HERITAGE FOOD PRODUCERS AND PROCESSORS

Pork Seafood
Turkey Bison
Poultry Abattoir
Beef Artisanal Charcuterie
Lamb Native American Foods
Goat Artisanal Cheese
Rabbit    

PORK

Berkshire Pork

Berkshire meat is elegant, luscious and smooth. The streaks of fat that run through Berkshire meat give it a round and buttery flavor that melts on the tongue. The firm and substantial texture of Berkshire meat was so cherished by the British monarchy that they exported the breed all over the world, including Japan where it is called Korobuta.

Our Certified Humane Berkshires are raised by a group of small family farmers in Iowa, Kansas and Missouri. We know our Berkshires are purebred because they all have six white spots, one each on the tip of their feet and one each on the nose and tail. Unlike factory farm pigs, which have been bred to grow quickly in indoor environments, Berkshires have bred for maximum taste. Berkshire meat is so good it can be prepared with almost no additional ingredients save salt and pepper.

Duroc Pork

Duroc meat is clean and crisp. Its taste and texture are polished and easy on the palate. Duroc pork is a standard, not too fatty, not too lean, not too strong but certainly more flavorful than its factory farmed cousins. For decades the Good family of Olsburg, Kansas have bred to improve the taste characteristics of their Durocs.

Duroc pigs were used as the foundational genetics of the pig industry beginning in the 20th century. Large litters and the ability to gain weight quickly were Duroc characteristics from the start. In 1812, early "Red Hogs" were bred in New York and New Jersey and these would be the ancestors of Duroc pork today. As our Duroc farmer Craig Good attests: Duroc pigs Do Rock!

Red Wattle Pork

Animal WelfareRed Wattle meat is charmingly inconsistent and can be earthy, vegetal and herbaceous. Its expressive porky flavor is concentrated, edgy and even racy.

The Red Wattle pig populated the backyards of New Orleans during the 18th and 19th centuries where it was bred to stand up to the strong and flavorful Creole cuisine. These gentle Red hogs are noted foragers and when allowed to roam their meat develops traces of the forage of their locale.

Originally the Red Wattle hails from New Caledonia in the South Pacific, and is one of the few pigs raised in the United States not from Western Europe. The Red Wattle is the only pig left in the world that still has a wattle hanging from its jowl. The Red Wattle is considered critically endangered with an estimated global population less than 2,000. Buying and eating our Red Wattle pork is a key to preserving diversity in the livestock supply and supporting Animal Welfare Approved family farms like Lazy Ranch in Glasco, Kansas.

Tamworth Pork

Tamworth meat is robust and gutsy and is the leanest of the pork breeds that we sell making it an excellent source of bacon and jowl. It has a balanced flavor that is the pork equivalent of a red beer. Tamworth has an almost elastic texture but remains accessible.

A safe food supply is a diverse food supply so the Tamworth’s presence on the Threatened list means that demand is needed to preserve this delicious breed. The Tamworth is a hearty and strong animal making it an excellent candidate for a growing urban farm movement around the United States.

Gloucestershire Old Spot Pork

Gloucestershire Old Spots originated in the Berkeley Valley region of England and have now spread throughout the United Kingdom. A Gloucestershire Old Spots breed society was formed in 1913. While this variety once existed in great numbers, today there remain fewer than 200 registrations in the United States.

Large Black Pork

The Large Black is an orchard pig developed from the black pigs of Devon and Cornwall and the European pigs found in East Anglia. There remain fewer than 200 registrations of Large Blacks in the United States.

Newman Farm

Newman Farm, located in the Ozarks of southern Missouri, is owned and managed by Mark and Rita Newman. Their farm is one of the few pork farms left in southern Missouri. Both Mark and Rita have been involved with farming since they were children. Mark began farming in high school, as a member of the Future Farmers of America program. Mark, Rita and their grown children Chris, Susan, Courtney and David, believe strongly in the values of family farming.

The Newman’s have been involved in outdoor pork production since 1968. They began raising high quality 100% purebred Berkshire pigs on pasture in the mid 1990s, the only of its kind in the US. Today they have a thousand pigs which roam freely on this sprawling farm, and new piglets are born every day. They have plenty of fresh air, sunshine, and water, which also contribute to the rich pork color and excellent marbling.

The pigs receive only the highest quality feed rations or corn- soybean meal along with vitamins and mineral supplements. The pigs are completely free of growth promotants, animal protein by-products, or sub-therapeutic antibiotics. Through selective breeding, meat quality testing, and topnotch production standards the Newman family has been able to produce the highest quality pork product, which imparts a sweet, tender, juicy, and simply different flavor than any other pork. At Newman Farm they take pork production seriously and believe that quality pork begins at the farm and ends with satisfied consumers.

Each week Mark Newman drives 8 hours each way to transport his Berkshires to the processing house in Trimble, Missouri. All animals are handled and transported according to Humane Farm Animal Care Standards. Mark comments, “A lot of people wouldn’t do it,” but he and Rita understand the value of small family farms. Mark continues his work because he derives personal satisfaction from it. Seeing the end result is a unique and wonderful thing for him. In Mark’s own words: “You gotta have it in your heart or you’re never gonna make it.”

“Newman Heritage Pork Farm is guaranteed as Certified Humane.”
 For more information, please visit: http://www.certifiedhumane.com.

Lazy S. Farm

Larry and Madonna Sorell have been farmers since 1970 when they purchased 200 acres of land in Cloud County, Kansas. Larry Sorell continues a family tradition that was passed down from his grandfather to his father and then to him. Today, the farm is a bit smaller but they still maintain true biodiversity on the farm, raising numerous heritage breeds including turkeys, some chickens, Katahdin and Jacob lamb and several pig varieties. The Sorells raise the best Red Wattle pig in the country. This hog breed is the rarest of all American pork breeds. Red Wattle meat tends to be a little darker than most other pork and is very tender. The variety makes wonderful hams and has a juicy and flavorful taste even though the meat is lean. This pig, which gets its name from its red color and the wattle that hangs under the chin, originated in New Caledonia, came to New Orleans in the 18th century and was developed in the forests of Texas. With increased demand and the hard work of the Sorells, the Red Wattle will find its niche in the 21st century, even if it does not conform to the unnatural needs of industrial agriculture.

Animal Welfare

 

Good Farm

"My family has been involved with agriculture for many generations. We have had this farm in Olsburg since 1964. We are a diversified farm, raising purebred hogs, purebred Angus cattle and various crops. I have worked with pigs and cattle since my 4-H projects in the mid 1960's. Following graduation from Kansas State University in 1975 I worked for another purebred swine breeder for 5 years. Amy (my wife) and I decided to move back to the farm in Olsburg in 1981.

The bloodlines of our Duroc pigs go back to a few select sows from the breeder I worked for. He had raised Purebred Durocs since the 1940's. We are small in comparison to most pork producers. We have 65 purebred Duroc and Yorkshire sows. Of the 65 sows, 30 of them are Durocs. The Yorkshires are noted for their Maternal traits and the Duroc are noted for their good growth rate and excellent carcass traits. They are also noted for their muscle quality and good eating quality. We have been performance testing since our start and only select the best of the best to be breeders in our herd. We are now placing extra emphasis on selecting Duroc pigs that have superior muscle quality. In our effort to do so, we are bringing in some old lines from the 80's. We will evaluate what they can offer to our herd. We feel that they may even further advance our effort to produce great tasting pork. We primarily sell to other small to medium sized producers. The producers purchase pigs from us because they trust the good health level of our herd, and the attention to detail and quality that we are able to employ in our small herd.

In recent years, with the evolution of large, mega swine farms, Good Farms has resisted the trend to grow large. We choose not to follow that trend because we feel that true quality is achieved by working with detail and care in breeding our hogs, not just cranking numbers and pounds off of the farm. Because of the trend of larger and larger swine operations, remaining our size is difficult because, as with many businesses we are in an era of low margin and high volume.

We are proud of our place in the farm economy and hope that we can continue to serve the producers that have been true to us over the years. We feel that the family farm has been a true asset to America and we strive to work together with our fellow producers to remain a viable part of the future. We have a strong commitment to produce pigs that are of the highest quality possible. The pigs that we are raising are not fed any antibiotics. All pigs are registered and all ancestry is tracked in making our breeding decisions."

The Goods are excited to have recently introduced a new breed to their farm: the Gloucestershire Old Spot.

Metzger Farm

Doug Metzger works his 1500-acre farm, which grows corn, sorghum, wheat, alfalfa, oats, barley, Reese turkeys (he has worked with turkeys since 1951) and pigs with wife Betty, son Mark, daughter Marilyn, son in law Stan and their three kids. Farming has become more challenging for Doug in recent years as he struggles to remain independent in an era of commercialization. "The chicken industry and the turkey industry went the way of industry," Doug explains, " and I'm working hard so that the same doesn't happen to the pork industry". Doug has raised purebred, certified Berkshire pigs since 1954 and learned the art from his grandfather Fred, father Wilhelm and father-in-law Japhet. These elder statesmen also taught Doug how to raise the now endangered Tamworth pig (as of 1961) and the Hampshire pig.

Fred Metzger was born 1885 in Lamar, Missouri to a family who had recently moved to the United States from Germany. Fred moved to Hancock, Minnesota when he was 10 and then to Larchwood, Iowa around 1900. Fred lived to be 104 and according to one source, had more living descendents than anyone alive in the United States with 368. Fred's son Wilhelm was born in 1911 and moved to Kansas in 1933 after he met and married the beautiful Julia Meyer. Julia's father Japhet Meyer owned the farm where the Metzgers live to this day.

Doug currently raises certified Berkshire and Tamworth pigs. For the past three years Doug has sold his Berkshires to the Japanese market. But Doug hopes that rising interest in Berkshire pigs will help him lay the foundation for a domestic market and allow him to expand production to include other local Kansas farmers. Making enough money to get by is the hardest aspect of farming for Doug and is the greatest obstacle to allowing his grandchildren to continue the work of four generation of Metzgers.

