Tag: livestock breeding

  • The Cuaddus e Tellas farm

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    We went to the Giara district located in the centre and to the south in Sardinia.

    At the foot of the upland of Giara and surrounded by wide fields lies the educational farm and guesthouse “Cuaddus and Tellas “.

    It is managed by Giuseppe and Franca Sedda who raise horses of Giara, Sardinian calves, pigs, goats, chickens and ducks.

    Giuseppe and Franca were expecting us and since hospitality is a characteristic of many Sardinians, we were cordially welcomed and felt like home at once. While Franca was preparing coffee, Giuseppe started telling us about the horses of Giara.

    Although the origin of the horses is unclear, it is assumed that the Phoenicians brought them to Sardinia about 2500 years ago, then some of them managed to escape and taking refuge in the inaccessible region of Giara where they could easily hide. Now they are considered to be aboriginal. In any case, it is natural that man used them for work since antiquity until only a short time ago. In fact, Giuseppe told us that the horses were used to separate the hay from the grain by means of trampling, but after the mechanization of agriculture in the 50s and 60s, they were replaced by threshing machines.

    Not being useful any more for this type of work, the horses of Giara, being very agile and rather fast, started being bought in Sicily and used for pulling carts, but having been replaced by mechanization there too, failing to sell them to evaluators, then it was tried to increase the size of the horses by breeding them with other, bigger horses and sell their offspring to slaughterhouses.

    “Fortunately”, the crossbreeds were too heavy and required too much food to be able to survive in Giara. Instead, the original horses of Giara reach a maximum weight of 150 kg (about 330 pounds), which is far too little and even inconvenient for the slaughterhouses. Thus, the horses were liberated and returned to their former homeland.

    Now, the horses live in small groups and often a strong stallion live with some mares and their foals. They are very strong and rough and even their hooves are very resistant against wear and tear, a very useful characteristic in this rocky area. Due to natural selection, this race carries genes of resistance and roughness which have disappeared in domestic races. They are really genetic reservoirs and, in general, they are able to survive even when it seems like there is nothing to eat. Nowadays, about 6-700 horses live in Giara, living off the land and with no need of treatment against diseases. In fact, Giuseppe have never seen a mare bear a foal and he told us that man only intervenes when a horse is very weakened in order to decide if the horse can be saved or if it will have to be put down.

    An important part of this farm is therapy with horses, a therapeutic method which has proven to be useful in aiding children with mental or physical problems. Only old and tranquil horses are used for this activity and since they are very intelligent, they recognise and adapt themselves to the ability of the children. At the same time, the children always have the same horse such that an intense relation develops between child and horse. Children with physical problems have to get used to coordinate their movements and horseriding is very useful for stimulating the leg muscles. Fortunately for the children, Giuseppe does what he can for the horses and using a modern word, he wants to maintain the biodiversity.

    Unfortunately, the horses in Giara don’t have antibodies and one horse with flu can infect all the other ones, almost leading to their extermination. In order to avoid it, similar horses live at Tancaraggia and Foresta Burgos and it would be possible to use them to repopulate the horses of Giara.

    Giara is a special region with very little water in summer, but quite much in winter. When it rains in winter marshes are formed, while in summer it is totally arid. In spring, the region is covered with buttercups which are eaten by the horses. Since there is so little to eat in this area, the weakest horses tend to die ensuring natural selection.

    While Franca was preparing our lunch with two from our group, the rest of us went to see the animals. One horse was standing in the shade below a tree in order to avoid the flies, while a group of horses appeared at the corner of the house and moved towards small heaps of hay in front of the guesthouse. All of them were dark and according to Giuseppe, there are no light horses in Giara.

    We also saw the Sardinian cows, a small, rough and aboriginal race. The cows only produce milk for their calves and this milk contains lots of fats and some other substances which don’t occur in the milk of other cows. However, the father of Giuseppe used to make pear-shaped cheeses with the milk from Sardinian cows. The market isn’t requesting the meat of the Sardinian calves and they aren’t highly valued. These animals are also being raised in order to maintain the biodiversity.

    We also saw the pigs, the piglets, the goats, the chickens and even a turtle which was sleeping below a bush.

    Afterwards, we returned to the guesthouse where were treated to a delicious and abundant lunch at a very low price.

  • Lu Branu farm

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    Along the road between the cities of Palau and Arzachena on the ridge of a hill separated from the coast of Smeralda by hills of granite, the farm shop la Bruttéa, meaning the spring, is placed. It has a wide selection of typical products like liqueur of myrtle, liqueur of wild olive (one of the representative plants of the maquis), and liqueur of goat’s milk, an antique liqueur of Gallura, the region where la Bruttéa is located. In addition, they are selling olive oil, red wine. cheeses, sausages and cold cuts, fresh meat, fruits and seasonal vegetables. There, we met Antonello Colombano who manages the farm of the family, while his sister manages the farm shop.

    After our visit at the farm shop, we went to the ethnographic museum of the Colombano family. First, Antonello told us about the familial traditions which had been passed on from his great-great grandmother. In the museum, there were buildings from about 1800 containing tools for making wine and olive oil, millstones, tools for plowing, a workshop for repairing tools and making new ones, etc. There was also an annex where vagabonds could stay overnight as long as they brought news from where they came as payment, meaning that the farm was isolated, indeed.

    Having finished our visit to the museum, we went to the farm where they are raising animals. The pigs were outside, but inside a fence and being curious, almost all them approached us for a closer look. Instead, the piglets were inside a building, and we  heard them when we walked from the pigs to the wild boars. The wild boars lived inside another fence to which the adults stayed near, while two baby wild boars watched us timidly behind some bushes. After some time, they left the bush, but they always tried to have an adult between them and us.

    Both the pigs and the wild boars looked very clean even though they love taking mud baths. Maybe it’s too dry such that it isn’t possible where they live.

    The goats lived in a shed, while the kids lived separately in a small room. When Antonello liberated them, they jumped and ran around like gymnasts.

    The hens and one rooster lived inside another fence and they approached us during our visit. Instead, the ducks, which lived inside the same fence, didn’t notice us at all and continued what they were doing in a pool.

    We also met a small donkey which was very timid. In the beginning, it stood rock still, but with Antonello nearby, it approached us gradually. Instead, the horses were on a field and we could just see them from a distance. Also the cows of the race “rustic Sardinian” were on a field far from the farm.

    The farm has a workroom where food like gnocchi, ravioli and sweets, etc. are made manually. Likewise, meat, cold cuts and sausages are prepared in another workroom.

    Cereals are grown for making flour and feed for the animals, like barley for the pigs. Vines, olive trees, wild olive, myrtle, vegetables like garlic, zucchini, pepper and tomatoes are cultivated. Medical herbs are grown among trees where each herb has a small sign describing its name and medical use. Legumes are cultivated for domestic use.

