Welcome!


Prairie Heritage Farm is a diversified, organic farm near Power, Montana, owned and operated by Jacob and Courtney Cowgill.

We grow

organic vegetables,
heritage turkeys,
ancient and heritage wheat, lentils and
a variety of seed crops.


We sell all our products
direct to customers (call for details!), but mostly through our three Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) share programs.

Click
here to learn more about and sign up for our Grain and Bean share.

Click here to learn more about and sign up for our 2013 Vegetable shares.

Jacob can be reached at (406) 396-1261 and Courtney is available at (406) 531-4794. Catch us both at farmer -at- prairieheritagefarm dot com

Read on for news and views from the farm.

Wednesday, August 22, 2012

7 Ways to Use and Reasons to Join the Prairie Heritage Farm Grain CSA


Farro, beet and blue cheese salad. More about Farro and the recipe for this salad here.
Prairie Heritage Farm is now taking signups for 2012 Grain and Bean Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) farm shares. "Shares" are $200 and include 50-70 pounds of a variety of organic, family-farmed ancient and heritage grains and legumes. (Sign up information here or at the bottom of this page.)
Once you get to know the suite of grains and legumes we grow at Prairie Heritage Farm, you'll love them forever. You'll use them every day. You'll want to name your children after them. (Seriously, Sonora - one of the heritage wheats we grow - is a great name, right? How about Lucile Emmer?) (Lucile Emmer is the variety of Farro we grow.)

But, we know from our own experience that cooking with fresh whole grains and legumes takes some getting used to.

With that in mind, here are seven things you can do, and reasons you should join our Grain and Bean CSA:

1. Bake with fresh flour.

And not just bread. Crackers, (graham crackers, even), pancakes, cookies, pizza. We even use our whole wheat fresh flour to thicken soups and best of all, make dynamite roux. Fresh flour is more nutritious. Did you know that most of the flour that you buy at the grocery store has gone through an enormous amount of processing, even the "whole wheat" flour? The store-bought flour has been stripped of most of its nutrients then "fortified" by adding a few of them back in. And, the store-bought flour is certainly not fresh, as it's been sitting on the shelf for months, necessitating preservatives and stabilizers. 
 
2. Cook with whole grains.

And we mean really, truly whole grains. (We don't pearl or process our grains or lentils in any way, meaning they are fully in tact when they get to you.) Most of our grains simmer for about 45 minutes and come out plump, chewy and ready for folding into your favorite dish. Pilafs, soups, salads, risottos (or “farrottos” as they're sometimes called) are gorgeous with whole grains. The possibilities are endless. One of our favorite members calls our grains “rice-like” grains, not because they're like rice, but because he uses them instead of rice. Brilliant way of looking at it. We serve gumbo over Bronze Barley or Prairie Farro. Barley mushroom risotto anyone? Or, vegetable-fried Farro?

3. Cereals and porridge.

Your blender or Vitamix will crack these grains (just throw them in and run for a minute or two) into quick-cooking cereals of all kinds. One of our members likes to mix all the grains up, crack them and boil it all up for multi-grain cereal. Bronze Barley porridge was one our daughter's first foods.

4. Pack in protein with legumes.

Oh, the lentils. They're not just for soup, you know. Spice them up and use them as taco filling. Puree them with tahini for hummus. (Lentils make great hummus too!) Make lentil burgers that will put anything store-bought to shame. Shame I tell you!

5. Connect with a food history.

And not just for educational purposes, either. These older crops are not only more interesting and more flavorful, but they're also better for you. We raise these crops because of their valuable genetics and to preserve these endangered seedstocks. The varieties we grow are known as landrace varieties. Landrace crops are genetically diverse and are able to adapt to changing environments and climates. Their development over the millennia by farmer selection has allowed our bodies us to adapt alongside them. In the past half-century, crop scientists have rapidly and dramatically changed the structure of our staple grain crops for higher yields, genetic homogeneity, short stature, and drought resistance - all to the detriment of our ability to enjoy these grains. The gluten structure in these modern varieties has changed to such a degree that many people have developed wheat allergies and can no longer eat any wheat products made from them.