Norton Farm

David and Wesley, and Eric Norton run Norton Farm in Plattsburg, MO. It’s a third generation farm that raises 6,000 pigs annually, Angus cattle as well as corn, beans and wheat. Eric tells us he loves being outside, watching the pigs grow and seeing happy customers taste his efforts. Eric spends most of his time feeding the pigs a no-antibiotics feed or animal by-product. Eric is a young farmer who claims he wants to stay on the farm and raise pigs until he retires.

Holthaus Farm

David Holthaus is an avid and experienced community farmer who has been raising pigs and cattle on his 500 acres in Decorah, Iowa since 1974. He currently backgrounds Holstein cattle for the many farms that make up the dairy country in Northeast Iowa in addition to the 700 Berkshire pigs he has on pasture and feed at any given time.

David takes pride in bedding his pigs very deeply in corn stalks and straw bailed on the farm. The stalks and straw are then cleaned out of the barn and returned to the land for fertilizer to raise corn and hay for the next year.

These Berkshires are housed in traditional northeast Iowa farm building, open barns with access to the outdoors at all times.

David is also raises corn for the cattle raised on his farm or is delivered to the local feed mills.

David’s farm was granted the Certified Humane Certificate this September.

Holthaus Heritage Pork Farm is guaranteed as Certified Humane.”
 For more information, please visit: http://www.certifiedhumane.com.

Leaping Waters Farm

Leaping Waters Farm is a family operated sustainable farm run on 300 acres of pristine mountain valleys in rural southwest Virginia. Leaping Waters Farm takes pride in the rare breeds of cattle and hogs they raise on pasture. These rare breed animals produce beef and pork of the highest quality. In 2010 Leaping Waters Farm will begin to raise larger numbers of Heritage turkeys along with the Heritage chickens they already have on the farm for their meat and eggs. The Bradfords are an excellent example of a family operated farm. Every member of their young family pitches in whether it is to collect the eggs or round up the cattle!

Fisher Farm

Charles Fisher raises purebred Six-Spotted Berkshires on his 16-acre farm in Delaware, Iowa. The Fisher family has occupied the same land since 1976 and has been raising cattle and pigs since many years before then. Charles is dedicated to swine first and foremost and will begin raising Red Wattle pigs on his farm within the next year in addition to the pasture and hay he works to upkeep. The farm is biodynamic as the manure is used to help nourish the pasture. Charlie heats his home on the farm exclusively with wood using a converted 1916 furnace that he plumed in himself. He considers himself to leave a lesser carbon footprint than that of the average man. Charlie also enjoys playing the harmonica and fiddle.

Koerperich Farm

Paul Koerperich farms on the land he was raised near Epworth, Iowa. The town in which he lives was one of the first to be settled west of the Mississippi river. He spends his days focusing on increasing the number of Red Wattle pigs he raises while overseeing his Berkshire pig, beef cow-calf operation, crops and hay. Paul takes pride in the nursery where his young pigs live while ranging between 12 and 40 pounds. Once the pigs exceed 40 pounds they are moved out of the nursery where they live in open barns with full access to outdoors at all times. From there his pigs have a nice view of a limestone stone church built in the late 1800’s.

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TURKEY

Since 2002 a partnership between Heritage Foods USA and Good Shepherd Turkey Ranch has led to one of the greatest conservation success stories of this decade and a future for the most delicious tasting turkey in America.

By buying a Good Shepherd Turkey Ranch Heritage Turkey you are supporting a network of independent growers, preserving endangered lines of turkey breeds that you must eat in order to save, and ensuring humane animal treatment: our turkey farms are the first to receive Animal Welfare Institute’s Animal Welfare Approved certification.

Good Shepherd Ranch
Frank Reese

Frank Reese is considered the God Father of American poultry. His farm is called Good Shepherd Turkey Ranch. Frank has been "hanging out" with turkeys as long as he can remember. He is a fourth generation poultry farmer from Lindsborg, Kansas. Frank joined 4-H at an early age and began keeping his own turkeys at about age five, winning his first Kansas State Turkey Championship in 1955 and his first National Turkey Championship in 1974.

Animal WelfareFor nearly all his life, Frank has maintained a keen interest in American Heritage Turkeys, with an avowed objective of preventing their extinction. Frank is a founding member of the All-American Turkey Growers' Association and a lifetime member of the National Poultry Association. He is also the only licensed turkey judge for the American Poultry Association. His operation has been certified by the National Poultry Improvement Program since 1974. His turkey farm is the first turkey farm to be certified by the prestigious Animal Welfare Institute (AWI). Robert F. Kennedy Jr. says AWI is “The gold standard for how farm animals should be taken care of.”

The New York Times’ Kim Severson writes of Frank: “Only someone with a trained eye can pick the best toms and hens to breed and Mr. Reese is considered the best of the few people in the country who can do it. He is also the only one with a flock whose genetic line can be traced back to the late 1800s.”

In that same November 7th, 2007 article Severson writes:

“Although these breeds make up far less than one percent of the 265 million turkeys produced in America last year, many chefs consider them the best thing to eat on Thanksgiving. Turkeys like Mr. Reese’s take much longer to grow than mass-produced ones. Thus, they develop more fat and a robust flavor.”

Frank has brought together a group of neighboring farmers to help him raise his birds including Danny Williamson of Windmill Ranch, Doug Metzger of Metzger Farm and Ron Tommy, whose farm is located just outside Wichita, Kansas. Each spring Frank sells his cherished poults to the members of his network under the condition that they sell the grown turkeys back to him just before Thanksgiving. In this way, Frank has been able to significantly increase population counts of Heritage Turkeys. The Bourbon Red turkey, for instance, was upgraded from "rare" to "watch" status by the American Livestock Breeds Conservancy.

A heritage turkey is defined as:

  • A true heritage turkey is reproduced and genetically maintained through self-breeding;
  • A true heritage turkey has a long productive lifespan. Breeding hens are commonly productive for 8-9 years and breeding toms for 3-5 years;
  • -A true heritage turkey has a slower rate of growth. Today's heritage turkeys reach a marketable weight in 26-28 weeks.

Frank has benefited from the mentorship of some of the leading American Heritage Turkey producers he met over the years at turkey shows and meetings. He counts among his most treasured teachers the late Norman Kardosh, as well as Sadie Lloyd, Agnes Trow, Bill Cawley and Hy Patton. For years, Frank pursued his hobby and "labor of love" with financing from his job: he is a licensed nurse anesthetist practicing in the Lindsborg and Salina area of Kansas State.

In addition to turkeys, Good Shepherd also owns some of the rarest genetics in the waterfowl segment of the poultry industry. For example, its American Buff and Toulouse geese are bred to produce the highest quality meat in the world.

Windmill Ranch
Danny Williamson

Danny Williamson owns Windmill Ranch and deals with all business related to Good Shepherd Turkey Ranch. Danny built his home, which looks more like a log cabin set in the middle of the woods of Wisconsin, from scratch with his own two hands three years ago. He and his friend Dave were looking for a place to build a home near the quarter mile section of land Dave owned in Tampa, Kansas and they found it in the form of an abandoned farm. The first thing they did with their newly purchased 18 acres was build a chicken and turkey coop. Then they proceeded to populate these structures with Black and Bourbon Red turkeys, numerous types of heritage chickens including Dark Brahmas and ducks including White Calls. His Black turkeys, which he had been raising for eight years, were sourced from Rita Eichman's farm near Dodge City. Today, Danny keeps about 100 breeders and about 2,200 young poults on his farm.

Danny grew up participating in 4H projects and so had some experience with poultry. And then, in 1998, he met Frank Reese at the state fair and his interest in poultry was rekindled. Danny's love of turkey goes past just raising them. He is also a great chef.

Danny spends his days checking up on his birds, retrieving ones that have flown over the fence, changing the water and cleaning the coops. The biggest challenge on the farm is carrying the feed. Danny is a licensed American Poultry Association Judge and presides over numerous 4H competitions (Danny will visit 15 competitions or more a year). Danny is one of the only people who has a Grand Master Breeder of Black turkey. He also boasts a Grand Master Breeder of the Dark Brahma chicken and White Call duck. To get that honor a breeder has to win many shows and accumulate at least 100 points. Depending on the show, a bird can win between 5-25 points. Only winners get points.

Metzger Farm
Doug Metzger

Doug Metzger works his 1500-acre farm, which grows corn, sorghum, wheat, alfalfa, oats, barley, Reese turkeys (he has worked with turkeys since 1951) and pigs with wife Betty, son Mark, daughter Marilyn, son in law Stan and their three kids. Farming has become more challenging for Doug in recent years as he struggles to remain independent in an era of commercialization. "The chicken industry and the turkey industry went the way of industry," Doug explains, " and I'm working hard so that the same doesn't happen to the pork industry". Doug has raised purebred, certified Berkshire pigs since 1954 and learned the art from his grandfather Fred, father Wilhelm and father-in-law Japhet. These elder statesmen also taught Doug how to raise the now endangered Tamworth pig (as of 1961). Doug has worked with Frank Reese since Frank first started to raise turkeys in larger numbers in 2002.

Fred Metzger was born in 1885 in Lamar, Missouri to a family who had recently moved to the United States from Germany. Fred moved to Hancock, Minnesota when he was 10 and then to Larchwood, Iowa around 1900. Fred lived to be 104 and according to one source, once had more living descendents than anyone alive in the United States with 368. Fred's son Wilhelm was born in 1911 and moved to Kansas in 1933 after he met and married the beautiful Julia Meyer. Julia's father Japhet Meyer owned the farm where the Metzgers live to this day.

Doug currently raises about 5,000 turkeys and has about 700 certified Berkshire pigs and 70 Tamworth pigs but hopes to double that number through Heritage Foods USA. For the past three years Doug has sold his Berkshires to the Japanese market. But Doug hopes that rising interest in Berkshire pigs will help him lay the foundation for a domestic market and allow him to expand production to include other local Kansas farmers. Making enough money to get by is the hardest aspect of farming for Doug and is the greatest obstacle to allowing his grandchildren to continue the work of four generation of Metzgers. But with growing support from consumers and restaurants, there is hope.