    There is also a guesthouse and a large restaurant on their property where products made at the farm are served. The restaurant has been constructed using local materials like stones and wood, just like the ancestors of the Colombano family used to build their houses. The restaurant is wide and open consisting of stone arches, big windows, and a fireplace made of stone, while the height of the interior is quite high. There are also photos of their ancestors who lived in the buildings housing the present ethnographic museum. We finished our visit with a delicious dinner, beginning with pasta, sausages and pork for the main course and fruits for dessert. Naturally, we used olive oil made at the farm on the salads and we drank their wine Rosso di Surrau.

    All in all, this farm is a place where the animals are treated well, they know well how their ancestors lives, but they use modern tools and machines, they are practising organic agriculture, a farm shop with a wide selection of very healthy products and their visitors are met with real pleasure.

  • Finnvollen mountain farm

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    Slow Food Telemark arranged a tour to Finnvollen, a mountain farm west of Tuddal with a view to the mountain Gaustatoppen on Saturday 13 August. After most of the participants had arrived around noon, we sat down around a long table where the farmer Bent Nilsen started talking about daily life at their mountain farm in addition to bring us foods and drinks made by him and his family..

    After having brought us flat bread, butter, prim (a dairy product made by boiling whey) and knaost (a cheese made at the farm) besides coffee and tea, we got an introduction to the Nilsen family’s stay at Finnvollen. They have their own farm in Sande, but due to house building they “lost” half of their property. Formerly, they let their domestic animals graze wherever they wanted and they needed only to store winter fodder at the farm, but with only half their property intact, they needed to provide fodder for them all year.Then, they had the idea of buying a mountain farm and after some time they bought Finnvollen, a farm which had been abandoned in 1991. When they arrived in summer 2007, the property was partly overgrown and the buildings were in bad repair. Conditions were in other words primitive when they arrived, but now they have a building where the cows can be milked together with a cheesemaking room and a wood-fired hot water tank. The water is extracted from a well located 80 metres below ground and is suitable for cheesemaking. Electrical power for running the water pump and lightbulbs is generated by a diesel-powered generator. Since it isn’t possible to make cheese in low temperatures, they are using a heat exchanger being heated by propane gas in order to keep the cheesemaking going on cold days.  Even under these primitive conditions, they are able to make dairy products of prime quality.

    Our common lunch in the outdoors was a delicious experience whee we also got to taste their home-made ham from their own pigs together with salami. The butter, which was more yellow than “ordinary” butter, was so tasteful that we, strictly speaking, didn’t need to cover the flat bread with anything else. We were told that the strong sunlight at high altitudes with long days leads to that the photosynthesis is very active leading again to a high production of beta-carotene, a strongly coloured red-orange pigment abundant in plants and fruits. The high level of beta-carotene gives a more yellow milk and softer butter with a shorter shelf life, the latter meaning that the dairy products from Finnvollen can only be bought from the producer at Finnvollen and some outdoor markets.

    There are about 10 cows at the farm and most of them are made up of rather rare races like Nordland and Trønder cows, rather hardy animals who only go home in order to be milked. The calves have a pyramid-shaped wooden building in which they can stay in case of bad weather. The 4 pigs live partly in a horse truck and partly within an enclosure where they can do as they please and really have a good time in the mud. They also have two workhorses, a pony and a golden retriever.

    The pigs are fed whey, that is the liquid which remains after about 10% of the milk has been turned to cheese. Bent Nilsen lets the pigs reach a weight of 140 kilogrammes before he slaughters them at their farm in Sande, meaning that the pigs are relaxed until the end and that the meat is of supreme quality. I’m hardly exaggerating when I say that man and animals live in harmony at this farm.

    The cheese called knaost is “related” to another cheese called pultost and the makings of both types of cheese naturallly resemble each other.In both cases, cow’s milk is separated into cream and skimmed milk. The latter is heated to 72°C in order to finish off some of the naturally occurring bacteria in the milk before lowering the temperature to 30°C. Then, it is soured down to a pH value of 4.3 by adding a freeze-dried culture. The pH value is also a characteristic of the safety of the milk, meaning that it may have been infected by dangerous bacteria and unsuitable for cheesemaking if the pH is too high. However, as long as the pH value is okay, the milk is heated to a little above 40°C and constantly stirred. After some time, it will be possible to separate cheese mass while the remaining liquid is called whey. The cheese mass is put in a container where the whey is allowed to drip away. The cheese mass will start fermenting all by itself and in order to prevent the temperature from exceeding 42°C at which the fermentation ceases, the cheese maker has to turn around the cheese mass twice daily. Finally, the cheese mass is heated such that the cheese “grains” melt and and a homogeneous mass results. After having cooled the cheese down to room temperature, the cheese is ready to be served.

    Bent Nilsen told us that the process described above was far from easy and the first three summers were spent with trial and error, letting the dairy products be fed to the pigs. Besides, he studied traditional food making at a college in Rauland in Telemark in order to get professional help and to do experiments to find a reliable production process.

    After having been shown around and got delicious food, it was time to go home. However, all the participants bought a fair share of dairy products before leaving, in fact it was the least we could do after such a pleasant and interesting stay.

    My respect for the women who worked all summer in mountain farms has definitely not decreased after this visit. They had to make do without running water, electrical power and hardly any possibility for cooling their products. In those days, people and animals wandered from the valleys to the mountains, while the Nilsen family freight their animals by car at summer solstice up to the mountain farm and back again in the middle of September.

  • The Claudio Bressano farm

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    The Claudio Bressano farm is a family-driven farm, whose main activity is cultivating hazel nuts besides cultivating some vines for domestic use and raising Piemontese oxen, which are native to Piemonte.

    The passion for raising Piemontese oxen was passed on to Claudio from his father, a great expert on this subject.

    Claudio buys the best available calves, when they are weaned, from selected farms. When the animals arrive at his farm, they weigh about 200 kilogrammes, while they weigh about 600-700 kilogrammes after 20-25 months. The animals are only fed the best, available food. In fact, all the animal feed is cultivated at the farm in order to guarantee high quality meat only.

    Cultivating food for the animals, which are producing manure to be used as fertilizer on the farm gives a very tight cycle: hay obtained from meadow grass, maize, field beans and barley cultivated and milled at the farm, and everything being fertilized by a mix of manure and hay.

    Each ox had a yellow mark on one of its ears and I would like to know what they indicated since they seemed to contain more than just the typical cryptic numbers. Claudio patiently explained to me their meaning: the first symbols show the parents of the animal permitting a retrace of its genealogy, followed by a symbol indicating at which farm it was born, a serial number for a bovine register, last but not least, the name of the animal.

    In other words, this is a tiny livestock farming where man and animal stay in close contact with each other where the animals have first names like it was a big family.

    Claudio confided to us that he’s raising these animals because of his grand passion for doing it since it barely pays itself. In the past, raising livestock was an investment since in a year with a small harvest due to bad weather and consequently little food for man and animals, it was possible to sell the calves, but now life is different.

    In addition to breeding Piemontese oxen, they are also cultivating 2600 hazel nut trees, which as mentioned at the beginning, constitutes the main activity at this farm.

