$8 fancy coffee drink or $8 sausage? Why is one seen as too expensive?

I posted this on Instagram the other day, while we were set up at the farmers market. My post was a reaction to a common situation that small farmer’s face- being made to feel that our product is too expensive, but seeing those same people who hold that notion- spending money freely on items that they perceive to have value. In this example, that item was expensive coffee drinks. I got some hassle online over this example, because some felt my example wasn’t fair because I didn’t show the cost and labor breakdown for what it took to produce that cup of coffee, such as beans being grown and roasted, or a cup being manufactured. That’s not what this example is about. In it’s simplest terms, this example is about how we live in a society that will readily drop $8 on a unicorn frappuccino or other fancy beverage, but tell a small farmer that their pasture raised eggs, pork, beef or chicken- are too expensive.

My post was met with resounding agreement by other farmers. If you’re a consumer who feels that pastured meats are too expensive, I understand that financially you may not be able to afford the meats that small farmers such as my son and I raise. That’s alright- you can still be an advocate and supporter for small farms, and support your local farmers market. I strongly believe that we should be eating higher quality meat, even if it means eating less meat! If you’re a consumer that is financially able to spend $8 on sausage, but sees no value in it, then please consider the hard work, passion and time that goes into the production of pastured proteins, and how humane farming is so important in comparison to the alternative- government subsidized factory farming, where animals are farmed en masse indoors, and never see outdoor or pastured conditions. Please don’t make small farmers doing it the right way- feel badly about what they need to charge for their product.

Please note that the sausage in this post reflects the price of premium/gourmet linked sausage for MY area. I know farmers raising heritage crosses to 6 months old, and charging this for linked sausages. We raise rare Kunekune and Meishan pigs to 12-18 months old, which are smaller pigs by nature- and we are still charging $12. Price of sausage in your area may be different- please don’t get stuck on the price of the product and overlook the message of the post, the fact that as a society we have a disparity in our perception of what food items have more value than others.

 

The original post:

This cappuccino was made in minutes and cost over $5. This pack of garlic bratwurst costs $8.76 and took over a year for the pig to grow out. Most breeds reach market weight by 6-7 months. Our rare breed Kunekune and Meishan pigs take 12-18 months- and they are still a smaller pig with a lower yield than what most pastured pig farmers work with.

The pig was fed by us over 300 times, and watered twice a day or more by us, in all weather both freezing, and torrid hot.

We checked on the health of the pig daily, and then drove two hours each direction to deliver the pig to our processor, and two hours back.

Then we made that trip again to pick up the meat and pay our processing bill, which for two pigs that hung at 160 pounds each, was $581 (normal costs for our geographic region for dispatch, vacuum sealing, sausage blending, sausage linking, curing, and specialty ingredient costs).

Then we unpacked the meat and store it in freezers that cost $500 each, and pay the electricity to run them.

Every time we go to the farmers market, we leave the farm with a truck packed with coolers of meat, set up our tent and table display, and then sit for hours meeting and greeting customers and selling our pork.

This is why sausage is $12 per lb. This is what humanely raised, rare breed pork actually costs.That is a premium price, but it reflects what we need to receive in order to be able to continue farming, feeding our animals and having some money to put back into our farm.

I can’t put a time estimate on the amount of labor put towards maintaining fencing and structures, driving to purchase feed and hay, growing produce and other food for the pigs, driving to pick up loads of apples or pumpkins. We bring piglets into the world, sleeping in the barn for the first few nights of their lives, to make sure they all survive those first critical days. We see the pigs every single day, multiple times a day until it is their time to bless us with their sacrifice, and provide good, clean, properly raised pork for our community.

Most people think meat is cheap and easy to produce. It isn’t. It is back breaking and heart wrenching work, especially to do it properly and humanely, while being good stewards to the land.

I know we are not alone in our plight to educate the public about the true cost of our product. Society has trained us that meat is cheap, and fresh vegetables are expensive. Think about that for minute. We live in a society where people don’t think twice about spending $8 on a unicorn frappuccino, but may consider the same dollar amount spent on locally and humanely raised pork, chicken, beef, eggs or produce… to be too much money. Real food raised by small farmers.

© 2018 Cristiana Calderan Bell, Corva Bella Farm

Greenville Rare Breed Heritage Pork Delivery- we need your help to make it happen!

Greetings!