Thome Farm
Ron Thome

Ron Thome, whose farm is located just west of Wichita in Goddard, Kansas, is a master at raising Heritage turkeys. His mother Ester Thome raised turkeys on range and was involved with the industry for many decades. Ron's father was a Kansas wheat farmer. Ron is carrying on the tradition of raising turkeys on free range by being a part of the Heritage Turkey project. He can still use the farm's original design from many years before.

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POULTRY

We sell chickens, ducks and geese, year-round and fresh during the holidays!

The Original Meat Chickens, the Chickens that Fed this Country until 1960

So says Frank Reese, the country’s preeminent poultry farmer, about the famed heritage chickens that thrive alongside his turkeys at the Good Shepherd Turkey Ranch in Kansas. Like his turkeys, his chickens come from those breeds that are threatened by the rise of commodity production; and they are all free ranged and humanely raised. Until now, Frank’s chickens have been hard to come by; but the farm has been building up its numbers in recent months! These are no doubt the best chickens available in North America.

The 150-year-old Plymouth Rock, or the king of meat production, is the ultimate broiler chicken; it is also a member of the American Poultry’s Standards of Perfection. This was the original chicken produced in the United States.

The New Hampshire is a descendent of the Rhode Island breed. Like their less blocky relative the Plymouth Rock, they are a dual-purpose chicken, known both for their eggs and delicious, very fleshy but smooth meat.

The Cornish Game, a breed from England, arrived in America in the 19th Century, and was developed solely for its meat. That meat, darker than your average chicken meat, is robust and firm, with a flavor slightly reminiscent of game.

Frank chose his last breed, the Jersey Giant, to illustrate the diversity of heritage chicken breeds. The Jersey Giant is a slow growing bird (it takes 24-28 weeks to reach market weight, as compared to the Plymouth’s 16-18 weeks). A larger chicken with silky and rich meat, this is the perfect chicken for roasting. Dress it simply so you can taste its natural flavors.

Wild Rose Farm

Wild Rose Farm and Apiary is located in the scenic, irresistibly beautiful Loess Hills just outside of Glenwood, Iowa. Bob and Dee Mejstrik purchased their farm in 1996 and immediately built a big garden and orchard. In order to get good pollination and increase productivity, they took up beekeeping. Then, in order to create a backyard layer flock, the following year the Mejstriks became ardent poultry farmers and discovered the wonderful world of purebred exhibition poultry. They quickly acquired a hatchery license and began raising exhibition poultry. Today they farm 100% heritage pasture-raised Dark Cornish “Indian Game” and Plymouth Barred Rock chicken varieties.

The pure-bred Dark Cornish birds are finally available to Heritage Foods supporters for the first time in a long while. The tasteless, genetically modified supermarket chicken is officially called a Cornish Rock. The true Dark Cornish on the other hand is a delicious rare variety of chicken. To avoid possible confusion we like to refer to this chicken by its original name: Indian Game. The “game” name was given because the true Dark Cornish is a descendent of an Indonesian breed raised to be a fighting bird. Our Indian Games, which came to the USA via England, are absolutely luscious tasting and are so authentic and pure they have even retained their fighting look.

Frank Reese has held this genetic line since 1974 when he acquired two breeder birds from poultry experts Tommy Reece and Vincent Farro. Frank and the rest of Good Shepherd Ranch have been working closely with the Mejstriks to raise this next generation of Indian Game chickens.

Indian Game meat is darker and firmer with a better texture than the commercial kind. The flavor is not gamey but “heavy,” a term used to describe a deep chicken essence.

The Mejstriks are members of the American Poultry Association and attend several shows each year. Wild Rose Farm is a true family business. Together they make candles, soaps, bath salts and hand-painted crafts as well as fabulous honey and herbal products all of which they sell at local farmers markets and area craft fairs from June through September.

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BEEF

Piedmontese Cattle

Piedmontese cattle originated in the foothills of northwestern Italy and are thought to be a mix of the Auroch and Zebu cattle crossed over 25,000 years ago. We are especially fond of this breed, because Piedmont is also home to the Slow Food movement in Bra, Italy. Today, in the United States, a network of family farmers is raising the cattle on a pure vegetarian feed without the use of antibiotics and without added growth hormones.

Piedmontese is unique in that it contains myostatin, known as the "double muscle gene." Myostatin is only found in Piedmontese cattle and results in a natural tenderness. Though the beef is naturally lean, the flavor is rich and intense.

 

Hearst Ranch

Hearst Ranch from San Simeon, California has been raising 100% grass-fed cattle since 1865. The Hearst family is responsible for one of the largest working ranches and conservation easements on the California coast. The Hearsts started a ranch that was prized for its quality breeding, fine livestock and stewardship of the land. These cattle, a mix of predominantly Hereford, Angus and Shorthorn breeds, are humanely raised and graze on 150,000 acres of nutrient-rich coastal prairie and native grasslands along the inland terraces of San Simeon. The flavor of Hearst grass-fed beef is influenced by the nearby valleys as well as the central coastal terroir.

We are proud to offer this beef thanks to our friend Brian Kenny from Hearst Ranch who is bringing this product to market for the first time in years. We have chosen two cuts that best express the spectrum of flavor profile and characteristics: the ribeye and the sirloin steak. The flavor of both is influenced by the nearby valleys as well as the central coastal terroir.

White Oak Pastures

Among the peanut and cotton fields of Early County in southwest Georgia, sits White Oak Pastures, a fifth generation grass-fed cattle ranch owned and operated by the Harris Family since 1866. Today the farm is in the hands of Will Harris III who steered White Oak Pastures back to the days just after the Civil War when his great-grandfather, Captain James Edward Harris, grazed his cattle outdoors and slaughtered the animals on the same land.

After the war, a relative helped Captain Harris, a cattleman at heart and by trade, settle into the area. He and other sharecroppers butchered one cow and some pigs once a week in order to feed the 100 or so people living on the farm at the time. His son, Will Carter Harris, inherited the farm, expanded it and began slaughtering animals on a daily basis. A mule-drawn wagon delivered meat in the nearby town of Bluffton while meandering the commissaries, hotels and boarding houses.

During the 1940s, the third generation took possession and saw Will Bell Harris transition White Oak Pastures into the world of industrialization along with his son Will III. But in 1995, Will made the brave and bold decision to transition back to the older ways. He started a closed herd of predominantly Black Angus cows that relied on the benefits of the deep south's bright southern sunshine, its clean air, fertile soil and sweet native grasses to keep the animals happy and healthy. Around the same time, Will and his wife Yvonne Harris were raising the fifth generation of ranchers, their three daughters: Jodi, Jenni and Jessi.

Will Harris III became a grass-fed beef perfectionist. Leaning forward and pulling up his pointer finger with an intensity heightened by a heavy drawl, he explained his desire to build his own on-farm humane processing facility. In 2008, they cut the ribbon on a USDA-inspected processing plant large enough to slaughter a few dozen of their own cattle a day. Abiding by his hero George Washington Carver's words that nature never wastes, the new plant is a zero waste facility, using a digester to transform waste into organic fertilizer.

Animal WelfareCertified Humane
White Oak is certified by the Animal Welfare Approved and Certified Humane.

Fountain Prairie Highland Cattle

John and Dorothy Priske’s Fountain Prairie Highland Cattle Farm is home to the most beautiful cattle in the world and holds the largest Highland stock in Wisconsin. They graze on 434 acres of grass just outside of Fall River Wisconsin.

John and Dorothy began farming asparagus in 1984 but changed course when they bought a large old house built at the turn of the Twentieth century. The Priskes had a vision to repair, restore and share their newly acquired property with the community. This vision of change was meant not only for the house, but also for the entire prairie land on which the house sat. The Priskes knew that raising cattle would be the perfect solution to maintaining the land, because the cattle would both harvest and fertilize the land. With this notion, John and Dorothy Priske began farming Highland Cattle on the prairie.

The Priskes have brought back dozens of species of native grasses and other plants and recreated the original wetlands that once supported the flocks of migrant waterfowl. Today they have successfully restored 60 acres of wetland prairie and the birds and animals are returning!

These Highland cattle eat grass most of their lives and feed on grain towards the end. The Priskes raise and handle cattle humanely and do not use any hormones, anabolic steroids, or sub therapeutic feed antibiotics. The Priskes dry-age their meat for 21 days after slaughter and sell most of it locally directly to customers at the Dane County Farmer’s Market.

The Priskes are dedicated stewards of the land. In fact, they have achieved Level 3 with the Conservation Security Program (CSP). The CSP is a voluntary USDA program that gives financial assistance to farmers with the best conservation and stewardship practices. The Priske’s role models and sources of great inspiration include Aldo Leopold, Wendell Barry and author Michael Pollan – each would be proud.

Sharing and learning with community is important to the Priskes. Through interacting with the community, they have learned that people from all backgrounds are eager and striving to get back to the land and good quality products. The Priskes often host community dinners and give tours of their farm and inn to create a place where dialog and education take place.

Leaping Waters Farm

Leaping Waters Farm is a family operated sustainable farm run on 300 acres of pristine mountain valleys in rural southwest Virginia. Leaping Waters Farm takes pride in the rare breeds of cattle and hogs they raise on pasture. These rare breed animals produce beef and pork of the highest quality. In 2010 Leaping Waters Farm will begin to raise larger numbers of Heritage turkeys along with the Heritage chickens they already have on the farm for their meat and eggs. The Bradfords are an excellent example of a family operated farm. Every member of their young family pitches in whether it is to collect the eggs or round up the cattle!

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LAMB

Sandstone Ridge Farm

James and Lisa Twomey established Sandstone Ridge Farm, in the southwestern region of Wisconsin, after they visited the nearby Kickapoo River and fell in love with the charming topography composed of limestone and sandstone outcroppings, steep valley walls and clusters of Amish farms. The glaciers that leveled most of the mid-west 12,000 years ago hit a granite bump and skipped this corner of Wisconsin where today cold springs of mineral water and trout streams flow constantly. The Kickapoo River was also a source for inspiration for the architect Franklin Lloyd Wright.

