Northern Valley Pastoral Guild Grassfed Produce
Grass Fed Products from the Shenandoah Valley - The Good is in the Green
Grass Fed Products from the Shenandoah Valley - The Good is in the Green
Northern Virginia Pastoral Guild Pastured and Grass fed products
Pasture Raised Beef, lamb, pork and cabrito
Grass Fed  Pastured Artisan  
Beef  
Lamb  
Cabrito  
Milk  
Chicken  
Pork  
Rabbit  
Eggs  
Honey  
Cheese  
Sausage  
Paté  
Quantities are
often limited --
be the first in line!
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Updates from the Valley


3/1/2010 - NVPG 
Pastured Eggs now Available! US Grade AA Eggs from 100% cage-free and Pastured hens. Click on the Egg icon to order your fresh eggs. Available for pick-up at Briarmead farm in Front Royal.


2/11/2010 - Briarmead 
At this time of year with much SNOW on the ground and this past season's beef and lamb entirely sold out, we look ahead to warmer weather and our next butchering date in May-June; place your orders now.  We appreciate all of the feedback about this year's healthy and delicious beef and lamb.  The beef has excellent, rich flavor that has made several customers comment on how it makes conventional feedlot beef taste oh-so-BLAND.   Additionally, Briarmead lamb chops are planned as the centerpiece of a local professional chef's upcoming gourmet dinner; sure to please the palates of a group of discriminating guests.  We'll let you know how that comes out in March!


11/11/2009 - NVPG 
Thanks for the strong support; we have sold out of whole lambs (some cuts available via request), and Beef is sold through December.  We are taking orders for January Beef delivery, so do feel free to order for January.


10/4/2009 - NVPG 
NY Times - woman paralyzed by eColi in ground beef... read on:

"Ground beef is usually not simply a chunk of meat run through a grinder. Instead, records and interviews show, a single portion of hamburger meat is often an amalgam of various grades of meat from different parts of cows and even from different slaughterhouses... confidential grinding logs and other Cargill records show...the ingredients came from slaughterhouses in Nebraska, Texas and Uruguay, and from a South Dakota company that processes fatty trimmings and treats them with ammonia to kill bacteria.  Using a combination of sources — a practice followed by most large producers of fresh and packaged hamburger — allowed Cargill to spend about 25 percent less than it would have for cuts of whole meat."

Would you pay 25% more to know where your beef comes from and how it is processed?


10/1/2009 - NVPG 
Harvest season is upon us and the early fall orders have been fulfilled.  Order your Beef, Lamb and Rabbit for the holidays.


8/20/2009 - Notting Hill 
New batch of Black Star chicks arrived today; now begins the 22 week process of nurturing them into Laying Hens.  A lot of work goes in to producing that first pastured Egg.


7/31/2009 - Fair Knowe 
Harvested the Summer honey!  Supplies are in high demand, please send us an email if you would like to get on the customer list.

Grassfed Basics and Pastured Animals
Pasture Raised Beef, lamb, pork and cabrito

There are a lot of very good reasons to eat local, grassfed or pastured products from growers practicing sustainable “beyond organic” agriculture.  Some of the chief reasons are:

  • Health
  • Quality/Taste
  • Animal welfare
  • Micro-Environmental benefits (reduced pesticide use)
  • Macro-Environmental benefits (reduced petroleum use)
  • Economic justice

Now, we’re not saying that any given person has to subscribe to principles 1-6 to enjoy grassfed products… just that the interest in products provided by the Guild Farms comes from a vary wide and diverse group of folks.

For example, If you are drawn to Grassfed products for health reasons, you may want to explore the benefits that this type of farming provides to your local environment, or you may be inspired to learn more about the incredible taste differences between factory foods and local farm foods (just for starters… some day crack open two eggs: one from a battery chicken and the other from a pastured hen… you’ll wonder how factory chickens can even lay claim to calling their products “eggs”). 

To learn more about Pastured Eggs and the differences between Sustainable vs. Factory vs. Organic farming and the confusion among the three, click here.

We hope, that all who come here looking for good food – for whatever the reason – will endeavor to patronize local farms (whether they belong to NVPG or not) and help to rebuild an agriculture and a rural economy that are both sustainable.

Jo Robinson, author of Pasture Perfect and founder of www.eatwild.com has been one of the pioneers of the grassfed movement; her Grass-Fed Basics is succinct, widely distributed and quoted in it’s entirety below:

Back to Pasture. Since the late 1990s, a growing number of ranchers have stopped sending their animals to the feedlots to be fattened on grain, soy and other supplements. Instead, they are keeping their animals home on the range where they forage on pasture, their native diet. These new-age ranchers do not treat their livestock with hormones or feed them growth-promoting additives. As a result, the animals grow at a natural pace. For these reasons and more, grass-fed animals live low-stress lives and are so healthy there is no reason to treat them with antibiotics or other drugs.