Corva Bella Farm is a small permaculture farm located in Oconee County, SC. We are unique from other pork-producing farm models in that our farm’s main focus is rare breed conservation. We maintain the largest and most genetically diverse herd of registered Kunekune pigs in the state of South Carolina, and we also work with rare and critically threatened Meishan pigs.

Our pork is also unique. It’s deep red and marbled, with firm and flavorful fat. Pastured pork fat is one of the healthiest fats in the world, believe it or not! The pork we make available is part of our conservation breeding program, where we strive to allow only the best examples of the breed move forward in our herd, or other farm’s breeding programs. Pigs that are weaker in breed characteristics, or not well-suited for breeding, become members of our meat herd.

At this time, we work on a very small scale, and only have enough pigs growing out to be able to offer retail cuts, sausages and dry cured bacon for sale direct to consumers. We don’t have enough pigs to offer whole or half hogs, roasting pigs, or to sell to chefs. These are all things we hope to transition into being able to do in the near future, as the infrastructure of our young farm expands, and we grow slowly without stressing our natural resources.

We did several farmers markets last year, and it was very difficult for us. As farmers, we have limited resources in that we’re a Mother/Son team. I’m also a single parent who homeschools and works a second job to make farming possible, as my Son more than anything wants to work in agriculture. He is currently 16 and we hope to have our farm at a stage in two years, where Connor can begin to take on a major role in crafting an agricultural career, working with our established breeding stock, and providing our unique craft pork on a wider scale, to high end chefs who want to elevate our breed-specific pork through snout to tail, whole hog artistry, as well as offering premium pig roasts, and potentially charcuterie.

For now, we dream of the future and work hard to educate others about the breeds we work with, and the unique pork that we provide. In lieu of being unable to attend more than one farmers market per week, we are hoping to set up a weekly delivery service to Greenville, SC. We don’t have the online reach to do this on our own. We need your help!

We are trying to determine the best date, time and place for such a delivery to take place. We used to live in Greenville so have basic geographic familiarity with the city and outlying areas. Our dream is to be able to take pre-paid pork orders throughout the week, and then on a weekly basis, make the two hour round trip into Greenville, to our delivery point, and within a set time window, meet you so that you can pick up your orders.

If you are interested in placing an order and being a part of our delivery, please send me a message through the form below! Underneath that form, I’ve included more information about our pork- price lists, photos of the product raw and also cooked.

You can also learn more about our pork here. And how we care for and feed our pigs, here.

 

 

Check out photos of our pork, both raw, and prepped or cooked into various dishes. Choose our pork for your next special occasion!

Pumpkintown Pork Delivery… every Saturday!

Let’s MEAT UP this Saturday, from 2-3 PM at Pumpkintown’s Mountain Market! We are now offering pork delivery to Pumpkintown during the market, so you can pick up your rare breed pork and enjoy the market!

This week, we have our full range of premium rare breed heritage cuts, as well as six types of gourmet linked sausages, and dry cured bacon. (See photos for list of varieties and also price list)

Delivery date is pending a minimum delivery total of $100 for all combined orders from all customers, because it’s a 90 minute round trip for us to Pumpkintown.

Please send me a PM if you have any questions, or would like to put together an order. I’ll get together the cuts and items you’d like, and message you back with a price. Payment is pre-paid, via paypal invoicing (you don’t need a paypal account to pay).

Then, we meet on Saturday from 2-3 PM and I’ll have your order bagged up and ready to go in my cooler!

I hope to make it to Pumpkintown for a “meat up” every week. Let’s make this happen. Put rare breed heritage pork on your fork!

Check out photos of our pork, both raw, and prepped or cooked into various dishes. Choose our pork for your next special occasion!

Put [rare breed heritage pork] on your fork! How our pork differs from “supermarket” pork

Market season has begun, and with it we continue our work ardently educating our customers about our breed conservation efforts and how our pork is different. This is our greatest challenge, as people are so used to seeing pork as a cheap, white, readily available meat. We are going against the grain, and it’s not easy to change mindsets.