Sandstone Ridge Farm is a “piece of heaven” that became the Twomeys’ hobby farm. The land they inherited was burly and overgrown, so when a neighbor recommended grazing sheep or goats to keep the grass down, the Twomeys searched for the perfect residents. They chose the Tunis sheep, a personable breed that produces wonderful meat. The Tunis have managed their pastures ever since.

Tunis have chestnut-colored faces and legs covered in thick velvety wool. The lamb are raised with their mothers on hay and feed on a good mix of protein and carbohydrates including locally-grown alfalfa hay, oat hay and nitrogen-heavy clover, a nutritional program that provides natural fertilizer and also sustains local bee populations that pollinate fruits and vegetables.

Though the barn door is always open, the animals roam on the sloping terrain most of the time. Only birthing, cold winter nights and the occasional blizzard are the few instances where their instincts motivate them to take shelter and cozy up on straw.

The younger lambs are milk-fed by their mothers and weaning occurs naturally. Pregnant ewes are given an extra ration of alfalfa pellets, corn, oats, and molasses. The ewes breed out of season and the delicately-flavored lamb is available year-round.

The Tunis sheep is amongst the oldest breeds of livestock in America and was developed in 1799 from a cross between a Middle Eastern fat-tailed sheep from Tunisia and local American sheep. It is said that Maynard Spigener (1849-1913) is responsible for having saved the Tunis breed in the United States from extinction during the Civil War. Spigener hid 30 head of pure-bred Tunis lamb in the swamps near a river that runs near Columbia, South Carolina. After the war, Spigener sold ten head of his sheep to James A. Guilliams who entered the Tunis in the Crawford Indiana County Fair where the stock was awarded for its meat, wool and breeding qualities.

Clover Creek Farm

Animal WelfareChris Wilson has been raising Katahdin Lamb for the last 18 years on 50 acres of land in Northeast Tennessee at an elevation of about 1650 feet. Clover Creek Farms practices sustainable agriculture and Chris Wilson was named Soil Conservation Farmer of the Year in 1999. Chris Wilson is certified by the Animal Welfare Institute and was a founding member of the Four Season Grazing Club.

Clover Creek lambs graze on native grasses, such as blue grass, and clovers that are abundant in the Tennessee area. Lambs are never separated from their mothers. They wean themselves naturally without any hormones or antibiotics. They are born outside and spend their entire life grazing with their mothers.

The Katahdin comes from Maine-lineage Katahdin Hair Sheep, which was bred specifically for their meat, without the big wooly coat that needs shearing.

Katahdin meat has a mild, delicate and wonderfully-balanced flavor. Our succulent Katahdin Lamb has a creamy texture and almost nutty taste.

Cattail Creek Farm

Cattail Creek Farm is located in the valley of the heavily forested hillsides just outside Eugene, Oregon. John Neumeister has been raising sheep for almost forty-five years and opened Cattail Creek with a small herd of thirty-five Romney ewes on seventeen acres that had previously been farmed by Native Americans. He and his partner have since expanded the operation to care for about 1,200 sheep, all 100% pasture-raised and finished on five hundred acres.

The sheep spend most of their time outdoors while the barns are used for workshops and storage. John rotates his pastures to maintain good grass coverage and offers a small amount of locally-grown hay and alfalfa when necessary, but never feeds his animals imported soy or grain. Cattail Creek Farm benefits from a mild climate thanks to its proximity to the Pacific Coast that protects it from the cold. The river running near Cattail Creek keeps the soil moist. The area has been likened to the Piedmont region in Italy.

John brings his sheep to Marks Meat Company, a USDA-inspected family-owned processing facility, where the husband and wife owners break-down and butcher the meat themselves. Cattail Creek has a strong local customer base and delivers directly to forty restaurants and nine natural foods stores in and around Portland, Oregon and San Francisco.

John and his wife manage a non-profit dedicated to improving the quality of food in schools in Africa and they have partnered with Slow Food Kenya to help achieve this mission. Cattail Creek is certified by the Food Alliance, an organization that rewards food producers who meet the group’s rigorous environmental and social farming standards. John’s partner has three children who manage their own sheep and will likely remain on the farm and keep the legacy of Cattail Creek Farm alive.


 

Sweet Grass Natural Lamb

Sweet Grass Natural Lamb is a cooperative of five sheep producers from Sweet Grass County, Montana. Sweet Grass Natural lamb raises a cross of Targhee and Suffolk Lamb.

The first private individual began breeding Targhee in 1929. The breed was named after the Targhee National Forest where the sheep grazed during the summer.

Harv VanWagoner, as well as the other producers, have farmed for five generations. Harv claims, "We eat what we raise so we can attest to the quality of our lamb". The farms range from 1900 ­ 6400 acres.

Sweet Grass Natural Lamb belongs to the Western Sustainability Exchange. The ewes roam freely and graze on native and tame pastures for nine months of the year. They are fed alfalfa hay and whole corn in the months of March-May. The lambs wean themselves naturally in the fall without any hormones or antibiotics.

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GOAT

Boer goats are a South African breed originally developed for meat production. All of our goats are raised outdoors on green pastures.

Goat meat is very lean and tastes similar to moose and venison. It has a unique flavor but not an overpowering one. Some more fascinating facts about goat:

  • Their feet are composed of two separate hooves that were originally the third and fourth toes of their mammal ancestor.
  • The inside of the horn is living bone material with a blood supply.
  • Goats browse rather then graze and they live communally. Goats are very smart and make an excellent addition to any small farm, especially in colder regions.

Dragon Fly Cove Farm

Dragon Fly Cove Farm is owned and operated by Marge Kilkelly and Joe Murry and is part of a consortium of working farms dedicated to outdoor agriculture and ethical treatment of animals. Within a short time they converted a ten-acre hay field into a playground for 80 Boer goats and smaller, seasonal populations of hens, pigs and turkeys.

When Joe left his job as an electrician to become a full-time farmer, he put his carpentry skills to use and built barns with bunk beds and hay feeders with access through the windows so the goats need only to poke their heads in without having to climb on the bales of hay and soil the feed. Hay is also spread over the land during feeding to assure the animals get their exercise. The cross Boer goats love being outdoors and grow beautiful coats in the winter months.

 

 

Thyme for Goat

Thyme for Goat is a consortium of five family farms in Maine primarily raising breeds for meat production to offer delectable meat cuts for our customers. Their herds are raised in a natural environment exposing them to pasture feed, sunlight and shelter from inclement weather. They enjoy browsing, Maine hay crop, grain and garden grown veggie treats.

Goat meat is very lean and tastes similar to moose and venison. It has a unique flavor but not an overpowering one. Goat families reside in the widest ecological range of any domesticated species. Dragon Fly Cove Farm one of the consortium’s five partners is a small, diverse homestead farm located at the confluence of the Eastern and Kennebec rivers in mid-coast Maine. Marge Kilkelly and Joe Murray, who have worked with these lovely and gentle animals for over five years, raise the goats. Joe and Marge raise and sell Boer cross meat goats. When away from the farm, Marge works for the Council of State Governments on agricultural and rural policy in the Northeast.

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RABBIT

The Blanc de Hotot rabbit is listed as threatened on American Livestock Breeds Conservancy. The Blanc de Hotot is known for its frosty white fur and black-rimmed eyes. The beautiful Blanc de Hotot rabbit is unique being that the breed was developed entirely by women in the Hoto-en-Auge region of France. Madame Eugenie Bernhard, chatelaine du Calvados aimed to develop a new breed of rabbit that could be prized for its meat and fur. In the year 1902 she began crossing breeds and found that the Geant Papillon Francais when crossed with other lightly marked rabbits began to produce the characteristics she was looking for. It took over 10 years and 500 matings to produce what we know today as the Blanc de Hotot. The French rabbit governing body officially recognized the Blanc de Hotot as a breed on October, 13th 1922. The Blanc de Hotot was first brought to America between 1921 and 1922 but never took off as a breed. The Blanc de Hotot nearly went extinct during World War II but picked up again in 1978 when Bob Whitman from Texas imported 8 Blanc de Hotots . The American Rabbit Breeders Association standards accepted the breed in 1979.

The American rabbit is listed on the American Livestock Breeds Conservancy as critically endangered. It is one of the oldest breeds developed in the United States and is a cross of many different breeds. The American rabbit was officially listed as a breed in March of 1918. As a result of the First World War the original name of German Blue Vienna was changed to the American Blue. Lewis H. Salisbury of Pasadena, California is credited as having the best genetics and kept the list of breeds used to create the end result a secret. By the 1920’s furriers were paying high prices for their deep colored pelts. The American rabbit is one of the rarest breeds in all of America.

The Rare Hare Barn

Eric and Callene Rapp are the owners of Rare Hare Barn in Leon, Kansas where they raise rare breed Heritage rabbits. Eric and Colleen are both extremely dedicated to the care and preservation of rare domestic species. Callene has a degree in agriculture and has been on the board of the American Livestock Breeds Conservancy since 2003. She also holds the title of senior zookeeper at the children’s farm at the Sedgwick County Zoo in Wichita, Kansas. Eric had also worked at the zoo up until February of this year when he left his job to care for the rabbits at their own farm full time. Eric’s passion for rabbits started on the farm that he grew up on. Eric and Callene began raising rabbits about four years ago for the main purpose of providing their family with high quality, healthy and great tasting protein.

Eric and Callene raise their rabbits in the most humane way possible making sure that the rabbit pens are large enough to allow the animals to move around and get exercise as well as stand up and stretch. The barn has plenty of windows that provide a nice view as well as ventilation and air circulation to assure that the rabbits are always cool and comfortable.

Eric and Callene truly enjoy how engaging the rabbits are. Each morning Eric brings the rabbits fresh greens from the garden, usually kale. According to Callene as soon as the rabbits see Eric coming with the greens they get all excited and start thumping around. Aside from the garden greens the rabbits have access to hay for roughage and are given a supplement of grain-oat pellets to enhance their diet. These rare breed rabbits are never fed any growth stimulants, antibiotics or animal by-products of any kind.

