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Five Marys ranch raised cookbook : homegrown recipes from our family to yours  Cover Image Book Book

Five Marys ranch raised cookbook : homegrown recipes from our family to yours / by Mary Heffernan with Kim Laidlaw.

Heffernan, Mary, 1978- (author.). Laidlaw, Kim, (author.).

Summary:

"This cookbook will feature 75 recipes for the hearty, ranch-style meals Mary cooks for her family at home. This is a meat-centric cookbook with recipes for the kind of satisfying, comfort food that is popular in middle America, the South, and Southwest"-- Provided by publisher.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9781632173072
  • Physical Description: 265 pages : color illustrations ; 28 cm
  • Publisher: Seattle, WA : Sasquatch Books, 2020.

Content descriptions

General Note:
Includes index.
Formatted Contents Note:
Ranch breakfasts -- Bites to share -- Beef -- Pork -- Lamb -- On the side -- Five o'clock cocktails -- Something sweet.
Subject: Cooking, American.
Ranch life > California.
Cooking (Meat)
Genre: Cookbooks.

Available copies

  • 8 of 8 copies available at Missouri Evergreen. (Show)
  • 2 of 2 copies available at Crawford County.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 8 total copies.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Status Due Date
Crawford County Library-Recklein Memorial-Cuba 641.59 HEF (Text) 33431000482651 Adult Non-Fiction Available -
Crawford County Library-Steelville 641.59 HEF (Text) 33431000406809 Adult Non-Fiction Available -

Syndetic Solutions - Excerpt for ISBN Number 9781632173072
Five Marys Ranch Raised Cookbook : Homegrown Recipes from Our Family to Yours
Five Marys Ranch Raised Cookbook : Homegrown Recipes from Our Family to Yours
by Heffernan, Mary; Laidlaw, Kim; Gamble, Kathryn (Photographer); Burggraaf, Charity (Photographer)
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Excerpt