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

 In the South, it’s not uncommon for even small farmers to raise pigs in confinement, on concrete- or in a small pen. Some folks are always surprised that our pigs are free ranging, or that they are smaller in size, or that we don’t sell “whole hog sausage” for $3/lb. We live in a society where meat is seen as a cheap commodity, while vegetables are seen as a luxury. Most customers will readily spend $4-5 per pound for fresh broccoli, but balk at spending $12/lb for a beautiful & marbled nutrient-rich pork chop that took 12-18 months and a whole lot of hard work, love and dedication to produce.
 .
The reason for this is that we are trained to expect meat to be cheap. And factory farms pump out millions of animals per year to meet that cheap, government subsidized demand. What most consumers don’t understand is that the vast majority of large-scale agriculture, from corn & wheat to pork & beef out of confinement buildings and feed lots- is government subsidized. You do pay more for that meat, you just don’t realize where your tax dollars are going. Factory farms unfortunately are necessary to meet demand, but as consumers we always have the choice to take our buying power where we wish, and keeping dollars local and invested in small farms is the smart choice for sustainability and our local economy!

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

 Our pork is a premium product, that you won’t find at any grocery store and you may not even be able to find a product like it at most farmer’s markets. It is unusual for a small farm to be centered solely around rare breed conservation and working with smaller pigs with long growout times and smaller meat yields- but here we are, doing just that.
 .
The topic of confinement pork- what almost all “supermarket pork” is, always comes up at the farmers market. Factory farmed pork consists of thousands of pigs being raised indoors, in an enclosed space. There is no comparison between this and what pastured farmers do!
 .
In our case, we also factor in the unique meat and fat quality of our rare breed pigs. Both the Kunekune and Meishan pigs produce intricately marbled meat- the equivalent of being the “Waygu beef of the pork world”.
.
How are our pigs different?
.
  • Unlike supermarket pork, our pigs are bred for taste rather than leanness. They are an old fashioned style pig, known as a “lard breed”.
  • Our pork is different by sight alone- the deep red color is both inherent to the breed’s genetics, as well as the slow, outdoor rearing.
  • Pigs reared outdoors, and raised slowly (12-18 months) results in excellent marbling and intramuscular fat, creating incredibly tender pork.
  • Slow growth means a tastier product.
  • Our are happy pigs, and happy pigs taste better. We’d never consider raising pigs in a tiny pen, indoors, or on concrete. Ours are reared outside, free ranging on pasture and in the forest. Piglets stay with their mothers until 6-10 weeks of age depending on breed, litter size, and sow condition.
  • Kunekune and Meishan pigs are bred by a few select breeders who prioritize the breed’s purity, conformation and traceability via pedigreed registration.
  • In buying rare breed pork, you are helping to create demand for rare breeds in need of conservation, which in turn will encourage breeders to continue working with these amazing animals to meet demand for both breeding stock and meat stock!
  • In short, every bite of our pork helps to conserve the breeds we work with. It makes it possible for us to continue our work, manage the intricacies of our breeding program, and do our best work possible.
Thank you for putting rare breed heritage pork on your fork!
Kunekune pork- the other red meat. Old fashioned pork, with rich flavor, creamy & firm fat quality and taste beyond compare.

How our Pork is Different!

Market season has begun, and with it we continue our work ardently educating our customers about our breed conservation efforts and how our pork is different. This is our greatest challenge, as people are so used to seeing pork as a cheap, white, readily available meat. We are going against the grain, and it’s not easy to change mindsets.