    After having harvested and dried the hazel nuts, they are sold to companies which use them as ingredients for confectionery and a diverse selection of foods.

    They are also cultivating Barbera and Dolcetto d’Alba vines for domestic use only.

  • The Mura farm and farmhouse dairy

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    We went to the house of Gianpaolo and Barbara Mura in the evening after having ascended a long series of steps in the historic centre of Santu Lussurgiu. Gianpaolo met us at the entrance of their fine house and led us up their neat dairy from whose ceiling were hanging the traditional “Su Casizolu“, that is typical, Sardinian cow’s cheese, produced in the region of Montiferru.

    Gianpaolo e Barbara, being in their twenties, are running a farm having been started more than 200 years ago in accordance with nature’s cycles. They are raising cows of a race called Sardo-Modicana living outside all year in pastures being supplemented with organic fodder from fields between the hills of Montiferru and the valleys approaching Oristano.

    The extension of their property amounts to several hundred hectares, but being divided into three different parts situated in three communes. The herd moves from the highlands to the lowlands in winter and vice versa in summer. The Sardo-Modicana race derive from cross-breeding the Modicana race imported from Sicily in the early 1800s with local races in the Montiferru region and being meant for working. Quite early on, it was discovered that the cheese obtained from the milk of the Sardo-Modicana cows was excellent and getting the name Casizolu. Besides, the meat of the Sardo-Modicana cattle has also been discovered to be of prime quality. Now, veal of the highest quality called “Bue Rosso” or “Red Bull” is obtained from the Sardo-Modicana calves.

    Gianpaolo and Barbara, although producing “Bue Rosso”, are more interested in talking about their rare cheese shaped like a giant pear. In fact, they are proud of their production of cheese firmly anchored to the cycles of the seasons and the reproductive cycles of their animals, but they won’t have their product nominated as a Slow Food presidium because they want to be independent.

    In order to make the “Su Casizolu” cheese, the curd has to be kneaded manually until it becomes smooth and thready, while at the same time keeping it at a temperature of 45°C. At our arrival, Barbara was busy kneading the curd, a work which seemed quite laborious and long-lasting. After she had finished her work, Gianpaolo cut off a part of the curd and started forming a baseball-sized ellipsoid. Then, he started reshaping it such that the lower part is round and large, while the upper part is slender, ending in a fine, wide rosette.

    After having shaped the cheese to his liking, he put it into a container of water filled with salt, rotating it regularly such that the shape remained symmetrical. The cheeses had to stay in the water until the temperature had decreased to 20°C. Then, he would put the cheese in a net and hang it up on a beam located close to the ceiling for drying.

    Before leaving, we were shown the cheese cellar of Barbara and Gianpaolo, that is a a room without windows with a temperature ideally suited to let the cheeses justly dried, mature. In fact, the ceiling was more or less covered with maturing cheeses.

  • Ezzi Mannu farm and guest house

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    The farm is located at the extreme north west corner of Sardinia, between Porto Torres and Stintino. A wind-swept territory with a low-lying vegetation and almost completely covered with grassland and Mediterranean steppe. Only in depressions, where rainwater is collected, can the Mediterranean maquis be seen.

    Arriving at the farm at noon, we could see a tiny collection of buildings consisting of about 10 houses almost forming a semicircle, below a clear, blue sky, surrounded by the salty tang of the sea and fragrances of the Mediterranean maquis.

    Being in an arid area where it scarcely rains, meaning that it isn’t possible to use fertilizers because the long, dry periods and high temperatures will lead to that soil which has been fertilized will dry out completely. This means that only organic cultivation of the soil can be applied in this area.

    Mario Stacca, the owner of the farm, has decided to carry on the work of his ancestors who have been cultivating this land and raising cows for the last 150 years. The area of the farm has been extended several times until it now stretches to 80 hectares, but they are not adjacent meaning that a tractor is necessary for transport between the plots of land.

    Some of the plots of land are used for cultivation of cereals (wheat, barley and oats), which are partly used for feeding the cattle and partly being sold on the market.

    In order to prepare soil to house the seeds and for providing a base on which the cereals can grow, crop rotation is used, consisting of alternating the cultures which are being cultivated (every second or third year). After having planted a field with legumes and letting them grow for about 2 years, the field is ploughed, making the legumes decompose inside the soil while at the same time enriching it with nutrients like nitrogen. After a specific time, cereals are planted in the same place.

    Mario is also raising Charolaise cows for meat production. The cows are mainly eating grass, but they are also allowed to enter fields planted with cereals which have obtained a certain height. Naturally, the cows will also fertilize the soil by means of their manure.

    This young entrepreneur also wants to integrate agriculture and farm holidays with clean energy production by installing solar panels, making the farm self-sufficient with energy. He also wants to introduce electric vehicles due to the degradation of the land caused by cars driving near to his farm in summer.

  • Vito Celeste farm and farmhouse dairy

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    After having finished the wine-tasting at the regional wine bar in Jesi, we drove in-land to the Vito Celeste farm. Being a bit off the beaten track, my guide Raffaela had to ask a shepherd for directions. Reaching the farm after dusk, we met the owner Arturo Valentino working outside on some kind of machine.

    The farm
    The Vito Celeste farm has been family-run for about 20 years, and Arturo Valentino is running the farm which was started by his grandfather. They also have an agri-tourism which was founded in 2004.

    Arturo willingly showed us the shed where their animals were living followed by, maybe up to 8 big, white dogs.

    The Jersey cows
    The cows come from Jersey in the English channel. The milk of the Jersey cows contain lots of fats and proteins and it resembles sheep’s milk. In general, 100 kilogrammes of milk gives about 20 kilogrammes of cheese and a Jersey cow gives about 13-14 litres of milk daily.

    The average age of the cows amounts to 8 and a half years. Insemination takes place when they are about 2 years and it’s completely natural by means of one of the farm’s 3 bulls. The animals stay in the sheds more or less all the time. The meat of the calves is of exceptional quality and it is served to the guests of the agri-tourism.

    The sheep
    The sheep are of the race Comisana, originating from Sicily, characterised by a red-brown muzzle and ewes producing about 2 litres of milk per day.

    The race is mainly spread around Sicily and Calabria, but it’s also present in some regions of the centre and in northern Italy due to its great adaptability to diverse environments,

    The wool is cut annually by master shearers coming all the way from Australia.

    The cheeses
    The farm is producing yogurt, soft cheese and mozzarella cheese.

    The sheep’s cheese contain other types of proteins than the milk of the Jersey cows.

    Selling of their products
    The farm is selling their products to groups of supportive purchasing, delivering directly to their representatives. Lots of customers go to the farm in order to buy their products, which aren’t sold at any other shops.

