CRX: The Bird That Built a Nation

So much of this slow and local food renaissance being promoted all over has to do with knowledge.

Know your food. Know your farmers. Know your greater food community.

So…it’s a must: know your chicken. Meet the behemoth Cornish Rock Cross Jumbo Broiler.

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Poultry Pages: Introductions

Introductions…

My name is Doug.

I am a poultry farmer.

I am a freshly-minted, small-scale, unlikely poultry farmer who was lucky enough to have settled in one of the most beautiful spots on the eastern seaboard, Martha’s Vineyard’s Tisbury Great Pond.

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Turkey Dealing in the Parking Lot

At 12 o’clock this afternoon, I found myself outside a Levi clothing store, awaiting a silver jeep to pull into the adjacent parking spot. It had taken several days to arrange this meeting. I live in north Portland and he lives outside the city’s limits to the southeast. I like fresh food from local farmers practicing sustainable farming methods. He likes letting chickens and turkeys roam around his land. It was clearly a good match for the both of us.
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Freezer Madness and the Long Winter Ahead

Although not aesthetically pleasing, freezing is a simple process for the preserving novice.

Although not aesthetically pleasing, freezing is a simple process for the preserving novice.

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Immersed in the Northwest (weekly menu 8)

The local food movement is about place and the desire to reconnect oneself to foods that are either grown, raised or native to where we live. Learning the locality of our foods is not only a challenge to engage but an education to gain. For all of our technological gadgets and modern amenities, there is something romantic and pragmatic about knowing where you live and what foods are grown there. Some might say this is about redefining ‘home.’ Our sense of place effects our identity, whether urban or rural, rich or poor. The local food movement deepens this shift in self, now we can literally taste and smell and touch those earthly things that make our environment, home.
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