 In the South, it’s not uncommon for even small farmers to raise pigs in confinement, on concrete- or in a small pen. Some folks are always surprised that our pigs are free ranging, or that they are smaller in size, or that we don’t sell “whole hog sausage” for $3/lb. We live in a society where meat is seen as a cheap commodity, while vegetables are seen as a luxury. Most customers will readily spend $4-5 per pound for fresh broccoli, but balk at spending $12/lb for a beautiful & marbled nutrient-rich pork chop that took 12-18 months and a whole lot of hard work, love and dedication to produce.
 .
The reason for this is that we are trained to expect meat to be cheap. And factory farms pump out millions of animals per year to meet that cheap, government subsidized demand. What most consumers don’t understand is that the vast majority of large-scale agriculture, from corn & wheat to pork & beef out of confinement buildings and feed lots- is government subsidized. You do pay more for that meat, you just don’t realize where your tax dollars are going. Factory farms unfortunately are necessary to meet demand, but as consumers we always have the choice to take our buying power where we wish, and keeping dollars local and invested in small farms is the smart choice for sustainability and our local economy!
 Our pork is a premium product, that you won’t find at any grocery store and you may not even be able to find a product like it at most farmer’s markets. It is unusual for a small farm to be centered solely around rare breed conservation and working with smaller pigs with long growout times and smaller meat yields- but here we are, doing just that.
 .
The topic of confinement pork- what almost all “supermarket pork” is, always comes up at the farmers market. Factory farmed pork consists of thousands of pigs being raised indoors, in an enclosed space. There is no comparison between this and what pastured farmers do!
 .
In our case, we also factor in the unique meat and fat quality of our rare breed pigs. Both the Kunekune and Meishan pigs produce intricately marbled meat- the equivalent of being the “Waygu beef of the pork world”.
.
How are our pigs different?
.
  • Unlike supermarket pork, our pigs are bred for taste rather than leanness. They are an old fashioned style pig, known as a “lard breed”.
  • Our pork is different by sight alone- the deep red color is both inherent to the breed’s genetics, as well as the slow, outdoor rearing.
  • Pigs reared outdoors, and raised slowly (12-18 months) results in excellent marbling and intramuscular fat, creating incredibly tender pork.
  • Slow growth means a tastier product.
  • Our are happy pigs, and happy pigs taste better. We’d never consider raising pigs in a tiny pen, indoors, or on concrete. Ours are reared outside, free ranging on pasture and in the forest. Piglets stay with their mothers until 6-10 weeks of age depending on breed, litter size, and sow condition.
  • Kunekune and Meishan pigs are bred by a few select breeders who prioritize the breed’s purity, conformation and traceability via pedigreed registration.
  • In buying rare breed pork, you are helping to create demand for rare breeds in need of conservation, which in turn will encourage breeders to continue working with these amazing animals to meet demand for both breeding stock and meat stock!
  • In short, every bite of our pork helps to conserve the breeds we work with. It makes it possible for us to continue our work, manage the intricacies of our breeding program, and do our best work possible.
Thank you for putting rare breed heritage pork on your fork!

 

Come on out and try our new MAPLE BOURBON sausage!

We’ve worked hard on perfecting this recipe, and after several test batches, it is perfect and ready to roll out! Our newest sausage variety- MAPLE BOURBON- will be available for purchase at this weekend’s markets, or for farm gate pickup.

This decadent premium linked sausage contains generous amounts of real maple syrup and Wild Turkey 101 bourbon. We hope to eventually work with a local Upstate distillery and use their bourbon, but for now, we opted for familiarity! Blended with our rare breed heritage Kunekune pork, herbs and spices.

We’ll be cooking up samples at both the Foothills Heritage Market on Saturday morning (Westminster SC) and at the Pumpkintown Farmers Market in Pumpkintown SC near Table Rock, from 1:30 to 5 PM in the afternoon.

We’ll also have our other sausage varieties:

Dante’s Delicata- sweet italian sausage with asiago cheese & spinach

Giuseppe’s Garlic & Sweet Onion

Mild traditional sage breakfast links

And of course, a full range of pork cuts!

See you there!!!

#thinkoconee #oconeecounty #pickenscounty#takemetopickens #kunekunepork #heritagepork#putporkonyourfork #adifferentkindofpigadifferentkindofpork

Our First Proprietary Linked Sausage Now Available… “Dante’s Delicata”

Check out our newest premium sausage, available at the weekly Pumpkintown Market Farmers Market, or farm gate pickup!

This is “Dante’s Delicata“, a sweet Italian sausage with Asiago cheese and organic spinach, pork provided by our rare breed heritage Kunekune pigs.

It’s named after my Grandfather, Dante Calderan (shown pictured as a young boy in Corva, Italy, with my Great Grandmother Augusta)

A range of package sizes are available, with larger sizes being a sausage wheel.

USDA processed and packed by Foster’s Meats, Inc.

 

Saturday Market at the Pumpkintown Mountain Farmers Market

We started doing our first farmers market this year, and it’s been a wonderful experience thus far! You can find us every Saturday afternoon through September, at the Pumpkintown Opry on Highway 11, near Table Rock. This is a wonderful venue for a market, and the Opry Cafe has delicious lunches, coffees and ice cream to enjoy. In our hot summer weather, being able to attend a market in the mountains and under a beautiful shady porch, is a joy!

It’s truly wonderful to connect with all of you in person and be able to share what we’re so passionate about- providing heritage and heirloom nourishment to our community, which allows us to focus on our breed and seed conservation efforts!

Every time a piece of pork goes from our hands to yours, I’m truly excited about the potential to turn others on to just how wonderful and unique this pork is, and how rare breed animals must be utilized in order to be saved.

I’ve been taking pictures of our weekly setup, to document how we grow and change. Each week something is a little bit different as we learn more about how to best present our farm at market.