    The harvests
    The farm is growing the following types of forage for the animals:

    • barley
    • hay
    • alfalfa
    • field bean (vicia faba), a type of legume able to prevent erosion because they can over-winter and fix nitrogen in the soil
    • maize
    • soya bean

    Wine tasting

    After having seen their animals, we were invited inside for tasting their cheeses and having a glass of wine. Since Arturo was using a dialect which was more or less incomprehensible to me, I had to ask Raffaela for a translation on the way back home.

  • Trionfi Honorati farm and Piandelmedico dairy

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    The farm was started in 1939 by the marquis Antonio Trionfi Honorati who wanted to found a farmhouse dairy using milk from 30 Friesian cows. The farm has been owned by the Trionfi Honorati family ever since, and it is now being managed by the siblings Giulia and Antonio. Giulia is in charge of the farmhouse dairy and the well-stocked farm shop residing in the same building, while Antonio looks after the animals, whose number has grown to more than 300, consisting of both Friesian cows and buffaloes.

    The animals
    The farm has 190 cows, Dutch Friesian and 150 buffaloes. They are born in a special room and the birth may last up to a day for the cows, while it is very quick affair for the buffaloes.

    The calves are staying in separate rooms for 3 months until they are weaned off cow’s milk. They receive milk from their mothers for the first four days because it’s important that the first milk they are drinking are from their mothers in order to reinforce their immune system. Thereafter, they are fed powder milk.

    The health of the calves has to be controlled regularly. The young cows have to do 4 shifts from room to room, while the young buffaloes have to do only 3 shifts because they are less in need of controlling their health. The calves of the buffaloes are able to stand upright after only 20 minutes after birth because they are still preserving their wild characteristics.

    The first insemination takes place when the cows are about 15-17 months depending on the development of the animal. The cows are always artificially inseminated, while this happens very seldom with the buffaloes. Instead, the farm’s bull called Ciccio is doing this job.

    The buffaloes originate from Syria, coming to Italy during the barbaric invasions and found favourable environments in present Puglia and Campania. 70 buffaloes arrived at the farm in April 2004.

    The customers are buying the meat of the calves, especially the male ones. The meat of the buffaloes is exceptional and it contains lots of iron and little cholesterol. Naturally, quality of the meat depends on the fodder.

    Both maize, soy, oats and hay are grown at the farm and the animals are given a mix of these cereals. The farn has a mill where grinding and mixing of the cereals are carried out.

    All the animals live in sheds all year. The owner, Antonio Trionfi, would like to release the animals to a pasture, but, unfortunately, there are people who open the fences surrounding the pasture permitting the animals to escape.

    The milking of the cows is automated and the cows are milked twice daily. The Dutch Friesian cows are producing about 20 litres a day, while the buffaloes are producing about 8 litres. The milk of the buffaloes, containing about 8% fat, is not bottled.

    Photographing the animals was interesting: the Friesian cows seemingly didn’t care about being photographed, while the buffaloes cared very much. All of them were very curious and even those who were lying down, ruminating, arose and looked at me curiously.

    The cheeses
    Even though the cheeses are made from the same milk, it’s possible to produce many different types of cheese. The types depend on, among other things:

    • temperature
    • type of coagulated milk
    • salting
    • container in order to shape the cheeses
    • maturation
    • type of cut

    About 30 types of products, many of which are not traditional, are made at the dairy. Some of them are listed below:

    • buffalo ricotta
    • soft cheeses and cacetto
    • buffalo yogurt
    • buffalo vanilla ice cream
    • mozzarella
    • robioline
    • primosale- sheep’s cheese
    • stracchinella
    • caciottina, ‘pasta filata’ style cheese with truffles

    The farm has also a shop where the public can buy products from the dairy and other products mainly from the Marches. The customers are buying everything which is produced and it seems like the demand is greater than the supply.

  • Presidium cheese

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    Small scale producers of a soft, sharp cheese, called pultost in Norwegian, in the counties of Oppland and Hedmark in Norway received a status of presidium product at Slow Food’s cheese fair in Bra, Italy on 19 and 20 September 2009.

    The laborious work of a cheese producing cooperative called Pultost BA and the Slow Food Foundation in Norway have produced results. The soft, sharp cheese (pultost) is the first presidium product from the eastern part of Norway. Before, Norway had 4 presidium products: wild sheep from the western part of Norway, brown cheese from the western county of Sogn, smoked herring from the northwestern county of Møre and stock fish from Kristiansund.

    A presidium is the active part of the Ark of Taste whose objective is to rediscover, register, describe and spread the word about forgotten tastes, drinks and foods. The Slow Food movement has presently about 270 presidium products spread worldwide in the Ark of Taste.

    The Norwegian pultost is a very old type of cheese which formerly was produced in most of the country, that is, it was produced from the southern tip of the country up to the northern town of Mo i Rana. Now, the cheese is mainly produced in the counties of Oppland and Hedmark.

    We went to a mountain farm, called Fjellsetra, in order to see how the cheese is made in the vicinity of Hugulia located in Nordre Land in the county of Oppland. There, we met Bjørg Karin Hagen, who’s the manager of Pultost BA, a cooperative of several small scale producers of pultost in Hedmark and Oppland.

    Buttermilk waffle with pultost and chopped onion
    Bjørg Karin received us at her mountain farm on a bright autumn day in September just a week before she was going to Italy. After having invited us inside her guest hut, she brought us buttermilk waffle, pultost, soft, sweet, brown whey-cheese, chopped onion and coffee.

    For those not in the know, buttermilk is a waste product from churning cream into butter.

    Note! Adding chopped onion to pultost is recommended for beginners

    Thereafter, she let us know about the basics of pultost. Making this type of cheese naturally starts with what the free-ranging cows are eating, which will influence the taste of the final product. Then, after having milked the cows, the milk has to undergo separating, souring, separating whey and cheese mass, drying and maturing.

    The sweet milk is separated into cream and skimmed milk. 11 litres of skimmed milk is required in order to make one kilo of cheese, Bjørg Karin explained. Soured sweet milk (milk which has been warmed up to 20°C at a pH of 4.3 before being cooled down rapidly to 3-5°C) is added to the skimmed milk.

    Separating whey and cheese mass
    The soured, skimmed milk is warmed up to 50°C, then, the milk is whipped, before it is let to coagulate and turn into a cheese mass. After the cheese mass has been extracted, the whey stays behind. In fact, whey is a waste product or co-product from the making of white cheese. However, whey has been used in production of brown cheese and soft, sweet, brown whey-cheese for ages.

    Drying
    The cheese mass is compressed and then hung to dry in some type of porous cotton fabric in order to let out the whey. When it seems dry, firm and it leaves a little humidity when you hold it in your hand, it is ready for the next step. Bjørg Karin gave us a demonstration by holding a clump of cheese mass in her hand and showing us that the cheese mass had left her plastic glove humid. The last characteristic was a sign that everything was as it should be.

    Fermentation and maturing
    How long time does the cheese require to mature, we asked. That depends on many factors, was the answer. The cheese is matured at 25°C and it is checked daily. When the consistency, flavour, colour, and taste is like the producer want them to be, the cheese is ready. Then, salt amounting to about 5% of the total weight is added to the cheese in order to stop the fermentation in addition to adding taste. Caraway and possibly even more salt is added in order to set the taste of the cheese.

