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My apologies to the turkeys. Yes, I did find you creepy. I did find it difficult, having to show you where to find your food in the morning. Every morning. I did sometimes resent having to herd you back in from the road at least four times a day after I’d hear cars skid on the dirt as they braked trying to miss hitting you. I did struggle to love you as immediately, as unconditionally, as I did Maggie the cow. Or even Prosciutto and Cassoulet the pigs.
I apologise, because in the next life, turkeys, you taste simply delicious. Truly great. Like turkey should taste and never does. This is meat that is moist, flavoursome, tender and naturally sweet. The skin browns up to lacquer like brown-ness, the bones make a great stock. It’s like the flavour of all the turkeys you ever wanted to eat rolled into one. I don’t like commercial turkey meat. But I do love this.
I find killing the birds inordinately bad. I don’t like the chopping of the neck, and hate the plucking and gutting of the birds. I find I have to shower straight afterwards and don’t want to eat the meat for a couple of days, at least. It’s the smell of them, mostly of the feathers, that does it. But if this meat, poultry with real, inherent, complex flavour, is the end result, and the only way I can get it is to rear and kill the birds myself, I’ll do it.
The longer days have meant there are births, not just deaths, on the farm. I found my first Barnevelder egg. Sure, it was tiny, barely bigger than the end joint of my thumb. But what a day it was, so exciting when you’ve raised the birds from fluffy, fragile chicks, to matronly, full grown chooks. I don’t know who is laying. Blossom, perhaps, or is it Beryl? Apparently you can pick the chooks up, look between their legs, and tell. I think I’ll just wait and see how many eggs are laid.
Within a few days there are more eggs, more than one a day. Again, they’re tiny. Sometimes, the eggs have been coated in too fine a shell, so thin it breaks when the egg is laid. Apparently it can take a while for some birds to hit their stride. I put out a bowl of shell grit; coarse bits of shell that help in their crop (chickens don’t have teeth, they eat small stones that grind grain down in their necks) but more importantly help give the birds calcium. If you’re producing an egg a day, five days a week, you need all the calcium, and other nutrients, that you can get.
I boil my first ever Puggle Farm egg so I can have it at its most pure. I have it with sourdough toast soldiers smothered in homemade butter. The yolk is impossibly orange. Incandescent, almost. The flavour is rich, about three times the flavour of shop bought eggs, even the free range ones I’m used to. It’s taken over half of my first year on the farm, but finally one of the most basic foods, one that is overlooked by even the poshest restaurants in the land, I produce myself. These eggs, from chooks that scratch for grubs and nibble on grass, are the most humble expression of just how good, honest and true farmhouse cooking can be. Nothing bought compares to this. It helps me reconnect with the land, with the ideal of producing everyday food from this plot of dirt. What’s more, it’s bloody delicious.
Comments (7)
Perfect Match
Hi Mathew.... If your not married please write to me and I will show u my picture. You and me are the perfect match. I have dark hair and dark brown eyes. I can show u my picture okie dokes?
13 Feb 2010 13:47 AEST
From:
A job worth doing (cont...........)
We feel that it is important for our children to learn the skills of days gone by and to teach them respect for that animals sacrifice. All I can say is that it does get a little easier as time goes by. But best of all if you visit the remaining girls in the chook house the next day, they are almost smiling as they are no longer getting harrassed by all the boys!!!!!
13 Feb 2010 13:39 AEST
From:
A job worth doing
Congratulations on your bravery for killing the roosters. We also are striving to live the self sufficiant lifestyle. We have had our chooks for the past three years and with three kids you can imagine how much fun it is when a clucky chook brings out chickens. Unfortunately half of the chicks will be roosters and roosters eat a lot of food and I've never had one yeat lay an egg! A few days a year we do the cull. We get the kids involved too so they can appreciate where our food comes from.
05 Feb 2010 22:09 AEST
From: toowoomba
poultry
turkeys are a fun animal to have around with their strange noisey comical matting dance or when the turkey tom stands up to you and you lose. But the way they taste home produced will sell them everytime.
19 Dec 2009 15:29 AEST
From:
Turkey
Not a big fan of turkeys but they have their place in society lol
23 Nov 2009 10:52 AEST
From:
Thank you.
A day off has given me the chance to read/appreciate all your blogs & I realise that we regularly buy from you at the market - eggs, ham, bacon, hocks, rillettes & the beans. We hope to enjoy one of your hams this Christmas. We chose your stall as we wanted great quality food that was produced sustainably from free range animals & was local. It is nice to know part of the greater story behind Rare Foods, the producers & your personal 7 very interesting experiences. Thank you.
19 Nov 2009 17:27 AEST
From:
Natures Fast Food
Wow, your boiled egg was making me reminiss of when I had my own chooks. You are so right, you know what the chooks are eating at your own place. They love the table scraps, vege peels etc. Never did get into boiling up all the potato peels and stinking the house out, memories of someone elses kitchen smells! Fox got mine. I figured out why. We run an electric fence around our 4 acre home paddock. We turned it off when we got a new puppy. Bingo! the fox had lunch the next day. Cunning bugger.
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About this Blog
Ever wondered what it’d be like to leave a cushy city job and set up a small farm without any experience of rural life? Join Matthew Evans as he adjusts from being a restaurant critic to learning exactly where his food is coming from, on a farmlet in Tasmania’s beautiful Huon Valley.
Matthew Evans was once trained as a chef, before crossing to the dark side of the industry and becoming a restaurant reviewer. After five years and 2,000 restaurant meals as the chief reviewer for The Sydney Morning Herald, Matthew realised that chefs don’t have the best produce in the land, normal people who live close to the land do. So he moved to Tasmania, to a small patch of earth where he’s raising pigs and sheep, milking a cow and waiting for his chickens to start laying.
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08 Mar 2010 19:22 AEST
Juliette
From: Adelaide