Search results for: 'turkey+red+organic+hard+winter+wheat'
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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The Nativity Thief$10.00Historical Fiction: A story of redemption
Sweden, December of 1852
Fourteen-year-old Tore Neeson, the village trouble-maker, steals a master carpenter's priceless Nativity to save his sister's life, but a reversal of fortune leaves him more destitute and desperate than ever. To his frustration, he soon finds himself indentured to the very man he wronged.
In his angry struggle to free himself from the control of the inflexible Herr Andersson and the censure of other disapproving villagers, Tore blinds himself to the knowledge that all that stands between him and complete ruin is his most feared and hated enemy: the woodmaster.
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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)
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Black Turtle BeanAs low as $5.00We are looking for feed back on these Black Turtle beans we raised this year.
While they will cook up soft and tender, they still hold their shape after hours of cooking
One thing noticeable: Our harvesting/handling/cleaning equipment is not quite gentle enough for edible beans. We broke/split quite a few.
They are certified organic.
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SoybeanAs low as $3.00These soybeans are a clear hilum, high protein, food soybean that should make good tofu, soy milk etc. I've seen 3 generations of these, and the seeds had always been rather large. This years crop, however, was not and is a more typical soybean size.
They are certified organic and non-GMO.
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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.
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