    Sales and distribution

    The cheese is sold at stands and fairs and from her own mountain farm at Hugulia. Bjørg Karin is one of a few small scale producers who can say that sales and distribution is no problem since everything which she produces is sold.

    What she’s doing in order to achieve this, we don’t really know. After having stayed a few hours at her mountain farm, we think that her great ability to spread the word about the taste, culture and enjoyment are contributing factors. We think her customers buy her cheese and get a good story and a great experience, as well. That is, the customers get more than they give.

    We gave our thanks for being allowed to visit her, and gave her our best wishes for her trip to the cheese fair in Bra, Italy. There, she has received the final confirmation that the Norwegian pultost has been accepted as a presidium product since it is produced according to old, tried and true methods.

    Producers which participate in Pultost BA are the following :

  • Ramme farm

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    Ramme farm, whose aim is to give rise an increased interaction between sustainability, environment and culture is located at Hvitsten in the county of Akershus in Norway.

    The farm has been managed organically since 1986. Many staples, like vegetables, herbs, flour, eggs, pork and beef are among the goods you can find in the farm shop.

    Farm manager Håkon Nesheim showed us around the farm. We saw organic eggs being taken from the henhouse to the farm shop, meaning that the eggs were ready for sale minutes after having been laid. A great example of shortly travelled, organic and sustainable handling of food.

    We followed Håkon to the tomato nursery where delicious organic tomatoes were being cultivated. Tasting a mature tomato brought me back to my yearly summer visits to Liguria in Italy. Here, flavour, taste, bliss and acidity were in a perfect balance. The mature tomatoes were picked and brought to the farm shop for sale every day.

    Watching the farm’s piglets playing and greeting the grown-up pigs by touching their snouts was a delightful sight. Cows, which are supplying the farm with milk, were grazing on a meadow next to the pigs’ enclosure. Neighbour and cheese producer Den Blinde Ku (The Blind Cow) also receive some of their milk from Ramme farm. Farm manager Håkon also told us that he had delivered spelt (a species of wheat) to Holli Mill which is located nearby and which we have visited earlier

    The gardeners on the farm were also working hard in order to prepare the farm for the coming weekend’s garden and early summer party. They were expecting a lot of visitors who wanted to buy bushes and perennials. Ramme farm could also offer cultural activities like watching plays being performed and listening to bands playing this weekend.

    We have watched the way from soil to table at Ramme farm, a way which has been a pleasure to follow. We recommend going there in order to spend a slow day. Leave the stress at home and take your time to enjoy watching domestic animals, nature and human beings in balance.

    In addition to cultivating organically and raising farm animals, Ramme farm is also dedicated to permaculture. Besides, they are using an ingenious way of heating the buildings by means of wood chippings and branches from their own forest. Plans for the future include a Munch gallery and a place where visitors can stay overnight is under construction. In other words, Ramme farm is continuously being developed with organic, sustainable and cultural elements well integrated in everything they are doing.

  • Horgen farm

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    We visited the farm of Trond Qvale at Horgen farm located about 50 km from Oslo in the commune of Nes in Akershus. He was proud to show us his Angus cattle which are outside all year. It started when he imported a fertilised egg and used a Norwegian cow as a surrogate mother, resulting in tens of Angus cattle in the following years.

    He began organic farming in 1989 and has been doing organic farming only from 1999. By cultivating meadow grasses and Timothy grass, the Qvale family is able to cover 90-95% of what their animals need, while they buy organic fodder from farms nearby to cover the remainder. However, depending on the yield of their own produce, they may have to buy up to 30% from other farms. Anyway, the meat of their cattle contains more nutrients and is more tasty than cattle raised on compound feed. For those who want to know more about grass-fed beef, this article is a good starting point.

    Having raised cattle for many years, Trond has learnt how to assess the weight of his cattle before they are sent to the slaughterhouse. In fact, he uses a tape measure, measuring the size of the animal across its front and back, resulting in a fairly accurate measure.

    Having departed from the conventional way of raising cattle where the goal is to let the animals grow quickly and give a lot of meat, Trond lets his animals grow slowly. By limiting the size of the cattle and only letting quiet animals have calves, they get more harmonious and the work of the farmer is easier. All breeding takes place such that births happen in spring and the calves stay with their mothers for 7-8 months before they are separated in small flocks.

    Spelt, barley for malting, oats together with wheat are also grown at this farm.

    Please see this web site for advice on grilling meat from Angus cattle.

  • Letter from Tuscany, Italy

    I’ve been travelling around the city of Orbetello together with the teachers from the Terramare language school in Orbetello in order to document small-scale food and drink producers in Tuscany and Lazio.

    Being accompanied by a local person is invaluable, both because they help me with the language and the special terms used by the people we visit, but also because they spend a lot of time contacting small-scale producers making appointments, driving to where they are located and aiding in asking questions in order to understand more about what they are doing. Besides, although some people speak slowly and clearly, some people don’t, making help with the language mandatory.

    Our way of working consisted mostly of one of the teachers from Terramare asking questions and talking with the farmers, while I was busy taking notes in Italian of what they were saying. Afterwards I wrote my notes down on a computer and let the teachers form them into sentences in Italian. Finally, I have translated the texts into English, but not verbatim.

    Tuesday 24 March

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    We visited a nursery called Vivaio Pensalfine located near the coast of the Tyrrhenian sea and Capalbio Calo. This nursery is producing melons, tomatoes, asparagus, squash and aubergine.

    Fertilised seeds are bought from Korea, France, the U.S. and Japan. A plastic tray containing a matrix of small holes is used as a home for the seeds, that is, each hole is filled with a mixture of dark turf from the Black Forest in Germany and light turf from Lithuania. Then, an inert material is applied on top of the seed in order to preserve the humidity of the seed in order to assure that the seed germinates. Finally, another layer of the turf mixture is applied on top of the inert material. Next, the trays containing the seeds and the turf are put into a room with high humidity and a controlled temperature always between 25 and 27 degrees centigrade. Then, after some time the seed will grow into a minuscule plant with two leaves. When a third leaf is formed, the incubation period is finished and the next phase can begin. This phase, consisting of taking a part of one plant, making a cut in another plant, putting the stem of the first plant inside the cut of the second plant before applying a spring clip which will enforce a small pressure on the host plant, is called grafting. The purpose is to make the plant being inserted into a host plant more resistant to diseases. We were watching this operation where a watermelon plant was grafted to a pumpkin plant. The roots of the pumpkin has a large resistance to diseases, and the watermelon which is being grafted will inherit this resistance. In fact, the pumpkin plant is also able to accept a melon plant. Another combination is grafting an aubergine plant to a tomato plant. In order to do this operation, a tiny cut in the host plant between its two main leaves is done with a scalpel. Then, the roots of the plant to be grafted are removed before a tiny transversal cut is done to its stem. Finally, the stem is inserted into the cut and a spring clip will apply a light pressure around both the host plant and the grafted one. In this way, the host plant will bring nutrients to the grafted one.

