
Caesar Salad with Dressing and Homemade
croutons
Perfect
Roast Chicken with Sage and Brown
Gravy
Roasted
Yukon Gold Potatoes, Carrots and
Shallots
Sautéed
Spinach and Garlic
Lemon
Mousse with Blackberry Puree
We will
celebrate St Patrick's Day on the farm with a special
class that focuses on traditional Irish cooking.
Ireland is rather rural and many farm fresh items are
available. Also, the climate is rather wet and
days very humid, so a non-yeast soda bread became a
staple. This class will put it all together for a
fun filled Saturday March 14. Cost is
$60.
Irish Soda Bread
Carrot
Soup with Marjoram
Champ
Potatoes
Stewed
Pork Ribs
Chocolate
Whiskey Cake
Easter is a
holiday of special significance and for many a time for
the family to be together. With all the comings
and going of Easter Sunday, we will offer a class that
allows you to prepare a quick and easy Easter brunch
that does not take away from family time. This
class will be offered March 28 and cost is
$65.
Mixed Greens with Crispy Bacon, Goat Cheese and Fried
Egg
Sausage
and Egg Casserole with Sundried Tomato and
Mozzarella
Chive
Corn Muffins with Maple Butter
Roasted
Asparagus with Wild Mushrooms
Strawberries
with Cardamom Sugar and Grand
Marnier
More
information on these classes is available at our
website.
There will
be only one class in April on the 25th. It will be Part
II of Cooking Basics: The Art of Good Food.
Classes for the rest of the year are available
here
if you wish
to reserve early. Participation is limited in all
classes. Men may be interested in the Octoberfest
class (complementary German beer) and the class
November 14 on roasting meats.
Wildflower
Trails Festivals
The
Wildflower Trails of Texas festival will be April 24-26
in the nearby towns of Hughes Springs,
Linden
and
Avinger. In each town, which are a few minutes
apart on lovely east Texas highways, there are
different events that the entire family can
enjoy. You can stay at the farm and still be near
all the action. At this time of the year many of
our wildflowers are in full bloom along with the
dogwood trees.
Live
Music & Places To Hang Out
If you need
more than a rural retreat, the farm is near a number of
venues that offer a variety of music or other
activities.
For live
music, Crossroads
in Winnsboro offers a
relaxed coffee house environment. Sadly they will close
in a few months as the owners move on to develop their
own musical talent. There is probably a great
opportunity for someone to take over this very popular
business. In Linden, Music
City Texas also has
live music on Saturday nights. This is in a
building that was the old National Guard armory in the
60's when I was in high school. A group of teens, known
as the Four Speeds, performed for sock hops
occasionally on Saturday nights. The lead singer
was a local boy that made it big time;
Don
Henley of the
Eagles. In Jefferson, is a pub that will remind
you of a southern version of Cheers.
Auntie Skinners has good
food, good drink and live entertainment on
weekends.
Not into
music? There are two local vineyards with wine tasting
rooms. Jeff Sneed is a great host at Pittsburg's
Los Pinos
Ranch Vineyard, where you
can sit on the veranda of the tasting room and enjoy
the view of the vineyard. In Naples,
Red Road Vineyard and Winery 's host is
Merrill Grove and this unique wine tasting venue is
inside an 1890's ice and power generation house by the
railroad. Both offer great wine produced here in
East Texas.
Cabin
"Farm Stay" Special
At this
time, we are not fully booked for spring break.
There are also a number of cabins available this spring
(during the week and on the
weekends).
During March
and April we are offering our own version of the
economic stimulus. If you stay three nights or
more, we will discount the rental rate 10%. That
will probably cover the cost of gasoline for most of
you to get to the farm.
The weather
forecast for this weekend (March 6-7) calls for a
slight chance of rain. Book a cabin for these two
nights and save 10%. If you go to the cooking
class Saturday morning you save 20% which almost covers
the cost of the class.
Spring is a
delightful time of the year on the farm. The days
are warm and the nights perfect. I like to
compare the hundreds of shades of green in the forest
as the leaves appear to the many shades of green so
common in Ireland. This is also the time of the
year the lake turns over and the fishing becomes a
challenge. Lake turnover is a rather interesting
event. Water density varies by temperature.
The colder the water the more dense. The stratified
condition of the lake is different in summer and
winter. In the fall, as the surface water cools
the denser water drops to the bottom of the lake.
In the spring, the reverse happens. Each of these
change the fishing patterns for a few
days.
If you do
not fish, the trails are great to walk in the spring.
Many spring wildflowers and the scent off honeysuckle
vines fill the air. If you like to mountain bike,
we have some very challenging back country roads or
tackle the fire lane around the new
forest.
Many have
already booked cabins for the summer season. If
you wish to reserve more than one cabin on the same
dates we encourage you to book
early.
Healthy
Texas Grass-Fed Beef & Pastured
Pork
We recently
updated the information
on our
grass-fed beef. Many of you have purchased our
beef in the past, or have placed an order for later
this year. We offer a variety of discounts for
those that have purchased before or if you buy more
than a split quarter. Based on the actual
packaged beef our customers received last year, the
average price was about $4.29 per pound. This
includes all cuts from steaks to lean ground
beef.
