you need to make love and a pig轻松的反义词是什么么意思

you need to make love and a pig是什么意思_百度知道
you need to make love and a pig是什么意思
提问者采纳
骂需要猪做
来自团队:
其他类似问题
为您推荐:
您可能关注的推广
pig的相关知识
其他3条回答
需要猪(you need to make love and a pig )
你需要爱和猪(你需要爱和一头猪)
你需要给一头猪爱
等待您来回答
下载知道APP
随时随地咨询
出门在外也不愁Pastured Pigs, Chickens, Ducks, Geese, Sheep, Dogs and Kids in the Mountains of Vermont
Archimedes Pork Cut Chart
Click to Zoom
We’ll refer to the Pork Cut Chart above time-to-time. You can click on that to zoom in so that you’re able to read the smaller type or print it out if you would like. It is also available as a wall poster and a .
Reality of Economics and Social Justice
All of the pig is good, nose-to-tail but some of the pig sells for a lot more than other parts. This is not a social injustice. This is simply an economic reality. There are only two tenderloins on a pig and twenty people want them. There is only so much bacon to a pig and virtually everybody wants that. You can’t buy a pig and ask for it to be all cut into chops and bacon – pigs just don’t work that way although I’m trying to get there through our . :)
Sponsoring Ad:
Supply is limited and the rest of the pig must be eaten too in order to avoid waste. The people who are willing to pay the higher prices for the high demand cuts make the rest of the pig available at lower prices to the rest of us. Be thankful that the 1% likes and pays for tenderloin. This is not social injustice – this is just economic reality.
Additionally, not all cultures make use of all of the pig, or not in the same way. We find very little market for heart and tongue – delicious as they both are. A few customers know this secret and buy them up but it took years to develop that market. Nobody buys the balls, at least not here – A feast for our livestock guardian dogs.
There is next to no market for lungs and pig guts. One of the advantages of our forth coming on-farm slaughter facility is the offal, literally the parts that fall off, will be made use in feeding our chickens during the winter and our compost piles to recapture their nutrients for our farm’s soil to grow crops in the future. With on-farm slaughter, nothing goes to waste.
Selling All of the Pig
We work hard to use or sell every bit of the pig every week. It is a challenge. There is an old saying that it takes a village to eat a pig. We see this in the sales. Everyone wants the high on the hog cuts. The middle-of-the-hog cuts also sell out with ease. But the low-on-the-hog can be a challenge some weeks. We price them accordingly. Sometimes those cuts will build up in the freezer for a few weeks before they sell. We work to sell these parts, through pricing, talking up recipes, trying recipes ourselves so we can talk about them and getting the word about about using the lesser known cuts of the pig.
Chef A has hocks on her menu for the next four months so those are taken care of. All winter Chef B has been making delicious stews that he thickens and flavors with trotters. Chef C takes all the tongues he can get for pickling and smoking and he’s now taking all the ears for a new recipe. Chef D took all the hearts, some tongues and a big load of ribs. Tails have been going to a researcher on fatty acids. Through all of this most of the pig, most weeks gets eaten by our customers. What doesn’t goes to the farmer’s table or the livestock guardian dogs – they work hard and have to eat too. It takes a village, and its dogs, to eat a pig.
When we’re out of one high demand cut some week we’ve had people say, “well just butcher another pig.” But it isn’t that simple. Without a market for enough of the pig we don’t want to take another pig every week. That would be wasteful, take up freezer space which uses energy and fail to encourage people to be more adventurous eaters. So sometimes we have the outtas. Sometimes we have to tell a new chef they’ll need to wait, they’ll need to work with us on this and earn seniority for picking the high demand cuts. The price of the high-on-the-hog cuts goes up and the low-on-the-hog goes down to adjust. This is economics. The process works, each week’s batch of pigs sells and we use the pigs nose-to-tail. For the most part.
Taking it from the Top
Let’s start at the top of the pig and work our way down to way beyond the cuts of the pig – everything is useful. Along the way we’ll discuss what is literally high-on-the-hog, middlin’ low-on-the-hog, sausage, oddments and other things. Refer to the chart above, you can drag it around the screen in its enlarged form or put it into another window by control-clicking it or right-clicking it.