    During the growing phase, new leaves on the host plant will often start to grow, but they will have to removed since they will “steal” nutrients from the grafted plant. When the composite plant has grown to a size of about 10-12 centimetres, the spring clips around the host plants are removed, and the plants are sold to other nurseries.

    Wednesday 25 March

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    A farm called Azienda Agricola Biologica “La Selva” located at San Donato, Albinia. La Selva is a farm in which organic agriculture, which has been tried and tested in various ways for about 30 years, is practised.

    The cows being raised at the farm are native to Tuscany and are called Chianina because they were traditionally raised in the valley of Chiana. In fact, it is the same race that were used by the Romans, but only for the meat and not for the milk. The calves are born at La Selva and stay with their mothers for 6 months. Then, the animals are separated by a fence, but they are still able to meet each other. In this way, both the cow and the calf will avoid the stress which occur when they are forced to separate soon after birth. It also has a beneficial effect on the quality of the meat, which is sold to restaurants, etc.

    Both the cows and the calves live in large sheds consisting of a roof held up by steel columns and they are free to walk around the shed. They eat hay mixed with cereals and vegetables in addition to clover and they are never force-fed in order to obtain a specified weight in the shortest possible time. All the fodder they are eating is strictly organic. At the age of 12 to 18 months, some of the calves are sold for meat. About 25 Chianina cattle live outside all year. They consist of two bulls, about 15 cows and heifers, while the rest are calves. Every 4 years, the bulls are replaced in order to avoid in-breeding since the calves become mature after 4 years.

    Appennin sheep are also being raised at La Selva and they are grazing on land which is only being slightly farmed. The Appennin sheep originate from the centre of Italy and is only used for meat. Thus, the lambs are fed by their mothers until they are either sold for meat or they are gradually weaned off drinking milk.

    The hay, on which the cows walk, together with the their dung are used to fertilise the fields. In addition, a cycle running for 6-8 years is practised for cultivation of harvests. By using plants the first 3 or 4 years, which provides nutrients to the soil and only using the last 3 or 4 years for growing plants for food, a gradual impoverishment of the soil is avoided. Instead, the succeeding plants get nutrients from the preceding plants left in the soil.

    Regarding parasites feeding on the harvests, chemical pesticides are not used. Instead, insects like, for instance, ladybirds, which live in small forests spread around the farm feed on the parasites. The farmland of 450 hectares is divided into various areas for growing fruits, cereals, vegetables and fodder. Almost all the products from La Selva is sold in Italy, while a small part is exported to Germany. Only 10% of the production of fruits and vegetables are sold in their own farmer’s shop.

    Friday 27 March

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    We drove inland in the Maremma towards a farm called Aia della Colonna, which has been run by the Tistarelli family since the early 70s.

    The farm is located on the top of a hill and it is surrounded by rolling hills and valleys filled with maquis together with forests. The Tistarelli family has been doing organic farming since 1995 where they are reintroducing and increasing the use of the ancient bovine race called the Maremma cow. This cow has been used at least since the time of the Etruscans as work animals and for their meat.

    Fortunately, other farmers have also begun raising Maremma cows for the meat. Until only a few years ago, this cow race was little appreciated because of its large size and also because the race has not been bred for milk, meaning that it will probably not produce as much milk as dairy cows. Instead, the Maremma cow is appreciated for its tasty and meagre meat. An evident characteristic of these animals are their long and wide horns. About 100 cattle are being raised by the Tistarellis consisting of cows, heifers and calves which are dependent on milk. While the cows and the calves can roam more or less freely within a range, the heifers which are ready for selling are collected in enclosed areas where they are being fed hay, clover and fodder grown organically at the farm. In order to move the free-ranging cows and the calves, cowboys (yes, they still exist and they are called butteri in Italy) are used since the cows are very protective of their calves and can easily kill someone with their big horns.

    In addition to raising Maremma cattle, a pig race called Cinta Senese, which were originally raised near Siena, is also being raised at the farm. The pigs have a shed, but are free to go outside whenever they wish. Sheep are also being raised and the lambs stay with their mothers till they are weaned off. The wool is not being used due to that it requires too much work. The Tistarellis also raise chickens which are a cross between two ancient breeds of chicken. The hens are free to walk around inside a fence and they also have a shed for laying eggs.

    Besides growing fodder for the animals, the Tistarellis are also growing olives and vines. The olives and the vines are only for personal consumption and their guests since they also have rooms for rent. They also have premises for treating the meat from their animals, and the products are sold at their own farmer’s shop.

    Production of sausages are done using tried and true methods, that is, they are only using salt to preserve the meat and no preservatives are added. The products are sold to restaurants, wine bars, and so on. The salamis are much appreciated, especially in Tuscany where bread without salt is traditionally being used. The mix between the salted meat and the bread without salt gives a delicious taste. It is recommended to use a red wine called Morellino to accompany this meal. For the modest sum of 15 euros each, we were served a delicious meal consisting of wide selection of their meat products together with bread and wine.

    Various types of meat products are sold (the Italian names are included):

    • seasoned sausage – la salsiccia stagionata
    • a type of salami from Maremma – l’ammazzafegato
    • salami – il salame
    • chine of pork – l’arista
    • bacon – la pancetta
    • lard from the pig’s cheek – il guanciale
    • ham – il prosciutto
    • lard – il lardo.

    The products are sold in the vicinity of and in Tuscany.

    Monday 30 March 2009

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    We went to the neighbour of Vivaio Pensalfine called Azienda Agricola Augusto Petroselli, who are producing melons and watermelons in greenhouses and in open fields.

    The seedlings which are planted at this enterprise are bought from the Vivaio Pensalfine. Thus, they are buying seedlings which are resistant to disease, more likely that the seedlings will take root, greater growth rate and productivity. The hot and humid climate inside the greenhouses means that planting the seedlings can be started as early as February since no heating is provided to the greenhouses. Instead, heating is provided by the sun. The seedlings adapt well to being planted in the greenhouses and blossom in March. In the blossoming phase, pollination is ensured by means of bees, which live in the same greenhouse1. The female flowers turn into small fruits after having been pollinated, and the melons are ripe in May. Then, the primary harvest and sale of melons are carried out. In March and April, a new batch of seedlings are planted. The first ones are protected by a tunnel2 made of metal bows supporting a “roof” of cellophane which functions as a “house without floor” around them. Before the second ones are planted, a layer of cellophane is laid on the ground . This layer, which serves to hinder evaporation from the soil, has regular holes in it where the new seedlings will be planted. In addition, a tube with minuscule holes occurring at the same distance as the holes in the layer of cellophane is put along the seedlings. The holes let each seedling receive water, drop by drop, which seems to be a very efficient way of artificial irrigation. Thereafter, all the seedlings are covered with some kind of textile held up by metal bows. This “roof” protects the seedlings against diseases and parasites, but it is also porous in order to allow them to breathe. The seedlings which are grown in the tunnels are ready for harvesting in June, while the other ones are ready for harvesting in July/August.

