Search results for: 'therepresentative.co.in%2Famp%2Fplanet88%2F'
-
Organic Henry Moore Yellow Dent CornAs low as $3.00Available as:
- Kernels
- Cornmeal
- Grits (Creamy)
- Bolted Grits (Polenta)
- Corn Flour
not for popping
Learn More -
CSA Pickup: Chocolate Inspirations (Roselle, IL)$0.00This is a monthly pickup point, so if you need your order quicker, choose another option. Next delivery here will be January 19.
(Chocolate Inspirations will store your order if you can't make it on the day of delivery)
Orders will be available for pickup at Chocolate Inspirations kitchen/warehouse at 920 Central Ave., Roselle, IL. 60172. NOT at their retail store in downtown Roselle. (Please call if no one answers the door at the warehouse. (630) 894-0898)
Please place this item in your cart before checking out to help us identify your intention. Also, choose the "Picked up" option on checkout to avoid shipping charges. Please email at brian@qualityorganic.net to confirm specifics of pickup.
PLEASE NOTE: The Chocolate Inspirations staff is doing us a great favor by letting us use them as a drop off point. They are NOT compensated for their service. They are also NOT obligated to load your order into your vehicle. If you order heavy bags of product, please bring someone capable of carrying these from their office to your vehicle. If you are not able to do this, we are more than happy to load you AT OUR FARM. But DO NOT use this drop point if you are not able to load yourself.
Learn More -
-
-
Organic Hulless OatsAs low as $3.00Available as:
-
Groats
-
Coarse Oatmeal (Irish)
-
Fine Oatmeal (Scottish)
-
Oat Flour
-
Rolled Oats
-
-
-
-
Gourdseed CornAs low as $4.00Gourdseed corn was popular, prior to the American Civil War, stone ground into cornmeal to make cornbread. It fell out of favor to dent corns which could be milled into either grits or cornmeal. It's whole kernel cornmeal is a little bit like wheat flour and it makes a flavorful cornbread, with a texture that begins to feel almost like cake.
It was sometimes referred by the Indians as tooth corn, and got either name because of the shape of it's kernels. Either it's similarity to a gourd's seed, or to rows of kernels that look like teeth.
Learn More -
Feed CornStarting at $12.00
Made from certified organic yellow dent hybrid corn. NOT HEIRLOOM. Ground kernels and cracked kernels have had the flour/fines sifted out of them allowing them to store better. May contain an occational weed seed or field debris.
50 lb bag if picked up at the farm. 45 lb bag if shipped via UPS or Spee Dee Delivery. (to avoid heavy package shipping surcharge)
Learn More -
Organic Hard Red Spring WheatAs low as $5.90This Hard Red Spring (Bread) Wheat (variety=GLENN) has a bit of a strong taste to it and is usually used for making breads.
NOT an heirloom wheat
Available as:
- Berries
- Whole Flour
- Sifted Flour
- Clear First Flour
-
Blue Cornbread Mix$6.00All the dry ingredients to make a 10 inch round skillet of blue corn cornbread. (We use a 10 inch cast iron skillet in the oven)
You need to add: 1/2 cup melted butter : 1 cup buttermilk (or 1 cup milk + Tbsp vinegar) : 2 eggs
Made with all organic ingredients, but is not yet on our organic certificate.
Our blue cornmeal is soft and especially sweet. blue cornmeal/grits.
Learn More -
Heirloom Cornbread Mix$5.00 -
-
Scratch GrainsAs low as $12.00A mix of whole grain barley, hulless oats, Turkey Red wheat and black oil sunflower. Intended for use as a chicken treat. NOT a complete feed mix.
Learn More -
Purple Straw WheatAs low as $5.90A low gluten pastry type wheat that is appropriate for bisciuts, pie crust, pancakes and some quick breads. While low on gluten, it does have a relatively high protein at 11%.
Purple Straw wheat is thought to be the secret ingredient to old time Southern biscuits. A variety of wheat from the 1700s, pre-dating the Revolutionary War, was popular in the "South" until it was crowded out by better yielding modern wheat varieties in the 20th century.
Certified organic
Learn More -
Red Fife WheatAs low as $5.90A popular bread wheat in the late 1800s. Though it has less gluten than modern bread wheats, with care, it can make a nice yeast or sourdough bread today.
Sarah has made a video of how to make bread with this wheat's sifted flour here.
A hard red spring (HRS) bread wheat popular in Canada from around 1860 until the early 1900s, when it was replaced by better yielding varieties (though not better tasting). An heirloom variety that pre-dates the intensive breeding that occurred during the "green revolution" of the 1940s and 1950s.
