Cenizo Journal Fall 2010 | Page 11

already quite large and color- ful. I’ve always noticed the hands of people who are good with animals – strong, confi- dent – and the gentle way they handle everything from new- born lambs to spirited thor- oughbreds to farmyard poultry. “This is the Naragansett from Rhode Island,” Regina said. “It’s the biggest breed I have. They make good moth- ers.” Regina preened the poult, picking a bit of wood shaving that had caught in its wings. She let the dog Hilde lick the bird. I picked up an irresistible beauty whose feathers were a bluish gray. “That’s the blue slate,” Regina told me, “a 2,000-year-old breed from Mexico.” The small bird wrig- gled and peeped loudly until I let her beak rest in the cup of my hand. She went silent and docile, letting me pet her. Once the chicks were 5 weeks old Regina moved them to their outdoor pen, where they set to dust bathing. “I don't like to lose animals,” Regina told me. “I’m not raising chickens and turkeys to have an animal slaughter them. I’m going to make the effort to keep them safe.” To keep her turkeys safe Regina has built a large impen- etrable pen with cattle panels covered in chicken wire. She dug a moat around the perime- ter of the pen and buried chick- en wire to discourage predato- ry diggers. The fowl fortress was topped with 2-inch heavy- duty netting that would deter a mountain lion or a hawk. In - side the pen stood a very nice camping trailer, once used to haul kayaks to Baja where Regina set up camp on the beach. Now the trailer had been re-purposed and chris- tened the turkeys’ house. Unlike industry birds these turkeys can roost, run and fly and require accommodations suitable to their lifestyle. Regina told me about a day in July when she was working outside. “I yelled, ‘whoopee!’ and a gang of them answered me with gobbles.” This was their first gobble. “I know you’re a tom,” Regina said to the ones who were strutting and beginning to fan their tail feathers. “The necks of the toms are redder than the hens,” Regina pointed out. “The toms are neck wrestling but none of them are aggressive.” Turkeys are different from chickens, of course – but how? Regina noticed immediately that the turkeys didn’t come running when she filled their water troughs or fed them scraps the way the chickens did. Regina appreciated the spe- cial turkey qualities. “They are calmer than my chickens. They're curious and like to be around people. They’re always listening to voices.” It turned out the turkeys loved Marfa Public Radio. Whenever Regina played the station, the turkeys would wan- der in together and listen along. The “Nature Notes” show gave them animal noises to gobble along with. I wondered if it were possi- ble to have a favorite turkey. “The chocolates,” Regina said smiling. “They are more trust- ing and calm. They always come up to me to see what I'm doing. And they follow me around.” In November, when the turkeys are 6 and a half months old, Regina will have found someone to slaughter the birds. Their natural growing cycle will have given them time to grow strong bones and healthy organs before developing a good oxygenated muscle mass. Because they have spent their days walking and running and flying, their meat will be succu- lent, with a chewy texture. The summer rains that greened the grounds around Regina’s house will have provided abundant forage for the birds. Their var- ied diet will enhanced the woodsy flavor of their meat. The socializing and exploring they did every day stimulated their brains and kept them happy. “There's been so much interest at the farmer’s market in having a heritage turkey for Thanksgiving,” said Regina, “I won't be able to satisfy every- one. I’ll save some back for breeding. And I want to taste one myself!” TURKEY TO THE TABLE Dan Barber, the chef and director of Stone Barns, a farm and restaurant in New York that highlights the resources of the Hudson Valley, works with his farmer who raises bourbon reds. “On our farm we marry old-world systems with new world innovation,” Barber ex - plained on the “Edible Com - mun ities” radio show. “It's the key to a sustainable food system.” Even though the heritage birds took longer to raise, which increased the cost of labor and food, Barber was enthusiastic about “the fantas- tic flavor” of the naturally raised birds. Barber advised against brin- ing the heritage turkeys. “The notes of turkeyness would be lost in brining, would mask the subtleties of the flavor.” He cooks his heritage birds slowly at 280 degrees and tests the meat with a thermometer with- out touching the bone. He removes the turkey from the oven when it reaches 140 to 150 de - grees and lets it rest before carv- ing. “Good ecology makes good gastronomy,” Barber observed. The principled commit- ment of celebrated chefs like Dan Barber and the determi- nation of area farmers like Regina Boling inspire us to join the local food revolution, to reject the industrial turkey and to encourage our local farmers to raise the heritage breeds. 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