More Nutritious. A major benefit of raising animals on pasture is that their products are healthier for you. For example, compared with feedlot meat, meat from grass-fed beef, bison, lamb and goats has less total fat, saturated fat, cholesterol, and calories. It also has more vitamin E, beta-carotene, vitamin C, and a number of health-promoting fats, including omega-3 fatty acids and “conjugated linoleic acid,” or CLA.

The Art and Science of Grassfarming. Raising animals on pasture requires more knowledge and skill than sending them to a feedlot. For example, in order for grass-fed beef to be succulent and tender, the cattle need to forage on high-quality grasses and legumes, especially in the months prior to slaughter. Providing this nutritious and natural diet requires healthy soil and careful pasture management so that the plants are maintained at an optimal stage of growth. Because high-quality pasture is the key to high-quality animal products, many pasture-based ranchers refer to themselves as "grassfarmers" rather than “ranchers.” They raise great grass; the animals do all the rest.

Factory Farming. Raising animals on pasture is dramatically different from the status quo. Virtually all the meat, eggs, and dairy products that you find in the supermarket come from animals raised in confinement in large facilities called CAFOs or “Confined Animal Feeding Operations.” These highly mechanized operations provide a year-round supply of food at a reasonable price. Although the food is cheap and convenient, there is growing recognition that factory farming creates a host of problems, including:

  • Animal stress and abuse
  • Air, land, and water pollution
  • The unnecessary use of hormones, antibiotics, and other drugs
  • Low-paid, stressful farm work
  • The loss of small family farms
  • Food with less nutritional value.

Unnatural Diets. Animals raised in factory farms are given diets designed to boost their productivity and lower costs. The main ingredients are genetically modified grain and soy that are kept at artificially low prices by government subsidies. To further cut costs, the feed may also contain “by-product feedstuff” such as municipal garbage, stale pastry, chicken feathers, and candy. Until 1997, U.S. cattle were also being fed meat that had been trimmed from other cattle, in effect turning herbivores into carnivores. This unnatural practice is believed to be the underlying cause of BSE or “mad cow disease.”

Animal Stress. A high-grain diet can cause physical problems for ruminants—cud-chewing animals such as cattle, dairy cows, goats, bison, and sheep. Ruminants are designed to eat fibrous grasses, plants, and shrubs—not starchy, low-fiber grain. When they are switched from pasture to grain, they can become afflicted with a number of disorders, including a common but painful condition called “subacute acidosis.” Cattle with subacute acidosis kick at their bellies, go off their feed, and eat dirt. To prevent more serious and sometimes fatal reactions, the animals are given chemical additives along with a constant, low-level dose of antibiotics. Some of these antibiotics are the same ones used in human medicine. When medications are overused in the feedlots, bacteria become resistant to them. When people become infected with these new, disease-resistant bacteria, there are fewer medications available to treat them.

Caged Pigs, Chickens, Ducks and Geese. Most of the nation’s chickens, turkeys, and pigs are also being raised in confinement. Typically, they suffer an even worse fate than the grazing animals. Tightly packed into cages, sheds, or pens, they cannot practice their normal behaviors, such as rooting, grazing, and roosting. Laying hens are crowded into cages that are so small that there is not enough room for all of the birds to sit down at one time. An added insult is that they cannot escape the stench of their own manure. Meat and eggs from these animals are lower in a number of key vitamins and omega-3 fatty acids. (Read more -- link to NVPG)

Environmental Degradation. When animals are raised in feedlots or cages, they deposit large amounts of manure in a small amount of space. The manure must be collected and transported away from the area, an expensive proposition. To cut costs, it is dumped as close to the feedlot as possible. As a result, the surrounding soil is overloaded with nutrients, which can cause ground and water pollution. When animals are raised outdoors on pasture, their manure is spread over a wide area of land, making it a welcome source of organic fertilizer, not a “waste management problem

The Healthiest Choice. When you choose to eat meat, eggs, and dairy products from animals raised on pasture, you are improving the welfare of the animals, helping to put an end to environmental degradation, helping small-scale ranchers and farmers make a living from the land, helping to sustain rural communities, and giving your family the healthiest possible food. It’s a win-win-win-win situation.

© 2007 by Jo Robinson

To learn more details about the benefits of choosing products from pastured animals, read Pasture Perfect by Jo Robinson or explore her website: http://www.eatwild.com
Read: Pasture Perfect

 
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