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Typically orders placed by Sunday will be shipped later the same week. Please note that during the growing season we are sometimes forced to prioritize raising the crops resulting in occasional slight delays in shipping. We apologize for any inconvenience.

 

Because we are farmers and not web technicians, most of our time goes toward working on our crops instead of our web presence. As a result we focus on selling rather than presentation. Since we tend to do major web updates about once a year during the winter off-season and this year our selling didn’t need to be overhauled, we decided to work on the aesthetic side. The easiest way to do that (remember, farmers not web techs) was a second site. The site you are on now, qualityorganic.net is where you can buy our products. Our other site, qualityorganic.com is where we will focus on info, recipes, and keeping you up to date of what is happening on the farm.  We apologize for any inconvenience or confusion this causes.

Farming and the food it produces has changed a lot in the past 200 years. Farmers and manufacturers have become increasingly consumed with making cheap food, and, as a result, the grains and produce on your table have changed from what they were in your ancestors' time.

The infrastructure to produce large amounts of Alfred Nobel's smokeless gunpowder was created during WWII. This included factories utilizing the recently discovered Haber process, which could cheaply fix nitrogen from the air into ammonia. After WWII, there was no need for all these explosives, so now, for the first time in history, farmers had access to a cheap source of plant available nitrogen they could apply to the soil. The "Green Revolution" that occured after WWII was accomplished by maintaining higher than natural nitrogen concentrations in the soils and developing crop varieties that could better utilize the higher ammonia levels and yield more per acre. The concentration of other minerals in the soil, such as phosphorous and potassium, was also increased, and farmers bred plants to adapt to this over-fertilization. The physiology of the new crop varieties were different from the natural crops that had been grown for thousands of years.

At the same time, the U.S. population was becoming mostly urban, and farms changed from growing food for themselves to growing "cash" crops which were sold to this growing urban population. Yield and profit became the most desirable traits in the new varieties, with nutrition and taste hardly ever being considered. Most of the great tasting, nutritious old varieties fell out of use because they couldn't generate as much profit per acre.

 

Heirloom grains are typically defined as varieties that were developed before WWII, and have had limited breeding selection since.

 

Another change in how the nations food was produced also occured in the late 1800's. With the development of the railroads, the milling process in the U.S. was changed from numberous local stone mills to fewer large steel roller mills, making grain processing cheaper, and increasing the shelf life of the flour so it could be shipped long distances on the new railroads. This cheaper process removed important vitamins and minerals from the grain, preventing mold growth. But this lack of nutrition was also noticed in U.S. troops during the world wars, and caused manufacturers to being "enriching" flour. The reason so many flours and cereals are artificially enriched today is not because the grain itself lacks nutrients, but because modern processing methods strip those nutrients away.

 

Heirloom grains sold by us include:

(using the pre-WWII definition)

Blue Hopi corn

Bloody Butcher corn

Henry Moore corn

Turkey Red hard wheat

Einkorn wheat (also considered an ancient wheat)

Pennsylvania Dutch Butter Flavored popcorn

Hulless oats*

Buckwheat*

*I'm unsure of the heritage of these varieties. In general, relatively little breeding has been done in either common oats (Avena sativa) or buckwheat. Even less breeding has been done in hulless oats (Avena nuda) since WWII and some consider them ancient grains.

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