    1. The melons inside the greenhouses have male and female flowers and bees are used intentionally, while ants are also doing some pollination. The female flower turns into a fruit after pollination, while the male one, withers away. A beehive is kept inside some of the greenhouses in order to ensure pollination.

    2. Inside the tunnel, the temperature can exceed 60 degrees centigrade making it necessary to make small holes at the end of the tunnels. The sizes of the holes are gradually made larger as the seedlings grow larger. This also has the desirable effect of letting insect pollinators enter the tunnel.

    Thursday 2 april 2009

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    We drove from Orbetello, via Manciano and Pitigliano towards Sorano when we arrived at a farm called l’Azienda Agricola Biologica Fonterosa di Piero Bigi.

    This family farm is run by Mr. Piero Bigi who wanted to reintroduce traditional cultivation in the early 80s. Now, he is cultivating organically the following legumes:

    • Bean – Fagiolo Ciavattone di Sorano
    • Kidney bean from Sorano – Fagiolo Borlotto nano di Sorano
    • Bean – Fagiolo Cannellino di Sorano
    • Name in English??? – Cicerchie di Sorano
    • Wrinkled chickpea from Sorano – Cece Rugoso di Sorano and one type of garlic called:
    • Red garlic from Maremma – Aglio rosso maremmano

    The possibly corresponding names in English have been put in before the original names in Italian in the list above.

    Mr. Bigi is aided in searching for new legumes and cultivating them by the University of Siena. Together, they are also controlling the selection of seeds, the various phases of cultivation, and the storing of the new seeds are performed in accordance with the requirements to organic farming. Mr. Bigi told us that during searching for original seeds for the above mentioned legumes, he met a 103 year old woman farmer who was still cultivating wrinkled chickpeas from Sorano. She told him that her grandparents were cultivating the same type of legume. It seems like most of the legumes cultivated by Mr. Bigi originally arrived in Europe about 300 years ago, having been exported somehow from Central Africa. All the legumes together with the garlic cultivated by Mr. Bigi are officially recognised as traditional products from Maremma or Sorano by the Tuscan Commissione Regionale. The farm is located in the area of tuff, a volcanic rock. The tuff originates from volcanic ash and lapilli from the ancient volcanoes of Bolsena and Mezzano in distant geological times.

    The abundant content of potassium in the tuff lends the following characteristics to the legumes:

    • Absence of a “shell effect” on the outer skin of the legume, produces an effect like it is “melting in the mouth”.
    • A rich and intense flavour.

    Planting legumes has the beneficial effect that it enriches the soil because they release nitrogen into the soil which also fixes carbon dioxide from the air. When planting, the legumes are planted on pieces of ground which are far from each other, in order to avoid pollination which could have caused hybridisation. No fertilisers, no insecticides and no weed-killers are applied during cultivation of any of the products. Collection of the finished products are done manually. All of the above mentioned legumes are fundamental ingredients of the courses in the Mediterranean diet and the Tuscan kitchen.

    Friday 3 april 2009

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    We drove just a few kilometres from Orbetello in order to reach a place called San Donato where a farm called Azienda Biologica e Agriturismo Rustici is located.

    We were showed around by Giuseppe Rustici, who runs the farm in cooperation with his father, his brother and their wives. Besides, they employ 8 people. Originally, the whole area around the farm was marshland, but it was reclaimed by draining during the 1950s.

    In addition, the land which was formerly owned by absent landowners were divided up and given to independent peasants. Now, 60 years later, the farm has about 100 Frisone dairy cows which are only meant for milk production. In addition, they are raising Maremma cows in an enclosed space and a mix between Limousine-Chianina which live in another enclosure nearby. While the dairy cows live inside a shed, but where they are free to walk outside, are inseminated artificially at regular intervals (60 days after having given birth, i.e. annually), the cows living outside are inseminated by bulls.

    The farm has two Maremma bulls and one mixed race for this purpose. The Rustici brothers together with their father have decided to run the farm as an enterprise run in an organic way. This means first of all to let nature run its course and not to push things, e.g., the time between the birth of a calf and another insemination of a dairy cow is extended from the minimum one month period to two months. Besides, cultivation of the harvests and treatment of soil are done organically, the animals are treated as well as possible, new and genuine products are continually developed and brought to market. The Rustici family has been trying for several years to promote the sale and the consumption of raw milk. Raw milk is the milk which has been milked from the dairy cows and not treated in any way, except filtration and refrigeration at 4°C.

    This leads to several properties which are highly appreciated by their customers:

    • raw milk is easily digestible, containing enzymes in an active form and aiding in improving intolerance to drinking milk.
    • raw milk aids in absorption of calcium because it conserves phosphates. Instead, heat-treating the milk will prevent this property.
    • raw milk contains large amounts of unsaturated fats which are fundamental for the human body, gives energy to the body, aids in eliminating toxins and maintains the elasticity of the veins.

    Among the initiatives of the Rusticis for taking care of the environment is to extend their organic cultivation to neighbouring farms.

    The advantages are twofold:

    • restore the original organic components by preventing all use of pesticides, weed-killers and other chemicals.
    • provide fodder, cereals and legumes necessary for the nutrition of their animals.

    The Rustici farm has been officially recognised by a regional corporation called ARSIA and has received a certificate of conformity guarding the rules of running farms organically. The certificate has to be renewed at regular intervals. The health of the dairy cows is closely monitored. Each cow is furnished with a pedometer which monitors their movement, while the amount of milk each cow produces is also recorded as a means of detecting health problems at an early stage.

    The calves are separated from their mothers immediately after birth, but the calf is completely dependent on drinking the milk of its mother for the first 10 days of its life. Thereafter, it is fed milk from the other dairy cows for another 80 days. Thereafter, the calves are placed together in enclosures where they are free to be inside a shed or walk outside on a meadow. As the calves turn into heifers, they are placed in another enclosure until finally “advancing” to be dairy cows at which time they will join the other ones.

    The raising of cows outside (about 50 Maremma cows and about 70 mixed race cows only meant for meat production) take place about 25 kilometres from the Rustici farm near a town called Magliano about 150-200 metres above sea level. They live in a beautiful area consisting of hills and valleys covered with maquis and with a view of the sea. Ancient fountains nearby are used to provide water to the animals.

    In summer, the Maremma cows, which grow slowly, needing large open spaces and being able to move long distances, are moved to other meadows nearby where they are able to live off the land, whereas they are fed by the farmers in winter. Among the agricultural rotation techniques reintroduced by the Rustici brothers which is beneficial for the soil is called green manure. By means of this method, one type of plant is used to prepare the soil for multi-year plants the next season.