For those of
you that have never bought beef direct from a rancher,
we sell in different quantities. The least amount
is 1/8 of a steer which is a split quarter divided into
two parts. This will be about 1 to 1-1/4 freezer
shelves. Most of our customers buy a split
quarter. If that is too much for their family,
they divide it and share it with family or
friends.
We take
extra special care of our cattle and they are raised in
a natural environment free of artificial inputs.
This means no feed laced with antibiotics, hormones or
any artificial supplement. The beef you buy
in the grocery store is totally different than that
which we offer. Our beef is dry aged for at least
21 days while the beef in stores is packaged within
hours of slaughter. Our cattle eat a variety of
natural forages in the pasture. They are not
taken off their mother's at five months. They are
not taken off pasture and stuck in a feed lot with
thousands of cattle and forced to eat a diet of grain
with limited hay (plus bicarbonate of soda for their
acid stomachs and antibiotics to keep them alive) until
the day they die. When we do harvest our steers,
they are not left overnight in a cold damp killing pen.
We take our cattle to our local butcher with familiar
cattle they have been raised with and they are then
harvested within minutes of arrival free of stress. I
know to some this seems hard, but we do our best to
respect our cattle to the end. Ranching is a
business, but it does not have to be harsh nor inhumane
in treatment of the cattle.
On March 16
HBO has a special documentary, Death On
A Factory Farm. It is
about raising hogs in factory farms. A number of
the beef magazines and web based cattle newsletters are
raising concerns about this film. They all say
the same thing. This could happen to us!
My view is that it does not have to be that way if the
cattle industry woke up. In the 1950's, most all
of the beef available in grocery stores was raised
totally on grass and seldom passed through a feed lot.
It is only in recent decades, when the big corporate
interest became involved and greed came into play, that
factory cattle, hog and chicken farms became
dominate. If you purchase beef from the Greer
Farm, it is going to be raised the old fashioned way
and there is no chance we will be featured in an HBO
special focusing on factory farming.
In an
earlier newsletter and on a blog I shared information
on factory hog farming and our desire to raise pastured
pork as an alternative. We applied for a grant
that supports sustainable agriculture techniques that
can be shared by family farms. The grant was not
approved for the cooperative project with Stephen F.
Austin State University that we proposed. The
reason given was we needed a two year period for our
project to be fully tested and the funding agency
wanted projects that lasted a year or less. I could say
they were short sighted when it comes to the timing of
farming projects, but then it was graded by a group of
academics and not farmers. In any case, hope
still springs eternal and we hope to still do the
project on our own in cooperation with our local
community college and others.
We
need some feedback from you.
Please
email
us if you
are interested in buying pastured pork or pastured lamb
if the meat is available by the packaged piece, not a
whole animal. Also, it you are interested, what
amount of each would you purchase in a 12 month
period. This will help us determine the
commercial interest you may have in supporting a pilot
project. Without customers, we can not do this
economically.
From
Our House To Yours
We
appreciate your support of our family farm and enjoy
reading your emails including suggestions and
comments. Please forward our newsletter to those
you think may enjoy it.
For the
cooking classes, registration is limited due to space,
so please make your reservation as soon as
possible.
All the best
from everyone here on the farm.
Sid
&
Eva Greer




March 7, 2009
Basic Cooking Class 1
Creating tasty meals is not
that difficult if you learn some basic cooking skills.
This first class is designed to allow you to make one
of the most popular salads served in restaurants along
with the most common meat staple in America, roasted
chicken. Side dishes, that are healthy and full of
flavor along with a fun desert to make, complete this
menu. Each of these dishes is designed to teach you a
specific skill or enhance the kitchen skills you
already have.
Caesar Salad with Dressing and Homemade croutons
Perfect Roast Chicken with Sage and Brown Gravy
Roasted Yukon Gold Potatoes, Carrots and Shallots
Sautéed Spinach and Garlic
Lemon Mousse with Blackberry Puree
March 14, 2009
A Touch of Green for St
Patrick’s Day
Traditional Irish dishes are easily prepared and use
simple ingredients. Being a very rural country, fresh
food is a major part of every meal. This menu is as
traditional as you can get and starts with a bread
anyone can make. You will be surprised how such
inexpensive ingredients make such a flavorful meal.
Irish Soda Bread
Carrot Soup with Marjoram
Champ Potatoes
Stewed Pork Ribs
Chocolate Whisky Cake
March 28, 2009
Easy Easter Brunch
This menu is designed to
bring a touch of springtime into this special holiday
weekend. A unique mix of dishes that are fun to learn
to make and very tasty.
Mixed Greens with Crispy Bacon, Goat Cheese and Fried
Egg
Sausage and Egg Casserole with Sundried Tomato and
Mozzarella
Chive Corn Muffins with Maple Butter
Roasted Asparagus with Wild Mushrooms
Strawberries with Cardamom Sugar and Grand
Marnier