Five Marys Ranch Raised Cookbook : Homegrown Recipes from Our Family to Yours

In 2013 our lives took an unexpected turn. My husband, Brian, and I had a comfortable lifestyle in Silicon Valley with our four healthy girls, great jobs, and a beautiful home. We worked hard to make a good living there for many years: Brian owned his own small law firm, and I had built a number of small brick-and-mortar businesses, including two restaurants. We had lots of great friends and many social commitments. We had everything we were supposed to want--we were living the American dream. But we were inspired to change the direction of our lives. We bought a ranch and decided to move to a rural mountain town to raise livestock together as a family. I grew up in Menlo Park, the heart of Silicon Valley, before it became a bustling hub of opportunity. I left California to attend college in Virginia, where I started on the path to medical school. After college, I returned to my hometown and started tutoring local kids. I saw a need for a place where the kids could do their homework with tutors on staff, so I started my first business, called Academic Trainers. It made me realize how much I loved owning a small business. And I had big ideas for more. A few years later I was volunteering at a fundraiser and met a tall, handsome guy who drove a pickup truck but spent his days in a suit and tie. It was love at first sight. Brian was working his way up in a big firm, and I was managing my tutoring business and working on my next venture. We were married in 2006. After our first baby, Francie, came along, Brian decided to start his own law practice and leased office space upstairs from my business. We enjoyed working close to each other and decided we wanted more of that. Along with a few other family-centered businesses, we opened two farm-totable restaurants serving quality food made from the best ingredients we could find. We worked with top local chefs to identify just what we wanted and what was important to us. Sourcing consistent, high-quality meats year-round proved to be difficult. After a lot of research and a few years of searching, we knew exactly what we were looking for: well-marbled Black Angus beef from cattle with excellent genetics that were raised naturally on grasses and finished with barley. We wanted beef that was dry-aged for twenty-one to twenty-eight days for outstanding flavor and consistency every time. When we couldn't find anything that met our criteria, we decided to do it ourselves. We found the historic Sharps Gulch Ranch in the mountains of Northern California outside of Siskiyou County--or we like to say it found us. Our hope was that we could build an operation to produce our own consistently excellent, humanely raised meats, all while continuing life as we knew it. With some help from my brother-in-law, a fifth-generation cattle rancher in Eastern Oregon, we set up operations and jumped into ranch life while trying to run our businesses in Silicon Valley. When we purchased the property, we thought we'd just go up on the weekends, hiring a ranch manager to handle the day-to-day operations while we managed our businesses during the week. We quickly realized we couldn't do both things well. A few months later--and about two hours into the six-hour commute we made every weekend--I turned to Brian and asked, "What are we doing? Driving to the ranch every weekend is not sustainable. Let's commit to this full time." It was an easy decision to make. But it wasn't easy to unwind the life we'd created. Brian and I decided to sell our home and all of our businesses, including our two restaurants and his law firm, and move our family of six to the ranch for good. It was a huge change. We left behind the only livelihood we'd ever known and set our sights on creating a life and a sustainable business in a rural town with a population of just 681 people. This decision wasn't much of a shock to those who knew us. People often ask my mom if she's shocked we ended up as ranchers, and her answer is always "No, it makes perfect sense for Mary and Brian." Brian and I both have deep roots in California agriculture and share a love of the rural Western lifestyle. In 1867 Brian's great-great-grandfather Casper and his wife, Theresa, came to Ventura County from Germany to farm sugar beets. Casper was known as one of the first agriculturalists in the region. The couple eventually bought the four-thousand-acre Conejo ranch. Their son, Antone, continued ranching and later settled in Orange County, where Brian's dad started their family in agriculture. Brian's dad, Tom, was a banker in Ventura as a young man but decided to go back to his farming roots when Brian was an infant. Moving his young family to Imperial County, Tom grew alfalfa, grains, and specialty crops. When Brian was sixteen, the family moved north to Tehama County, where Tom began to farm prunes, almonds, and walnuts. Sadly, he suffered greatly from Parkinson's soon after the move and passed away in 2015, but Brian's dad made many visits to our ranch before he died. He was clearly very proud to see his son following in his footsteps. My ancestors immigrated to the Pajaro Valley from Ireland in 1851 and grew strawberries, apples, lettuce, and sugar beets in Santa Cruz County. They sold gold-rush supplies to miners and worked as farmers in the Watsonville area for five generations. Much of my family remains in California to this day. My grandfather moved away from farming but was a great man with big ideas and an entrepreneurial spirit. He always appreciated farmers and ranchers and found his own business niches--a trait I like to believe he passed on to me when I was a young girl riding around in the front seat of his car while he talked about his next big idea. So Brian and I set our sights on creating a new business in ranching in the mountains of Northern California. We had a big job: we needed to find a way to make the ranch work to support our family, and possibly even support the next generation someday. The first year of business was tough--Brian and I jumped with both feet into a life we hardly knew. We had 1,800 acres of pastureland and mountain hillside, and quickly started growing our herd of cattle, flock of sheep, and passel of pigs. It took us well over a year to determine the best way to ship and sell the meat we were working so hard to produce. We raise the animals for market, meaning that we breed and care for them before harvest, and then after butchery we ship the beef, pork, and lamb directly to customers all over the country. Little by little we grew our business from the bottom up, selling small boxes to friends and family, traveling for deliveries, and selling from farm stands. Eventually we opened the Farm Store, from where we now ship our meats directly to customers' doorsteps anywhere in the United States. Moving to the ranch was a big change for our home life as well. All of a sudden our family went from sharing a spacious house in the suburbs to a rustic 760-square-foot cabin with only a wood-burning stove for heat. Our initial thought was to live in the cabin for a short time while we got our bearings and eventually build a larger house on the property. But we soon realized we craved the comfort of the cabin; we all loved being so close together. We simply didn't need much more space. We spend so much of our time outside working that this small, cozy home is perfect for our family and all that we need. Living on the ranch has made our four daughters--ages seven to twelve and all of whom really are named Mary--extremely independent and resourceful. We honestly couldn't do all this without them. The hard, physical work of raising animals, growing hay, and running our businesses has meant we've relied on them to help from the very beginning. The girls were young when we moved to the ranch, but we quickly realized that they were so much more capable than we could have ever imagined. They learned how to drive the hay truck, take care of their horses, and are in charge of the bottle babies, helping the momma animals through difficult births. This collaborative effort has allowed us to branch out beyond livestock. Not long after moving, we built our camp area up the hill from the cabin so that we'd have a place to host family and friends on the ranch. We also offer summer experiences, where we share the food we raise, cocktails, and a little more about ranch life and what goes into raising animals with our guests. In 2017 we opened Five Marys Burgerhouse, a restaurant and bar in town, after swearing we'd never open another restaurant. But when the opportunity to purchase the historic bar came up, it just made sense. We serve all our own meats to the local community as well as to guests who visit from near and far. We also produce our own small-batch single-barrel whiskey with our partner Alchemy Distillery in Arcata, California, and use local produce raised by our neighbors whenever possible. Taking a chance by purchasing the ranch and jumping in with our family was the best decision that Brian and I have ever made. We look back at where we were just a year ago, or six years ago, when we started from scratch and can't believe how far we've come. It hasn't been easy, but as we like to say, "Nothing is easy--if it were, everyone would do it. But it's worth it." This cookbook is a culmination of all of this, an invitation to join us around the table to share a meal, a glimpse into our free-range life of dirt and sunshine and animals and community. Because, at the end of the day, when the sheep are tucked away in the barn and the woodstove is warming the cabin, there's nothing we like more than to gather in the kitchen, cooking together and savoring some of our favorite family recipes. We are proud to share them here with you, and we hope you enjoy sharing them with your own friends and family. Excerpted from Five Marys Ranch Raised Cookbook: Homegrown Recipes from Our Family to Yours by Mary Heffernan, Kim Laidlaw All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.

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