High-on-the-Hog
High-on-the-Hog cuts that are literally high up on the hog, along the back. These start with the sirloin, tenderloin, loin roast, loin chops and the Boston Butt. Refer to the Pork Cut Chart and you’ll see what I mean – these high priced cuts all come from the back of the pig, high on the hog. It is the sale of these cuts of pork that pay for the piglet, for feed, for raising the pig and for slaughter & butchering. It is because folks will pay that extra dollar for these higher priced cuts that pigs are farmable from the economic point of view and thus produce a lot of other good meat for everyone else at a more economical price.
Why are these cuts expensive? Simple: limits of supply and high demand.
What are the High-on-the-Hog cuts?
Sirloin – At the base of the spine between the ham and the loin. Typically sliced thin to cutlets. A lean meat.
Tenderloin – One of the leanest meats on the pig and perhaps the highest demand meat of all. Each pig has two and there are never enough. Often sliced to medallions.
Loin – Roasts and pork chops. This meat is probably the most commonly associated with pigs along with ham and bacon. These are the primary muscles of the back of the pig along the spine. Chine out for easy cut roasts, bone out or in at your preference. Some people like the flavor added by the marrow.
Boston Butt – Also known as shoulder, not to be confused with picnic shoulder which comes from the front leg just below the Boston Butt. In my opinion, this is one of best pieces of meat on a pig due to the marbling and the way the three muscles of the back come together. For roasts get it bone out so you don’t have to deal with carving around the shoulder blade. The Boston Butt can be kept whole or divided into roasts. This is prime meat to be used for pulled pork, followed by picnic shoulder and ham. It can also be cut to delicious steaks, often called country ribs by some butchers.
Having Your Pork Chop and Eating Tenderloin
Note that you can’t have your cake and eat it too. That is to say, in some cases, making a particular cut precludes making others.
For example, Bone-in lower loin chops contain the tenderloin the way it is normally cut at the butcher. You could get a whole loin, preferably chine-off to make cutting easier, and then strip the tenderloin and have tenderloin as well as semi-bone in chops. But with normal pork chops the tenderloin is that little eye of meat so that makes it no longer available as a whole piece.
Likewise if you get bone-in pork chops from the loin then you miss out on baby-back ribs because they are the bone in the chops.
With meaty spare ribs you lose the chest bacon. Meaty spare ribs are wonderful, especially smoked, but if you cut your pig that way then it leaves just belly bacon.
Another example is Boston Butt roast vs shoulder steaks. These are both cut from the same meat where three muscles at the top of the back come together layered with delicious fat. Some people want this for making pulled pork. Others for a roast. I love it for steaks. My absolute favorite cut of pork is the giant, flavorful, highly marbled Boston Butt steaks off of an old sow or boar. A single steak may be two to four pounds. Enough to feed a family.
Middle-of-the-Hog
Middle-of-the-Hog cuts are next down in the economic tier and they literally come from the middle of the pig. Many of these are made into delicious, and very high priced, products through additional curing, brining, smoking, drying and other processing.+ Think bacon, hams, proscuitto, sausages, hot dogs, salami, etc.
Each of these requires some additional work to produce the final product. These steps result in loss of water and trim (shrinkage), cost time and money all of which drives the price up and concentrates the flavor. This uses portions of the pig that aren’t in high demand as cuts and turns them into delectable dining. Everyone loves bacon – vegans speak of it in fearful whispers, calling it “the gate way meat that tempts people back to the traditional, sustainable, omnivore diet.” Understandable.
What are the Middle-of-the-Hog cuts?
Ham – Hams are typically brined and smoked to get their distinctive flavor. I’ve always been a big fan of big hams, the rear leg of the pig. I grew up with ham being a special meal and love the left overs. It’s a long slow cook. I like to glaze ours with maple sugar. Brown sugar or honey are two other common glazes. If you’re intimidated by such a huge hunk of meat consider slicing it to steaks or just cutting it in half. The ham can be done boneless, semi-boneless where the hip is removed or bone-in. The first is the easiest to carve but the bone adds flavor and can be saved for making soup. We also offer ham cubes which are great for stir fry and other dishes. Lastly, when in doubt, grind the ham to make ground for sausage, meat balls, kielbasa or hot dogs. No discussion of ham is done without mentioning the highest priced hams, the
which is salted and dry aged.
Picnic Shoulder – Roast bone-in or bone-out or made into pulled pork. It can also be treated much like the ham, ground for a variety of uses.