Certified organic
Red Fife has less gluten than our HRS (Glenn) variety, and is therefore harder to make into bread. However, it is heirloom, certified organic and I feel has a superior flavor.
Learn More -
Feed SoybeansStarting at $27.00
Organic soybeans for feed, mostly splits. These splits would need to be ground finer for small chicks, but are probably fine for most adult chickens, pigs, and larger animals.
Raw soybeans are fine to feed to a ruminant in limited amounts (cows, sheep, goats) but not good for anything with a simple stomach: (monogastrics/ pigs, chickens, etc). (look up trypsin inhibitor).
Roasted soybeans have been heat treated to deactivate the trysip inhibitor present in raw soybeans, making them suitable to feed to either ruminant or monogastric animals. (Roasted soybeans are not yet on my organic certificate, but it is currently applied for.)
50 lb bag if picked up at the farm. 45 lb bag if shipped via UPS or Spee Dee Delivery. (to avoid heavy package shipping surcharge)
The black on the surface of the roasted soybeans in the picture is from the roasting process.
Learn More -
Blender Pancakes$0.00WHEAT BERRIES: Turkey Red (HRW) or Pastry (SRW)
1 cup wheat berries
1 ½ cup milk
½ cup oil or applesauce
1 egg
3 tsp. baking powder
2 Tbsp. sugar
1 tsp. SaltBlend 1 cup milk with wheat berries for 2-3 minutes.
Learn More
Add rest of milk and blend for 2 more minutes.
Keeping the blender going, add remaining ingredients.
Cook on hot skillet or griddle.
You can also add vanilla, cinnamon, fruit or other ingredients as desired. -
Half Beef (Deposit)$200.00This is for a deposit on half a certified organic beef delivered to Eureka, Illinois locker in the summer of 2026. Typically, half a beef will be around 300 lbs hanging weight. Total cost of JUST the beef is $6 per pound times actual hanging weight. (i.e. 300 lbs x $6 = $1800.)
Locker/processing fees are an additional $300 to $400. Depending on how you want it cut and packaged.
Actual meat is less than hanging weight. Depending on how much bone-in vs. boneless cuts and shrink that occurs during hanging. Click on and open this tab to see an example of how a cow cut out.
These cows are certified organic, were born on our farm and spend their whole life on pasture. They are never in a feedlot, but are fed supplement grain when pasture and/or hay supplied are less than ideal. All grains fed were raised on our farm. The only purchased feeds these cows receive are salt and minerals.
Learn More -
Grainola Kit$6.50Contains approxiamately: 3 cups Organic Rolled Oats; 2/3 cup Organic Wheat Middlings; 1/4 cup each Whole & Sifted Wheat Flour; 1/4 cup Buckwheat Flour; 1/4 cup Organic Blue Cornmeal
Learn More -
CSA Delivery: Naperville Area$15.00This $15 flat fee will cover one time delivery of any amount to your home or business; delivered to a Naperville, Illinois address. Please email brian@qualityorganic.net with details of where (or if) to leave your order if no one is at home.
We run a route through Naperville once per month.
Please place this item in your cart before checking out to help us identify your intention. Also, choose the "Picked up" option on checkout to avoid additional shipping charges.
Learn More -
Make-Later Bread$0.00FLOUR: Red Fife sifted
3 cup flour
1 ½ cup water
2 teaspoons salt
¼ teaspoon yeastMix ingredients then knead, with a kitchen-aid or by hand, for 5 minutes.
Learn More
Let sit at room temperature for 2 hours, covered with a towel. Then sit in the refrigerator for at least 2 hours, covered. The dough can sit in the refrigerator for up to 7 days.
When ready to make bread, break off a softball size dough ball and flatten it. Sprinkle with a tablespoon of sugar or honey. Fold 5 to 10 times, and place into a well oiled loaf pan, flatten the dough out to the shape of the pan. Cover with a towel and let rise at room temperature for at least 1 hour. The dough won't quite double.
Preheat oven to 425 F. Bake for 15 minutes and then brush with butter or oil. Bake another 10 minutes.
Cool before slicing -
Apple Crisp$0.00FLOUR: Turkey Red (HRW) or Pastry (SRW) sifted or whole
OATS: Rolled Oats6 apples ~ 8 cups
8 graham crackers (2.5 x 5 in.)
¾ cup brown sugar
½ cup flour
½ cup oats
1 tsp. cinnamon
½ cup butter, meltedPeel, core, and slice apples.
Learn More
Coarsely chop graham crackers.
Add brown sugar, flour, oats, and cinnamon. Mix well.
Add butter to dry ingredients. Mix well.
Sprinkle crumb mixture over apples.
Bake at 350 F for 20 minutes.

