Tag: Sustainable Food

  • The Chicken Harvest

    Warning: The following post contains a couple of images that some may find graphic.

    Chicken Harvest: what does that even mean?  When I embarked on the Who’s Your Farmer project I was told if I wanted to understand how natural, free range chickens get from pasture to table, I needed to experience the chicken harvest.  The word harvest threw me. I’d seen crops harvested, but not animals. Naturally I was curious, so off I went to Autonomy Farms in California’s Central Valley to learn how chickens get from farm to market.

    A side note: I’m not a big meat eater. In fact I don’t eat beef or pork. There’s no religious or moral reason. It started as one of those things you try when you’re young, like vegetarianism or Buddhism, and it stuck. It’s been years now. I’ve had a sampling or 2 over the years, even a steak recently (that’s a whole other story from the ranch…).  One of my “rationales” to not eat red meat or pork has been that I should be willing to kill anything I was going to eat. As my reasoning went, I would never be able to kill a cow or a pig but I felt pretty confident I could kill a chicken.  Of course, I’d never been in a position to kill a cow, or a pig, or even a chicken, so this was all completely theoretical.  I honestly didn’t know how I would kill this imaginary chicken.  Perhaps I would have to wring it’s neck?  Well that’s not how they do it on the farm…..

    Harvesting chickens is a bit gruesome for this city slicker.  

    But the process is actually quite simple: catch chicken, slit throat, bleed it out, (that’s the gruesome part), blanch in boiling water to loosen quills, drop in plucker machine,  remove feet, head, and innards, package it up for market. 

    That’s about it – most of the harvest is nothing I haven’t done myself, in my own kitchen.  

    And there’s an air of respect for the birds here.  Sure, they’re being raised for human consumption, but there’s nothing excessive about it.  Most parts are harvested, including the organs and feet.  The chickens look like chickens. Autonomy Farms is proud of their birds.  They don’t have over inflated breasts.  They run around the farm freely.  And they actually taste like chicken, not the artificially plump, overly brined meat we’re so used to today. 

    So could I kill a chicken? I think yes, but it wouldn’t be as easy as I had rationalized…..  

     

     Chickens Scatter in the Yard
    Chickens Scatter in the Yard
     Caught
    Caught
     Placing into the Cones
    Placing into the Cones
     Cutting the Necks
    Cutting the Necks
     The Cones
    The Cones
     Bleeding Out
    Bleeding Out
     Just Blanched
    Just Blanched
     Into the Plucker Machine
    Into the Plucker Machine
     Removing Heads, Innards and Feet
    Removing Heads, Innards and Feet
     Removing Feet
    Removing Feet
     Dressed and Ready for Packaging
    Dressed and Ready for Packaging
     Shrink Bags 
    Shrink Bags 
     Weighing and Applying Labels
    Weighing and Applying Labels
     Ready for Market
    Ready for Market
     Off to the Freezer
    Off to the Freezer
  • Who’s Your Farmer?

    Who’s your farmer?  Simple question, right?  Not really…..  I don’t know where 99% of the food I consume comes from.  I mean, where it really comes from…  So what does that mean for me? My family? The world?

    I’ve embarked on a project exploring sustainable food – popularly know as Locally Sourced, Farm to Table or just plain Organic.  For me it began years ago when I read Michael Pollan’s seminal book The Omnivores Dilemma.  It planted a seed that’s been germinating ever since.  Over the last several years I’ve visited organic farms and pastures.  I’ve met and photographed dozens of hard working entrepreneurs looking to change the food system.  They all have their reason’s for doing what they do: lifestyle, business opportunities, seeking social and environmental change.  Whatever the reason, the one thing they have in common is they are producing food and products that are healthier for humans and the planet.   

    I believe there is an essential shift that needs to happen in order for us to break the cycle of faster and cheaper (read worse tasting and less healthy) food.  You may not ultimately Know Your Farmer, but I hope to introduce you to some of the people that will change the way we produce and consume our food.  

     Micheal Pollan, Author of  The Omnivores Dilema
    Micheal Pollan, Author of The Omnivores Dilema