6. Support sustainable, family farming.

Prairie Heritage Farm is owned and managed by Jacob and Courtney Cowgill, who both have returned to their roots in Central Montana. We believe that family farms nourish not only the people who work them, but the people they feed and communities in which they live -- which is why we moved back to rural Montana. We wanted to be part of reinvigorating the land and communities that raised us. We believe organic agriculture, diversification, and a robust local food system are good for the health of our farm, our customers, ourselves, and our planet.

7. Experience a taste of place.

Members in the Grain & Bean Share experience what is known as terroir -- or taste of place. We want people to think about grains like wine drinkers think about grapes: a particular piece of land is going to impart certain characteristics on a crop (and different from year to year) and knowledge of those characteristics is going to create a better loaf of bread, a better cracker, a better pasta. And, members will be supporting local farmers with the staple foods they eat. One of our friends and customers put it this way, “there is something almost magical about eating what actually grows in Montana. I love that this special place -- which has been my family's home for four generations -- is veritably in the food I am feeding my children. They eat Montana.” We couldn't put it better ourselves.

To sign up, send your check to:
Prairie Heritage Farm
P.O. Box 914
Conrad, MT 59425
(Please include your address, phone number and email address with your check so we can keep in touch with you.)

Or, you can sign up here online:

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Monday, August 20, 2012

Days Go By

Twisted carrot.
Broccoli.
Cauliflower.
The new Turkey Shack.
Turkeys hanging out in the living room.
Turkeys grazing.
Frost! August 16th!
Frozen tomatoes.
Frozen squash.
An unruly patch of lettuce for seed saving.
Lettuce flowering.
One of the most beautiful sights of the year: garlic curing.
Bucket of tomatoes.

Friday, August 3, 2012

And the Winner Is...

In honor of the Red Ants Pants Festival this last weekend (a music festival that supports family farms, women in leadership and business and rural communities -- all things we wholeheartedly believe in), we are giving away a Prairie Heritage Farm Grain Share to a lucky raffle winner today. Here's how it worked: If you signed up for a Grain Share during the festival, your name was entered into a drawing for a free share (donated by our very good friends Matt and Bridget C. and their wonderful children).

And so, with Willa's help, we put all the names of our newest shareholders into a hat and drew the lucky winner.

Here's how it went down:

The suspense is just killing you, isn't it?

And the winner is...
Linda M. of Helena!
Even if you didn't win, you can still get in on the Grain Share this year. We are taking sign ups right now for the program, which means a delivery this winter of 60-80 lbs of our delicious ancient and heritage grains as well as lentils and chickpeas. This year, we're growing:

-Sonora Heritage Wheat
-Prairie Farro (also called Emmer)
-Bronze Barley
-Black lentils
-Black chickpeas

And this year, thanks to a grant from the Red Ants Pants Foundation, we're working toward buying a larger, stone mill to grind some of your share into fresh flour. So if you don't have a grinder? No prob. (But, these aren't just for breads. Read on for some ideas on how to use fresh, whole grains.)

Sign up here now to get in on the grain goodness and be "local" right down to your staples.

Why Grains and Beans?

You can go local with the biggest level of your food pyramid: bread, cereal, and pasta. These are amazing grains and legumes you can use in almost every meal, every day. And, it's more than just about bread for the flour and soup for the lentils. Think of protein-packed lentil cake, casseroles, lentil burgers, hummus-yummus. The possibilities are endless. And the grains: The grains are great as cereals (don't ever buy pre-packaged wheat cereal again), porridge (barley porridge was one of Willa's first foods) or simmered up and used whole in casseroles, soups or salads. One of our favorite shareholders uses these grains as a local (and protein rich) substitute for rice. Oh, you've never had vegetable-fried Farro? You haven't lived, my friend.

But Wait, Why Ancient and Heritage?

What makes our grains and legumes unique are the varieties we’ve chosen to grow. We grow older varieties, commonly referred to as ancient and heritage varieties, because of their rich flavors and textures as well as their valuable genetics and also to preserve those endangered seedstocks. Additionally, older varieties are able to adapt quickly to changing environments and our goal at Prairie Heritage Farm is to establish many different seedstocks uniquely adapted to both our particular climate in North Central Montana as well as the changing climate we are sure to face in the coming decades.

Join us as we rediscover these lost foods together.
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