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The New York Times Magazine profile is out!

David La Spina photo for the New York Times Magazine.

Alexis and Eric in front of their house. (David La Spina photo for the New York Times Magazine)

Chirstine Muhlke’s profile of Soul Food Farm for the New York Times Magazine just came out this past Sunday, on Thanksgiving weekend. Titled “Field Report: Learning about Community Supported Agriculture the Hard Way,” it focuses on the dismal economics of a small farm like Soul Food, and how something like a comparatively minor fire can almost kill a farm.

From the consumer’s point of view, Soul Food Farm looks as if it’s raking it in: eggs cost up to $8 a dozen, and meat retails at about $6.50 a pound. Outsiders aren’t afraid to voice their opinion. After the fire, an online detractor wrote that the farm should have more than enough cash to rebuild.

If people think that farmers are driving home from the market in BMWs, Koefoed said, “they should go visit the farmer and see how hard they’re actually working.” Even before she laid off two of her three employees after Eric lost his civil-engineering job, the mother of three was rising at dawn and working late to tend to her 8,000 birds, which roost in houses dotted around the scrubby land. Until she bought an egg-washer last year, she cleaned 1,800 a day.

Soul Food Farm operates on razor-thin margins. To bring in extra money, Koefoed is concocting a lavender-products business with a neighbor; plans for a cooking school are in the works; and she began a pilot project in which others raise her meat birds on their land. In October, she started a C.S.A., or community-supported agriculture program, selling her produce to people who might not be able to afford it in restaurants. Cutting out the middleman means she’ll get all of the much-needed proceeds. “This romantic vision of the poor farmer needs to be thrown out!” she said emphatically. “It’s not romantic to be poor. It’s a struggle.”

Naturally, Koefoed would like to struggle less. She’d also like to see the day when people realize that cheap food is a lie, and values have shifted enough so that those who pay $8 for a six-pack of beer or thousands for a plasma TV won’t “gripe about paying $8 for a dozen eggs.” Those dollars go back into the community, she said, not to some corporation raising robo-chicks. “This should really matter, because it’s going into your mouth and fueling your capacity to get through the day,” she said. “Food is the bottom line: we all need to eat every day. Then ultimately aren’t farmers the most important resource we have in this country?”

The article has goosed CSA sign-ups, so quite a few readers seem to agree with her. So did Andrew Simmons, in a warm post over at the SF Weekly blog.

Chicken tips

A couple of CSA members have asked me about freezing/storing the fresh chickens. They are fine in the fridge for 3-5 days, I have cooked mine up to 7 days after getting. I always rinse inside and outside and pat them dry before cooking regardless. If you are going to freeze, I think best to do so whole, in their cryovac. If you are on a budget, the best way to get the most from your chicken in my opinion is to roast it whole. I do this with the damaged birds too.

I am no chef by any means, but a chef did teach me to roast chickens this way and it does make for pretty foolproof crispy skin and not-overdone flesh.
Continue reading ‘Chicken tips’ »

Blog post and email from happy CSA customers

Soul Food Farm’s Community Supported Agriculture program has just completed seven weekly deliveries, and so far most have gone smoothly. (There was that one time the Bay Bridge was closed unexpectedly due to a rolled truck, and Eric had to turn around and drive all the way through Marin to get to Potrero Hill.) Our CSA members have been understanding about the seasonal egg shortage and the occasional olive oil mixup or addition error.

I wanted to share some nice feedback we have received, both anonymously and signed.

Over at the Chef2Chef Culinary Portal, an apparent CSA member who goes by “Chef Drea” started out a little skeptical about Soul Food’s prices:
Continue reading ‘Blog post and email from happy CSA customers’ »

Soul Food fan Melissa Perello’s new restaurant, Frances, opens

On December 1, chef Melissa Perello’s new restaurant, Frances, opened for business. In addition to being a star supporter of Soul Food Farm, throwing a benefit dinner at Sebo that raised several thousand dollars post-fire, Melissa is quite the star chef, with awards and accolades from Food & Wine and the James Beard Foundation. She started at Aqua working with Michael Mina, served as executive chef at Charles Nob Hill at age 25, then was executive chef for Fifth Floor, getting it a Michelin star  in 2006. (I interviewed her about her favorite Bay Area spots for Condé Nast Traveler’s Insider Guide.)

Frances is open Tuesday-Sunday, 5-10 p.m. serving sustainable modern California cuisine in a relaxed neighborhood setting, 3870 17th Street in San Francisco. Go!

Olive picking day

When Eric and I bought this property, the first ting we did was plant 250 olive trees. Long before we had a single chicken, we knew we wanted olive trees and to start a family tradition of harvesting and pressing our own olive oil. Well, the trees grew and last year we had our first crop. Our second olive picking was Nov. 15. We and lots of family and friends worked from 8:30 a.m.till 4 in the afternoon and only finshed half the field. That was enough to turn into 30 gallons of delicious olive oil the next day at Yolo Bulb Olive Press in Dixon.
Here are some pictures:
The oliv grove
The olive grove

Soul Food Farm around the Web

We’re very excited to report that the New York Times Magazine will be running a profile of Soul Food Farm in the next month or so. (Update: It’s here!) There’s been a flurry of coverage in recent weeks, which is good news for the farm and the CSA.

A grassroots recovery is under way at the farm, thanks to all of you

sff_1134Green grass! The grass has been moving up along the hill and olive orchard for a week, like a slow-growing beard, and today it covers the whole farm.

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October has definitely been a time of new beginnings here at Soul Food Farm. To start with, the air is fresh and cool and the mornings have a lovely mist hanging low on the ground.  The sun shines and encourages those new seeds and grasses to keep growing taller, new types of bugs have moved in, and the pastured chickens are feasting.  They’re also living in new chicken houses built by volunteers who came to Soul Food Farm to help out and HELP they did. Continue reading ‘A grassroots recovery is under way at the farm, thanks to all of you’ »

First a fire, now a flood … what a year

SFFflood-2Yesterday the huge storm ravaged the farm. We had no clue what we were in for.

Luckily, since the fire we have learned to make immediate decisions. We saved a lot more birds than we thought. Wind and rain can kill a wet chicken within hours if they do not find shelter. We spent the day moving them from the open and airy summer villas to the winter huts. The weather was so severe that the summer homes were drenched and flooded. The creek overflowed and fields flooded, and we had the longest shower of our lives, being outside all day. It’s surprising none of us caught a cold.

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Soul Food Farm video: Rising from the ash

At the chicken house building workday a few weekends ago, filmmaker Thomas Richardson interviewed Alexis and shot this 8-minute video about the farm’s fire and the rebuilding efforts. The physical structures are, of course, the easier things to replace. The 30 acres of singed pasture will take a season to recover (while temporary replacement ones get seeded and irrigated); the two weeks of lost income from 1,000 meat birds are the main hurdles.

Soul Food Farm fundraising auction now live for bidding!

Oct. 10: The auction is closed. I will notify winners shortly by email. Thank you to everyone for their support!

Continue reading ‘Soul Food Farm fundraising auction now live for bidding!’ »