The Rapps have found that there is a large network of Heritage rabbit growers in Indiana where they have taken many road trips to select their breeding stock. They are lucky to have found breeders that have been raising these rare breed rabbits for over 20 years.

Eric and Callene are about an hour and a half from Krehbiel’s Specialty Meats where the rabbits are brought for slaughtering. For the trip the rabbits are loaded into pens specially designed for comfortable traveling and are driven in a horse trailer with their familiar pen-mates so that the rabbits never experience any stress along the way.

The rabbits are brought to market when they are about 12 weeks old. The Rapps are definitely able to notice a distinct difference in the color and taste of the meat of the two different breeds they are currently bringing to market. The meat of the Blanc de Hotot tends to be light pink in color and a bit paler than the meat of the American rabbit. Both breeds offer a delicate taste and have a fine grain making the meat very easy to digest.

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SEAFOOD

We sell fresh Alaskan salmon in late summer and frozen Alaskan salmon year-round.
Our Albacore tuna is the most delicious and sustainable tuna in the world.

American Tuna

Our American Tuna comes from six hook-and-line fishing families at American Tuna of southern California. Fishing with hook-and-line is the only way to ensure both the best taste and the humane treatment of fish.

Only the finest center cuts of this fatty fish are filleted and hand-packed, cooked in their own juices which provides a deep buttery flavor and creamy texture. The American Tuna fishermen catch tuna that are 2-5 years old, so the mercury level in them is minimal to non-existent. Omega-3 rich, lean, protein-packed, with no carbohydrates, no additives, no fillers, no broth or water, this tuna truly deserves the Heritage label. It is "once-cooked" in its own natural juices so you can eat it right out of the can.

While Albacore tuna may not be endangered per se, the methods used by American Tuna certainly are. It is those methods and attention to detail that give the tuna such an incredible flavor. Only the finest hook-and-line caught Gourmet #1 Sashimi grade Albacore fillets hailing from the Pacific waters off the coast of San Diego, California and Oregon are used for American Tuna canned tuna.

Omega-3 rich, lean, and protein-packed: Albacore is good for your health!

Iliamna Fish Company

The Iliamna Fish Company is a hardworking crew of native Alaskan fishermen who spend their summer months touring the fishery located deep within Bristol Bay, Alaska in search of fresh sockeye salmon.

Heritage Foods USA is proud to be working with the Iliamna Fish Company, a family of 25 immediate and extended relatives that has been fishing the pristine Pacific Northwest waters since 1948. Three of the fishing families live in Alaska full time while the rest spends winters all across the United States. Every June and July all the fishermen dutifully return to the healthy Bristol Bay waters where they spend many days on the boat waiting for the influx of salmon that helps sustain the community during the long off-season.

The sockeye salmon come from the deepest part of Bristol Bay, Alaska known as Nakneck. The rich flesh of these fish is a deep scarlet to persimmon red color and imparts a slightly sweet taste, a characteristic that can be attributed to the salmon’s journey from salt to fresh water.

Iliamna Fish Company has built the fishery on responsible marine practices and sustainable harvesting techniques. The fishery is certified by the Marine Stewardship Council thanks to a strong commitment from the fishermen to protect and promote the natural resources that preserve their livelihood.

The only way they fish is by setting nets, which are a lot like a sheet hanging on a clothesline floating in the wind. Part of the sheet floats on top while the remainder is anchored at the bottom and drifts with the current. The tide creates a basket that collects the fish, a spectacle often referred to as a “wall of salmon” that swims in the shallow water where the Iliamna fishermen waiting for the catch in their four-foot deep, twenty-foot long boats, carefully pull the net up and gently retrieve the sockeye. Each salmon is then bled by hand and submerged in a 33°F ice bath before it is brought to shore. Within six hours the fish are cleaned, inspected, packed and ready to be shipped to home chefs and restaurants all around the United States.

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BISON

Thunderheart Shape Bison Ranch

Hugh Fitzsimmons owns and operates Shape Bison Ranch near San Antonio, Texas. Bison meat is the native North American meat. Sixty million bison once roamed the great planes of this land and sustained our Native Americans. But by the dawn of the 20th century, the total bison population had dwindled to less than 1,000. Thanks to conservation efforts, bison are slowly recovering. Thunder Heart Bison Ranch is dedicated to allowing bison to live in accordance with their natural instincts: they eat only grass and are killed on the prairies where they live, under low stress conditions. Ted Herrera, a partner in Thunder Heart Bison and a member of the Cohahuiltecan Native American tribe, oversees kills with a ceremony that follows the traditions of his ancestors.

Thunder Heart is one of the very few ranches in America whose buffalo are both grass-fed and field-harvested. By grazing on such native grasses as Sea Coast Bluestem, Old World Bluestem, Curly Mesquite, and Hooded Windmill, these bison produce a flavor that is mild and delicate.

Thunderheart Shape Bison Ranch also produces Guajillo Honey. Guajillo is a wild desert bush that is native to Southwestern Texas and Northern Mexico, a member of the "acacia" plant family. When the delicate pale yellow blooms briefly emerge in early April, the bees at the Shape Ranch begin an intense rush to feed and gorge themselves on this "Native Nectar." The result is an exquisite monofloral "single source" honey, that is light, delicate, and subtly complex. Native Nectar Guajillo Honey, the very essence of the best our land can offer.

The Buffalo Guys

It was amidst the diverse and sprawling grasslands of Northwest Kansas that Ken Klemm and Peter Thieriot built their reputation as “The Buffalo Guys.” Friends since the early 1990s, Ken and Peter have devoted the past 15 years to creating a sustainable and natural buffalo business for US consumers. Heritage Foods is excited to sell bison again which around 1900 only numbered one herd!

The Buffalo Guys found an environment that not only satisfied their need to maintain the rich tradition of buffalo, or bison raising, but also one that allowed them to develop and highlight sustainable practices, such as grazing and humane slaughter.

The meat and sausages they produce, all very lean and highly nutritious, are full of rich, grassy flavor that reflects the lands on which the buffalo graze. This unique combination of native grasses and foliage, with a minor grain supplement, produce a meat that is intense and slightly gamey, despite having a very low fat content.

 

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ABATTOIR

Heritage Foods USA works hard to ensure the ethical and humane treatment of the foods we sell when they are raised, transported and processed. Just as we work with producers who use strict production protocols, we also work with processing facilities that we know and have visited. Abattoirs that share our values and commitment. We ensure that the animals do not suffer at any point in the process which would affect taste and which would violate the sacred pact we have with the food we consume.

Paradise Locker Meats

Paradise Locker Meats, Inc. in Trimble, Missouri is family-owned and operated. The Fantasma Family (Mario, Teresa, Louis & Nick), have operated the business since 1995. Paradise Locker Meats is a Certified Humane Facility.

They specialize in custiom meats and offer a variety of home made sausages created from family recipes that trace back to pre-World War II Europe.

All meat cutting and processing is done onsite in their USDA inspected plant. The Fantasma Family have gained a notable reputation for providing quality meat products.

Krehbiel’s Specialty Meats

Krehbiels Natural Meats believes your family deserves the safest and highest quality meat products available.

Krehbiels Specialty Meats, Inc. takes USDA product and processing safety seriously, meeting the highest quality standards and delivering only the finest in natural meat products to our customers. All of our products are carefully vacuum packaged at the peak of flavor, contain no artificial ingredients and are guaranteed to be delivered in perfect condition. Our Heritage Chickens and Rabbits are processed at Krehbiel’s.

Purdy and Sons

Located in Shelburne, New York

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ARTISANAL CHARCUTERIE

The United States produces some of the best cured meats in the world.

Our world-class cured meats are long-aged to guarantee a flavor profile that best reflects the characteristics specific to free ranged Heritage pork. Many great American cure masters work closely with us and Newman Heritage Berkshire Pork Farm and Paradise Locker Meats to bring you some of the best bacon, salumi and hams in the world.
We believe a local source for charcuterie has the duel benefit of launching new American terroirs while relieving those in Europe that are overtaxed because of high demand.

S. Wallace Edwards & Sons

In 1926 S. Wallace Edwards, young captain of the Jamestown-Scotland ferryboat, began serving ham sandwiches to his ferry passengers .... sandwiches made from ham the salt-cured and hickory, smoked on his Edwards family farm.

The demand for his ham grew so quickly that Captain Edwards soon began curing and selling hams on a full-time basis. Meanwhile, his young wife, Oneita, contributed from home by cooking hams and raising their two children, Oneita Mae and Wallace Jr. As word of the "Edwards Virginia Ham" spread, the young Edwards family began shipping their products throughout the country.

Today, Edwards smokehouses are still located in Surry County, Virginia close to the spot where the Indians first taught the English colonists the secret of bringing out the full flavor in meats. The Edwards family has been honored to demonstrate their art of curing hams at the Smithsonian Institution Folklife Festival, and received many State Fair of Virginia Blue Ribbon and Grand Champion awards for their hams and bacon.

Over the last 81 years, Edwards' emphasis has always been on quality, not quantity. S. Wallace Edwards and Sons (second and third generation) remains a thriving family business dedicated to producing the finest quality smoked meat products...and extending the vision and legacy of its founder, S. Wallace Edwards, Sr.

Edwards dry cures beautifully marbled Newman Farm Berkshire bellies with sugar and salt before hickory smoking them for 18 hours to guarantee a flavor profile that best reflects the characteristics specific to free ranged Berkshire pork.

Edwards works closely with Heritage Foods USA and its Certified Huamane Berkshire farmers to develop its Cured Surryano style Hams, which age for at least 16 to 18 months.