    A suitable plant for this purpose is called favino in Italian and probably mangetout in English, a legume which makes it possible to obtain the following main objectives:

    • after having spread dung from the cowsheds, the legume called mangetout, which collects nutrients from the dung, is seeded in the same place. Thus, when growing, it will transform the dung into elements which will enrich the soil after the plants have died.
    • the mangetout prevents other plants from growing up in the same area in which it is growing.
    • after the mangetouts have died, they are left on the field, thus providing a natural weed-killer.

    Besides, all legumes enrich the soil with nitrogen. Before a new cultivation is applied, the plant residues are mixed mechanically providing nutrients or green manure to the new cultivation.

    The Rustici family has lots of ideas for expansion of their farm, not limited to extending their land or raising more animals, but also to receive tourists. In fact, around the meadows used by the cows, numerous paths are situated which are suitable for both hiking and mountain biking and they are ready to accommodate groups, who want to spend their holidays in the countryside. They also serve food based on their own locally grown and raised food together with their un-pasteurised or raw milk.

    Monday 6 april 2009

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    We drove from Orbetello through Manciano and just before reaching Pitigliano, we turned right towards Farnese. Just a few hundred metres afterwards, we reached the farm called Azienda Agricola Belvedere situated on top a hill.

    One of the first sights which met us on arrival was Giancarlo’s, the owner of the farm, 75 year old mother slaughtering a turkey. Later, we were also watching her slaughtering a hen and a rabbit. A very unusual sight, indeed, for a city guy like me! However, the other free-ranging chickens seemed not to notice at all or just showing utmost indifference that two of their brethren had just been finished off!

    The Belvedere farm being situated between the Tuscan commune Pitigliano and the Lazian commune Farnese, resides on very fertile soil although it is outside the zone of tuff. All the countryside around the Belvedere farm was owned by large landowners up until the 1950s when an agricultural reform abrogated this custom and gave the land to the peasants. Giancarlo’s mother could still remember her grandparents had the right to stay in the farmhouse, but having to give half of whatever they produced to the landowner. After the agricultural reform, the family of Giancarlo has extended the area of the farm to 150 hectares by buying up land and by inheritance.

    The principal plants which are cultivated at this farm are olives and grape-vines. The vines are mainly Sangiovese, Cabernet and Rosso di Sorano where most of production is sold to wine-merchant called Cantina Sociale. However, the pride of Giancarlo is the wine cellar, dating from the 1400s and facing north to avoid the sun, which has been excavated below the family’s house. We were invited to taste his Rosso di Sorano which had an excellent taste.

    Regarding the olives, Giancarlo cultivates three types of olive trees, Cannino, Leccino and Frantoio, which have some of the following general characteristics:

    • Cannino olive oil: tasty, pungent, forever young and can be conserved a long time.
    • Leccino: the Leccino trees are robust and not susceptible to cold spells. The olives are big and meaty, while the oil is light and delicate, but not suitable for long conservation. May be harvested in October-November.
    • Frantoio: not able to produce olives if the tree is subjected to low temperatures, but it produces an excellent oil which is aromatic and fragrant.

    The following animals are raised at Belvedere:

    • Milk-producing Frisone cows and meat-producing Limousine cows.
    • Meat-producing Cinta Senese pigs whose meat is sold both as fresh and as sausages, salamies, ham, lard, etc.
    • Meat-producing Appennin sheep.

    In order to enrich the soil, dung is used, while no chemicals are added. The Belvedere farm has not been recognised as an organic farm due to too much bureaucracy. We were also shown a field of rapeseed which was only used for fodder for their animals and not for making vegetable oil.

  • Grøndalen farm

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    Grøndalen farm meaning the Green valley farm is being run in an organic manner, having excellent animal welfare, and producing a fromage blanc called Nýr, which is pronounced neer and can by all means replace both cream and sour cream.

    We went to Grøndalen farm in the Sørum district located about one hour drive northeast of Oslo.  We were expecting some information on running an organic farm and doing small-scale cheese production. Instead, we got much more.

    We met a farmer called Hans Arild Grøndahl with a liking for organic agriculture and animal welfare and a sense of balance in his environment. Hans Arild showed us his barn where the animals could walk around more or less freely whenever they felt like it. The most unique experience of it all was to see with our own eyes that the animals were having such a good time. In addition to being more or less free,  the newborn calves stay with their mothers for 8 weeks.

    On the contrary, it’s common practice to separate mother and child straight after birth which is certainly a traumatic experience for both of them. For the first two days after birth, cow and calf stay together separate from the other animals, while they stay together with the other ones afterwards. Even after the 8 weeks have passed, cow and calf are able to see each other across a fence.

    RELATED REPORT:
    Calf growth rate and welfare in a dairy herd with natural feeding until 6-8 weeks of age.

    This way of treating cows have gained a lot of attention, bringing visitors from lots of countries across the world in order to see what Hans Arild and his family have achieved. A short time after our visit, we were told that a research grant had been approved in order to do research, among other things, on the impact of the treatment of the animals on the milk they are making.

    A report in Norwegian describes experiences with letting cows stay with their calves.

    Fromage blanc production

    Hans Arild rents a small dairy at a vocational school close to his farm in order to produce Nýr, the fromage blanc, which is made from milk to which is added lactic acid bacteria. This leads to a unique, tasty flavour.

    Distribution

    Grøndalen gård could have sold a lot more of its fromage blanc. However, they have many of the same challenges like other small-scale producers are struggling with, like marketing and access to markets. However, we who are co-producers1 have to ask for their products at the supermarkets and spread the word as far and wide as possible.

    1. Members of Slow Food don’t call themselves consumers, but co-producers to the producers who are producing our food.

     

  • Eiker farmhouse dairy

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    Eiker farmhouse dairy makes mild cheeses which are popular in restaurants in the southeastern part of Norway. Three farms near a place called Hokksund located to the west of the town Drammen are cooperating in order to direct the farmhouse dairy.

    Just a few years ago, the three farms mentioned above had great problems going on as usual. Increased expenses and hard work didn’t encourage their children to go on running the farms and closing them down was a real possibility. Fortunately, the wives on the farms went to meet likeminded people in the same situation as them. The idea of starting production of cheese became a wish, an aim and finally a reality. Three farms called Grøsland, Bermingrud and Homlebekk were willing to think anew and now there is a modern factory with good prospects.

    Small scale producers like Eiker farmhouse dairy depend on my and your help in order to get their products marketed and sold. Members of Slow Food aren’t just ordinary consumers, but co-producers. We can become more knowledgeable about the cheeses which are made close to where we live. We can share a tasting of cheese with others, and praise the cheeses in shops and restaurants. All these small influences contribute to keeping a large selection of taste, thus supporting local sense of belonging and food culture.

    We recommend going to Eiker farmhouse dairy, taste their cheeses, visit the cows in the barn and by all means buy a piece of cheese. The cheese from Eiker which you serve to friends afterwards has got an identity. A story about the way from soil to table, locally made food, hard-working cowhands and dairy workers, and happy cows.