring, families involved with the non-profit came to the farm with their children to experience the planting process, while getting to know where their food comes from. In the fall, the same families return to harvest some food and prepare it in a way that’s tasty. Parents are empowered…more aware.”

Herban Living Farm also operates a B&B, an organic CSA (now in its 6th season), a new-this-year farmstand (all local foods), and, available this October, fresh pasture-raised organic chicken.

Beaudoin says ten years ago, “bio-regional” was the catch-phrase, when eating local was not a popular food trend. “But now, the campaign for eating local has taken off,” she says. “And that’s fantastic! People are asking, what is the ecological footprint of what I’m eating?”  Learning to preserve our local bounty is an exciting and economical extension of growing or buying fresh, nutritious local foods.

July Farm of the Month: Rosaly’s Garden & Farmstand

Rosaly’s Garden and Farmstand
P. O. Box 210, Peterborough, NH 03458-0210
603-924-3303
RosalyBass@aol.com
By Jan Sevene

Local vegetables and fruits are fresh and nutritious. To assure they are grown in a healthy and sustainable environment, we’re often reminded:  “get to know the farmer.” Rosaly Bass, master gardener and owner of Rosaly’s Garden and Farmstand, is one farmer you will want to know.  In business for over thirty years, her 16-acre Rosaly’s Garden is the oldest and second largest Certified Organic Farm in New Hampshire. And because every vegetable, fruit, herb and flower sold at the farmstand is grown right on the farm, each is guaranteed organic.

“People just love the farmstand. It’s convenient right on Rte. 123. It’s organic food. And, Rosaly puts her heart and soul into it,” says Donna White,” the farm’s bookkeeper, herself a first-year gardener who uses Bass’s book on successful organic gardening as her guide.

Every day from mid-May to Columbus Day, 9:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m., with numerous locally-made foods and crafts, Rosaly’s Farmstand offers mounds of tasty, farm-fresh, colorful and seasonal vegetables, fruits and herbs, plus fresh flowers. These encompass 90% of the farm’s produce. The additional 10% continues to provide for the community, sold to local markets, health food stores, restaurants and schools.

Scissors, baskets, or containers of water are provided for Rosaly’s Garden customers, to harvest the vegetables, herbs, berries or flowers of their choice.  The adventure of a scavenger hunt delights children searching for small plaster animals hiding among the culinary and medicinal herbs.

Get to know Rosaly Bass (see NOFA NH Organic Garden & Farm Tour). For more information on the many ways to get farm-fresh food from Rosaly’s Garden and Farmstand, and learn about the informative book and video series on organic gardening by Master Gardener Rosaly Bass, visit http://www.rosalysgarden.com.

Other farm-direct vegetables:

Keene Farmers’ Market
Tuesdays and Saturdays
9:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m.
Gilbo Ave.
Keene, NH

Green Wagon Farm
Bill Jarrell
Upper Court St.
Keene, NH
603-355-3258