Salumi

Located in the heart of Seattle's historic pioneer square district, Salumi Artisan Cured Meats brings to the Pacific Northwest a new concept based on some very old ideas. Drawing inspiration form the traditional Italian Slaumeria, Salumi is an artisan's factory equipped to produce the highest quality gourmet cured meats and other traditional foods. Their state of the art curing facility has been custom designed with space-age materials and processes to provide a level of artistic and process control unavailable to previous generations of Salumists. But Salumi is more than a place where wonderful foods are created and sold. It's also a place dedicated to the preservation and promotion of the handmade food traditions of Italy and the Mediterranean.

Salumi is the retirement dream for co-founder and Principal Salumist, Armandino Batali. His maternal grandfather, Angelo Merlino, opened the first Italian food import store in Seattle in 1903. A century later and only a block from that original site, Armandino works with generations of family cooking traditions. Armandino's 31 year career as a Process Control Engineer at Boeing plus a lifetime in the kitchen and 2 years in the formal study of meat curing and cooking make Armandino uniquely qualified to produce artisan products that also exceed stringent modern-day food processing requirements. With Marilyn Batali, wife and co-founder, Salumi has grown from a small neighborhood deli to a well-known stop on the Seattle culinary scene.

Esposito’s

In 1933 Giovanni Esposito and Sons was founded as a fresh meat and poultry butcher shop in the same Hell’s Kitchen, New York City location where it stands today.

As Giovanni’s sons grew older they too came to work in the family business. The brothers recognized the growing demand for their high quality products (especially their sausage), so they split the business into two separate entities: a retail butcher shop and a wholesale manufacturer and distributor of sausage. Armand Esposito ran the wholesale business known as Esposito’s Finest Quality Sausage Products.

In the 1970’s the wholesale business had grown to 10 employees and hundreds of local customers. During the 1980’s, with business booming, Armand refurbished the entire plant and all equipment. Flying directly to his father’s native Italy, he contracted with Velati and Risco to purchase the finest sausage-making equipment capable of handling the growth of his business.

Esposito’s continues to preserve the great tastes and traditions of Esposito’s, ensuring the legacy of Armand and the sanctity of the original recipes. In addition they have been adding new varieties as customers’ tastes and lifestyle evolve.

Heritage Foods USA is proud to supply Esposito’s with heritage pork that they use to provide customers with made to order sausages.

Benton’s Country Hams

Benton’s Smoky Mountain Country Hams are slow cured using salt, brown sugar, and sodium nitrite and typically aged 9-10 months, though hams are available 1 year and older. This time-honored practice dates back to the era of our forefathers, when the preparation and preservation of meat was a way of life and sustenance. Although the hands of time and technology have sculpted many aspects of our modern world, at Benton’s Smoky Mountain Country Hams we have upheld the traditional dry-curing process and are striving to produce world class country hams and bacon.

Benton’s was started in 1947 by the late Albert H. Hicks, a dairy farmer who began curing and selling country hams out of a building in his backyard. Allan Benton, a former high school guidance counselor, took over the business in 1973 and relocated it to the present location on US Hwy 411 near Madisonville, TN.

Out of this modest, painted block building, Allan Benton and his employees have honed the dry-curing of hams and bacon into a culinary art and have catapulted the products from a simple breakfast mainstay into the world of gourmet cooking, where they have been praised for their characteristic flavor. Most recently, Benton’s prosciutto, a domestic version of the renowned prosciutto specialty hams of Parma, Italy, has grown rapidly in popularity and has been featured in a broad spectrum of high-end restaurants, as well as in a number of magazines and other food publications.

Cameron's of Kearny

Just as there are heritage varieties of food, there are also heritage practices of making food. Ian MacAndrew is still making haggis, the Scottish national dish, at his store Cameron's of Kearny in Brick, New Jersey. Haggis was traditionally made with sheep’s “pluck” (heart, liver and lungs) and boiled in the animal’s stomach for an hour.

The origin of haggis is likely from the days of the old Scottish cattle drovers, when their wives would send them with food rations for the long journeys. Or perhaps haggis was invented as a way of cooking quick-to-spoil offal near the site of a hunt to feed hunters as they brought their prey back home. Today, because of modern safety regulations, haggis is made with less offal and more meat.

The Scottish store Cameron's of Kearny open in the 1950s and Ian has been working with meat since he was 14 years old. His son helps him in the store, serving as the official taste tester of each batch of haggis. During the busy winter months, the family makes about 500 pounds every week.

Ian’s savory, secret recipe includes beef shoulder and liver, oatmeal, salt, white pepper, onions, cloves, and beef suet (a hard white fat found on the kidneys and loins of sheep and cattle) all cased in a wrapping.

The taste is rich and meaty, filled with bits of crunchy onion and the mild sting of clove. Ian comments that his customers are “always upset to find out haggis actually tastes great!” And most Scottish fish and chips shops to this day still sell a ‘haggis supper’ to honor the tradition.

Nancy Newsome

Located in Kentucky

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NATIVE AMERICAN FOODS

Anishinaabeg Nation

Native American foods from Winona LaDuke’s Native Harvest and her White Earth Land Recovery Project bring us wild rice, flours, dried corn all from the Anishinaabeg Nation in Minnesota . Winona is working with the state legislature to patent wild rice as an untouchable genetic in our food supply.

Similarly, Tohono O'odham Nation in Sells, Arizona continues to harvest tepary beans and cholla buds. With the recent passing of Native American leader John Mohawk, Heritage Foods is evermore dedicated to reviving the Iroquois White Corn project in upstate New York.

 

 

Deep Run Pawpaw Orchard

Our Heritage pawpaws come from the rolling hills of Carroll county Maryland at the Deep Run Pawpaw Orchard in Westminister where Jim Davis has been raising these fruits for almost 10 years! There are seven named varieties of pawpaw he produces including the Shenandoah, Susquehanna, Pennsylvania Golden and the Allegheny, which is great in ice-cream. Each fruit will be marked so that you know what you are eating.

The pawpaw is the largest edible fruit that is native to the United States. Pawpaws are indigenous to 26 states in the US, in a range extending from northern Florida to southern Ontario and as far west as eastern Nebraska.

They have provided delicious and nutritious food for Native Americans, European explorers, settlers and wild animals. They are still being enjoyed in modern America, chiefly in rural areas. There are more than 27 varieties currently available.

The unique flavor of the fruit resembles a blend of various tropical flavors, including banana, pineapple and mango. The common names, 'poor man's banana', 'American custard pie', and 'Kentucky banana' reflect these qualities.

Pawpaw's beautiful maroon colored flowers appear in the spring and turn into clusters of fruit that ripen during the fall. The Pawpaw harvest season is from late August to mid-October. Ripeness can be gauged by squeezing gently, as you would judge a peach. The flesh should be soft, and the fruit should have a strong but pleasant aroma. The skin color of ripe fruit on the tree ranges from green to yellow and dark flecks may appear as on bananas.

The fully ripe pawpaws last only a few days at room temperature, but may be kept for a week in the refrigerator. Eat fruit that was allowed to finish ripening at room temperature. Ripe pawpaw flesh, with skin and seeds removed, can be pureed, and the pulp or whole fruit may be frozen for later use. Never eat the skin or seeds.

Pawpaws are a very nutritious fruit. They are high in vitamin C, magnesium, iron, copper and manganese. They are a good source of potassium and several essential amino acids and they also contain significant amounts of riboflavin, niacin, calcium, phosphorous and zinc. Pawpaws contain these nutrients in amounts that are generally about the same as or greater than those found in bananas, apples and organs.

Most enthusiasts agree that the best way to enjoy pawpaws is to eat them raw after they are picked from trees and are perfectly ripe. Or simply cutting the fruit in half, and using a spoon, scoop out the flesh and discard the seeds. The flavor and custard-like texture make pawpaws a good substitute for bananas in almost any recipe. You extend their tropical flavor beyond the end of the harvest season.

Tohono O'odham Nation

The Tohono O'odham Nation is a federally-recognized tribe that includes approximately 28,000 members occupying tribal lands in Southwestern Arizona. The Nation is the second largest reservations in Arizona in both population and geographical size, with a land base of 2.8 million acres and 4,460 square miles, approximately the size of the State of Connecticut. Its four non-contiguous segments total more than 2.8 million acres at an elevation of 2,674 feet.

Noland Johnson, a member of the Tohono O'odham Nation, comes from a long line of traditional farmers. In 2001, Noland became the first person in his family to become a farmer since his grandfather, Alexander Pancho, ceased farming in the late 1960's. Noland began by reclaiming four acres of his grandfather's farmland, starting the first traditional ak chin (floodwater) farm in the Tohono O'odham community since the late 1970's. Today, Noland is the Farm Manager for Tohono O'odham Community Action (TOCA) where he and his crew are growing over 75 acres of traditional crops annually. Noland lives in the village of Sells, AZ. He is the father of one-year-old Isabella.

Terrol Dew Johnson, a member of the Tohono O'odham Nation, is an award winning basketweaver and cofounder of Tohono O'odham Community Action (TOCA). He recently completed a major installation for the Smithsonian Institution/National Museum of the American Indian's 15-month The Language of Native American Basketry exhibit. TOCA is a grassroots community organization dedicated to creating positive programs, which are based in the O'odham Himdag, the Desert People's Way. TOCA now has four programs: 1) Tohono O'odham Basketweavers Organization; 2) Elder/Youth Outreach Initiative; 3) Tohono O'odham Arts and Culture Program; and 4) Tohono O'odham Community Food System

In 2002, Terrol and TOCA Co-Director Tristan Reader were recognized as one of the nation's top leadership teams when they received the Ford Foundation's Leadership for a Changing World Award.

Tristan Reader is Co-Founder and Co-Director of Tohono O'odham Community Action (TOCA). Raised in Arizona he was educated at Swarthmore College and Harvard University. He has worked as a community organizer in a variety of settings ranging from inner-city Boston to rural Iowa.

In 1995, he moved to the Tohono O'odham Reservation were he met Terrol Dew Johnson, TOCA's other Co-Founder and Co-Director. Recognizing both the extreme need and tremendous resources of the Tohono O'odham community, they joined with several community members to develop programs aimed at creating a healthy, sustainable and vital Tohono O'odham community. In 2002, he was a recipient of the Ford Foundation's Leadership for a Changing World Award.

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ARTISANAL CHEESE

Nettle Meadow Farm

Located at the base of Crane Mountain in the Southern Adriondacks, Nettle Meadow Goat Farm has been in operation since 1990. In the 19 years of its life, Nettle Meadow has taken a small artisanal dairy program and grown it into one of the finest we have encountered. Run by Lorraine Lambiase and Sheila Flanagan, Nettle Meadow occupies 50 acres, on which you can find approximately 200 goat. Because of climate and seasonality of their feed, the goats produce milk that varies in flavor and butterfat content throughout the year. This versatile and flavorful milk is the starting place of Lorraine and Sheila's delicious cheeses.

Sprout Creek Farm

Just north of New York City, in the scenic Hudson Valley, at the end of the Metro North line is the city of Poughkeepsie. One of the area's hidden gems can be found just outside of city limits, where the lush, rural landscapes start and the urban density begins to disappear. That gem--Sprout Creek Farm--has been in its current location since 1990, where it functions as a dynamic farm, a working dairy, and an active educational institution. Since 2000, Sprout Creek has been making small-production, raw and pasteurized farmstead cheeses. Starting with just a few, limited offerings, Sprout Creek's catalog of cheeses has grown and matured immensely in recent years, due to the arrival of Colin McGrath, the farm's current cheese producer.

Thanks to Colin and his team's creativity, experience, and dedication, Sprout Creek now produces about a dozen cheeses. Each cheese speaks to the quality and diversity of the farm's terroir and its milk, the flavors of which change from batch to batch. These are truly exceptional in taste and quality, and Heritage Foods USA is excited to team up with Sprout Creek to offer the entire Sprout Creek line to our customers, in four distinct packages.

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Past Anouncements

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 07/26/2010
Its summertime, and the cooking is easy.  To make it easier, Heritage Foods USA is offering a magnificent Duroc pork Frenched Five Rib Rack, slabs of Duroc pork Spareribs, and Fantasia Nectarines.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 07/19/2010
This week at Heritage Foods USA, we are proud to present a selection of exceptional Fresh White Oak Pastures Beef steaks for your grilling pleasure. Order today and receive this week!

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 07/12/2010
Summer is the season for grilling and here at Heritage Foods USA we are delighted to announce the arrival of some incredible deals on Fresh Heritage Ribs and Ribeyes!

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 07/06/2010
We have never liked that American food traditions are considered by some to be not as good as European traditions. That is why we are so excited about our American style cured ham that is equal in flavor to any produced in Europe. This is a staff favorite if ever there was one!

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 06/28/2010
Featured in this email is the first of 2009 Vintage Heritage Cured Hams, Meatball Packages and Fresh Rabbits!

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 06/21/2010
This is the final week to participate in our project to prove that there is a market for grass-fed beef! These cows are grass-fed, raised in the way nature intended, the way cows were built to eat, without the intervention of man who adds corn to the diet for faster growing carcasses and profit.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 06/14/2010
We hope you enjoy reading an eloquent letter from our close friend Brian Kenny that explains exactly why our goal of selling 50 head of grassfed cattle is an important one. Grassfed is how cows were meant to eat and it is healthier for you!

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 06/07/2010
$48 Osso Bucco, $6 Pork Chops and our annual experiment to see if Heritage Foods and its network can move 50 head of grass-fed and finished beef between now and July 4th!

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 06/01/2010
Over Memorial Weekend we met Bob Smith who operates the oldest Grist Mill in the country. Located in Rhode Island, the Carpenter Mill has been operating continuously since 1703 and uses heirloom White Flint Corn to produce the best Jonny Cakes Meal ever.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 05/24/2010
Today we are proud to introduce you to Leaping Waters Farm, owned and operated by the Bradford Family of southwest Virginia. In the coming months and years you will taste some of the rarest delicacies in the world including Ancient White Park cattle, Large Black pigs and Chocolate Heritage turkeys.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 05/17/2010
It is with great pleasure that we announce our traditional offerings have returned with a new year, including HEIRLOOM FRUIT from our friends at Frog Hollow Farm, located alongside the Sacramento River Delta, one of the best fruit farms in the country.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 05/10/2010
We believe that the best way to help a family farmer is to buy from him. We also believe in Founder of Slow Food Carlo Petrini’s words, “Taste, like identity, has meaning only when there is difference.” Try some recipes to unite these two ideas!

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 05/03/2010
True Heritage Chickens are more delicious than their commodity counterparts and now, thanks to our two distribution centers, they are much less expensive than they used to be!

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 04/26/2010
Today we feature four recipes from four of our most respected chefs in Berkeley, New York and Sante Fe. All call for a 4lb Heritage Foods Half Boston Butt. We are also featuring delicious artisan cheese made in the USA.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 04/19/2010
Half Boston-Butts, four seasonal selections of artisan cheese, slices of prosciutto-style ham – what could be better for Mother’s Day or any day for that matter

WEEKLY SPECIALS - West Coast 04/12/2010
WEEKLY SPECIALS - East Coast 04/12/2010
Iroquois White Corn is available again for the first time in five years.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - West Coast 04/05/2010
WEEKLY SPECIALS - East Coast 04/05/2010
Abraham Lincoln supports small farms and east coast specials.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 03/29/2010
Easter specials on Half Lambs with recipes from some great American chefs.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 03/22/2010
Easter specials on Lamb, Heritage Hams, Heritage Turkeys and Piedmontese Beef.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 03/15/2010
THE IDES OF MARCH ARE HERE!

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 03/08/2010
This week’s email features Tuna from six hook-and-line fishing families at American Tuna. Fishing with hook-and-line is the only way to ensure both the best taste and the humane treatment of fish.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 03/01/2010
The porterhouse pork chop consists of a portion of the tenderloin, the tenderest part of the pig, and the eye of the loin, just like a beef porterhouse steak. The Recession Special is a great value on what is normally the most expensive part of the pig.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 02/22/2010
We are excited to announce our annual RECESSION SPECIAL: the $6 Heritage chop!

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 02/15/2010
Ancient White Park Beef, Red Wattle Pork and other beef specials.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 02/08/2010
To honor our friends at O. Ottomanelli & Sons: a romantic pair of pork tenderloins for Valentine's Day and, in homage to the movement to use lesser cuts, Dandy Doodles, a rural Southern specialty that uses the lowest cut of them all.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 02/01/2010
Superbowl Sunday Specials Batali Style!

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 01/25/2010
The Colts and the Saints have made the Superbowl!! Be the star of your local tailgate spot with our specials on pork and lamb!

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 01/18/2010
Please enjoy reading Address to a Haggis by Robert Burns, Scotland’s favorite son, as well as its translation. Also, please enjoy $25 off Heritage Turkeys!

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 01/11/2010
Haggis is the Scottish national dish. Scottish native Ian McAndrew makes this Haggis at his market in Brick, New Jersey.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 01/04/2010
To begin this new decade we are proud to announce another project to help spread the gospel about artisan products and foods. If our revolution is to succeed it must embrace not just foodies but also carpenters, truckers, metal workers, real estate agents, architects, distributors and a host of others who can accelerate change for independent non-commodity businesses. The Heritage Radio Network now boasts about 20 shows, each more fun to listen to than the next and each in its own way promoting a better, cleaner way of living!

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 12/28/2009
Happy New Year from Heritage Foods USA and the Farms and Farm Networks of Heritage Foods USA.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 12/19/2009
Last Minute Holiday Specials on Hams, Ducks, Turkeys, and Beef.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 12/14/2009
It is an honor to feature Hearst Ranch Beef. In addition, we feature the BEST DUCKS AND GEESE that money can buy.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 12/07/2009
Today we feature rare breed lamb – the best in the country – and hams for the holidays, just heat and eat.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 12/01/2009
As always the pork business and lamb business continue day in and day out and we would like to feature one item from each animal: The Quarter Hog and Half Rare Breed Lamb.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 11/23/2009
More than 3000 turkeys have been sent! Happy Thanksgiving! Thank you for your support!

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 11/16/2009
Turkey delivery information and a look at our delicious hams and cured products.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 11/09/2009
We have added two larger turkey weight options as heritage turkeys tend to be large or small and not so much medium in weight.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 11/02/2009
At Emory University’s Heritage Harvest Feast, Turkeys Would Give Thanks, If They Could.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 10/26/2009
GOOD SHEPHERD RANCH HERITAGE TURKEYS THANKSGIVING 2009

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 10/19/2009
The best of last week plus specials on Piedmontese steaks.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 10/12/2009
Today we feature 4 items including 3 that are only available once a year: Guanciale, Belgian blue beef, Heritage turkeys, and Tamworth 10-rib racks.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 10/05/2009
The best value for buying Heritage pork and beef are with our Packages. When ordering, you can select a future delivery date (any Tuesday through Friday) if you know in advance that you are having a party or special dinner.  By ordering in advance, you are able to select a breed: Duroc, Red Wattle, Berkshire or Tamworth for pork and Piedmontese, White Oak or Hearst for beef.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 09/28/2009
Some of the favorite customer comments we have received over the years regarding the turkeys of Good Shepherd Ranch.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 09/20/2009
For the first time in 5 years Heritage Foods USA has published a Mail Order catalog! Get a sneak preview.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 09/14/2009
Our steaks are the best cuts from arguably the best breed of cow in the world: the Piedmontese breed, raised in Montana by family farmers and originally from the foothills in Northwestern Italy from as far back as 25,000 years ago.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 09/07/2009
It is with the greatest joy that we announce the arrival of the short growing season of North America’s largest edible fruit. Paw-paws are a wild banana-like fruit that many refer to as a custard apple. It is creamy and citrusy at once.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 08/31/2009
We are proud to announce the arrival of our first gadget: the Heritage Foods USA meat thermometer!! We also feature three new WHITE OAK BEEF PACKAGES.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 08/24/2009
It’s time for another gem from the ever-popular and delicious Piedmontese cattle. This week, we are excited to bring you, for the first time ever, bone-in short ribs! 

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 08/17/2009
It is that time of year again: Heritage Turkeys are for sale! There are fewer birds than there have been for many years so we recommend reserving your bird early.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 08/03/2009
About our Surryano Ham, Harold McGee wrote in a New York Times article, “These hams are so flavorful that an ounce will give you 10 mouth-filling bites…They’re worth every milligram and dime.” Just imagine what you can do with a boneless whole or half ham!

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 07/27/2009
We follow up last week's email with another week of tongue-n-cheeky goodness, but this time from the PIG! Also, a special on our Fantasma Sausage Sampler.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 07/20/2009
From our popular Piedmontese breed, two cuts are among the most flavorful and intense of the whole animal.  Grassy, robust, and hearty, tongues and cheeks are delicious and versatile. 

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 07/13/2009
Heritage Foods is excited to sell bison again which around 1900 only numbered one herd!

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 07/06/2009
After almost five years of discussion and planning, Good Shepherd Ranch Heritage Chickens are finally ready. As with Heritage Turkeys, we must eat these Chickens to save them. There is no better way to react to the injustices of factory farming than to inject cash into the farms that raise animals and food correctly.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 06/29/2009
Please consider tasting and supporting two new cheese producers as well as our Heritage Chicken farmers from the Good Shepherd Ranch! Yes, its true, chickens are finally back, this time for good!

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 06/22/2009
Cured, smoked, and then aged for between 14 and 18 months, the Surryano ham packs a rich pork flavor with a sweetness that is slightly offset by the ham’s smokiness. Also, This Week on Heritage Radio.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 06/15/2009
Announcing This Year's Batch of Surry-ano Ham from Sam Edwards! Also, This Week on Heritage Radio.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 06/08/2009
Celebrate Fathers Day with savings on our selection of FRESH Pork Packages and an update on the Heritage Radio Network.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 06/01/2009
Enjoy savings on our selection of FRESH Pork Packages including pieces from all parts of the pig!

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 05/25/2009
Heritage Rabbits, Pork Boston Butt, and our friend Peter Kaminsky’s new book, Seven Fires: Grilling the Argentine Way.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 05/18/2009
Enjoy all four months of our organic Summer Fruit Sampler, including: Bing Cherries, Nectarines, California Red Peaches, and Warren Pears.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 05/11/2009
A letter from Hearst Ranch's Brian Kenny that eloquently explains exactly why our first cattle share project is an important one.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 05/04/2009
The scoop on our first cattle share program and Mother's Day last chance.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 04/28/2009
This Mother’s Day give the gift of a Heritage Breakfast in Bed! Also, learn about our first cattle share program.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 04/20/2009
This week, we are lucky enough to bring back the delicious wild sockeye salmon in its frozen form from our friend and fisherman, Christopher Nicholson, and the Iliamna Fish Company.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 04/13/2009
We are excited to launch our Artisanal Dairy Program with the cheeses of Bronson Hill Cheesery. 

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 04/05/2009
FRESH Easter Lamb! FRESH Turkey and cured Pork specials. Special on Boer Goat..

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 03/30/2009
FRESH Easter Lamb! FRESH Turkey and cured Pork specials. Special on Boer Goat.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 03/24/2009
FRESH Easter Lamb! FRESH Turkey and Pork specials also.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 03/16/2009
Because value is of particular value during these trying times, we are happy to reintroduce the quartered RED WATTLE pig at the original cost from 2004: $250. That comes to $7 per pound or about $4 per portion!

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 03/09/2009
For the first time ever, Heritage Foods introduces three wine offerings each of which consists of 100% heirloom Erbaluce varietal.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 03/02/2009
Please enjoy our recipe from one of our newest supporters, PJ Clarke’s of New York City, who can tell you how to turn our Brisket into delicious corned beef.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 02/23/2009
Cranberry-fed Pork.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 02/16/2009
Please help us welcome a delicious and special new beef from our friends at White Oak Pastures in SW Georgia.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 02/09/2009
A NEW fresh cut pack of plum fed Duroc-pork for your romantic Valentine’s Day Dinner! 

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 02/02/2009
Plum-fed Pork for Valentines Day.  

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 01/26/2009
Recession Special on sliced maple sugar cured bacon.  

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 01/19/2009
Recession Special on American Tuna. Superbowl specials on spare ribs and skirt steak.  

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 01/12/2009
Recession Special on Frozen Turkey Breasts . 

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 01/05/2009
Recession Special on Porterhouse Pork Chops. 

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 12/20/2008
The Aylesbury duck, the African Brown goose, and Northeast Collection Gift Baskets. 

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 12/15/2008
We are thrilled to offer fresh pearl guinea fowl from Carey Farms in Lindsborg, Kansas, part of the Good Shepherd Ranch farming group. 

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 12/08/2008
The Aylesbury duck, the African Brown goose, and Northeast Collection Gift Baskets. 

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 12/01/2008
Newman Berkshire Certified Humane Heritage Pork Loin Package and Tohono O’odham Desert Foods Sampler. 

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 11/27/2008
Thanksgiving tips - how to prepare and cook a Heritage Turkey. 

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 11/18/2008
An array of special winter offerings from our Montana raised Piedmontese, Hearst Ranch, Tallgrass and Highland cattle. 

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 11/11/2008
The Animal Welfare Institute is sponsoring a Thanksgiving meal in partnership with the Food Bank For New York City's Community Kitchen of West Harlem.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 11/04/2008
To celebrate the future and 2009 in particular we would like to introduce the first Heritage Foods USA calendar.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 10/27/2008
Just in case you forgot how good true heritage turkeys are, here is a list of our favorite comments we have received over the past years.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 10/20/2008
We are thrilled to offer for the first time pearl guinea fowl, also known as pintade, faraona, African pheasant or guinea hen.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 10/14/2008
Quality takes time. Muscovy ducks and Heritage turkeys.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 10/06/2008
Muscovy ducks from Frank Reese at Good Shepherd Turkey Ranch in Lindsborg, Kansas.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 9/30/2008
Why Heritage Turkeys are a better choice than Factory Turkeys

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 9/23/2008
Everything you ever wanted to know about the Pawpaw.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 9/15/2008
Pawpaws are the largest native North American fruit and only grow in the Atlantic States region in the month of September.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 9/3/2008
A report on Slow Food Nation were about 60,000 people tasted some of the best food the country has to offer.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 8/26/2008
Introducing Route 11 Potato Chips! 

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 8/19/2008
Heritage Turkeys and a new Heritage Rabbit breed. Become a volunteer for Slow Food Nation – San Francisco

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 8/11/2008
Newman University, "Farmer's Art | Heritage pork: Not so lean cuisine" and Heritage Turkeys.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 8/3/2008
Heritage Turkeys 2008.
Early Bird Special!
$10 off all orders placed by Labor Day.

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 7/27/2008Heritage Foods might have made its name celebrating this country’s great proteins but we are also proud of our foods with no meat in them!

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 7/22/2008 Cranberry-fed Duroc Pork and the Porterhouse Pork Chop Breed Variety Pack.  

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 7/15/2008
News from the shores of Bristol Bay and the Iliamna Fish Co., Salmon Recipes, Up and Coming Heritage Foods News and La Vacanza del Gusto

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 7/08/2008
Wild Alaskan Sockeye Salmon and Plum-fed Duroc Pork.  

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 7/01/2008
Edwards Heritage BerkBacon, Support farmers in the Mississippi Valley from Wisconsin to Missouri, Nebraska to Indiana and more pictures from Newman University and a recent article from Arkansas!

WEEKLY SPECIALS - 6/23/2008
Two rare-breeds of fresh heritage rabbit, Esposito’s of NYC Italian sausage sampler, Salumi charcuterie from the Batali family, Agri-tourism in the USA, and the Tohono O’odham community’s 3000-mile walk home.

News from Washington D.C.
This week Heritage Foods USA will be providing the following items to the inaugural dinners in Washington D.C. We are proud to announce that these items are for sale through the Heritage Foods USA mail order and wholesale division.

Ancient White Park ground beef from Leaping Waters Farm in Shawsville,
Virginia and Six Spotted Berkshire baby back ribs from Newman Farm in
Myrtle, Missouri for the Dressing Room's Chef Michel Nichan dinner.

Piedmontese short ribs from Montana Ranch in Billings, Montana, Angus
sirloin steak from Hearst Ranch in San Simeon, California and Ancient White
Park sirloin steak from Leaping Waters Farm in Shawsville, Virginia for
Tabla's Chef Floyd Cardoz dinner.

Tamworth pig leaf lard and Berkshire Heritage "Surryano" ham from Sam
Edwards' Virginia Traditions in Surry, Virginia for Watershed's Chef Scott
Peacock dinner.

Berkshire Heritage "Surryano" ham from Sam Edwards' Virginia Traditions in
Surry, Virginia for Chez Panisse's Chef Alice Waters dinner.

40 Days and 40 Nights
40 DAYS AND 40 NIGHTS
Tales from the Trip

In Memory of Brian Anselmo
It is with great sadness that we announce the passing of Brian Anselmo, a board member and farmer for Good Shepherd Turkey Ranch.

Momoufuku Charcuterie Tasting
Join Sam Edwards, Momofuku Ssäm Bar and Heritage Foods USA for a delicious Heritage charcuterie tasting featuring locally cured meats.

Chef Zak Pellaccio
“I wouldn't buy these meats unless they were the very best...and that they are.”
Chef Zak Pellaccio, Fatty Crab
Chef Zak Pellaccio
“Since 2004, we have proudly sold Heritage Foods pork and we will continue to sell it for the next 50 years”
O. Ottomanelli & Sons
Chef Zak Pellaccio
“For 7 years, Heritage has been our supplier of memorable and delicious pork, and boy, do we love pork!”
Chef Mario Batali
Heritage Radio Network
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Heritage Radio Network
by visiting us at HeritageRadioNetwork.com
phone# 718 - 389 - 0985
BOX 198 402 Graham Ave. Brooklyn, NY 11211
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