Belly – Pork bellies are most often made into bacon through a brining or dry curing process and then smoking. Smoked protein, fat, sugar and salt – What’s not to like! Pork bellies can also be made into sausage, , pork sides as is popular here in Vermont, salt pork and many other things. It is a versatile mix of meat and fat. One of the most delicious things is to leave the bacon on the spare ribs, soak them in a tomato based sauce and then smoke them for BBQ meaty ribs.
Ribs – There are three main different types of ribs: Spare Ribs which come two racks to a side of pork and baby back ribs which are in the pork chops when bone-in. For the ultimate ribs, try smoked BBQ meaty ribs mentioned above in the bacon.
Sausage – The sausage tends to come from the middle of the hog. Sometimes as high as the butt, rarely higher. Mostly the sausage consists of meat from the hams, picnic shoulder and belly. If the demand for hock’s is low then the meat from them is available as well as jowl occasionally. We make Hot Italian, Sweet Italian, Breakfast Sage, Kielbasa and our famous all natural smoked hot dogs. In the future I would like to start making a breakfast maple sausage. Use high quality ingredients and keep the list short. We use real Vermont maple syrup from a farmer down the road for our hot dogs – delicious! For more about our sausages see .
Ground – Ground is essentially sausage before spicing and linking. It is one of the most versatile meats. You can make your own sausage, spaghetti sauce, meat balls, shepherd’s pie, lasagna, tacos, enchiladas and so many other wonderful dishes.
Low-on-the-Hog
The cuts in the high and medium areas of the pig are what are familiar to most American shoppers. But there is a lot more to the pig. Rural folk often cook some parts which urbanites may raise an eyebrow at. It is all good eating so keep going down the pig.
What are the Low-on-the-Hog cuts?
Hocks – There is a surprising amount of meat on the hock which can go to sausage or be served roasted. They’re very good smoked. Excellent for soup and stew making.
Jowl – The cheek of the pig is much like bacon. Smoke it. Many chefs use this slightly lower cost jowl bacon for flavoring chili and stews. Slightly different texture than belly. Jowl is also excellent in sausage both fresh and smoked.
Neck Bones – Interestingly, different butchers call these by different names. Depending on the deboning skill of the meat cutter there may be more or less meat on these. I’ve known some butchers who call it “neck bones” all the way down into the base of Boston Butt. We call it neck bones for just the neck. Delicious eating stewed, souped, low roasted or in a tomato sauce long cooked and the meat can be put to ground too.
Where low-on-the-pig ends and oddments begins is all a matter of personal point of view. Generally the organs are considered fairly low on the hog. Feet are at the bottom so let’s start there.
What are the Oddments?
– Pig’s Feet – Pickled, smoked, stewed or roasted. Sliced and sauced is also nice. There is a lot of great cartilage in the foot which makes an excellent thickener for soups and stews. Smoked they add flavor. Try roasting them and then slow simmering in the soup or stew pot. I’m told that eating this cartilage is good for my own joints. They put it in pills so perhaps it is better to get it direct. I eat a lot of soups and stews all winter – warms the belly and the body.
Caul Fat – Lacy fat found around the intestines. Rarely available. Use to moisten roasts.
Leaf Fat – A high quality harder fat found around the kidney used for pies and pasteries.
Back Fat – Render to lard for cooking or soap. Cut to strips for use on top of roasts. Make cracklin’s and .
Heart – Heart is the leanest of meat and very heart healthy. It is delicious stir fried with onions, peppers, mushrooms and strips of back fat.
Liver – Paté! I also like liver wrapped in bacon. Ah…
Tongue – A delicacy smoked or pickled and then thin sliced for hor-de-vores.
Bones – Soup and stew stock. Roast or smoke for the best flavor. Also great for carving. Try throwing knuckle bones for the original game of dice.
Ears – Fry crisp as chips or thin slice for salads
Head – Soup, stew,
or roasted as a buffet center piece. Think of head cheese, also known as brawn, as solid stew that can be sliced and made into a sandwich.
Brains – There are people who eat them. Personally, I wouldn’t as there is some question of viral, prion or other issues associated with brain tissue.
Cartilage – The connective tissue, particularly in the feet, is an excellent stock thickener. This is also recoverable from the skin.
Skin – The skin is edible and it is also made into non-food items. There are three ways of cleaning a pig of the bristles: skinning, burning or scald & scrape. The first is faster if you’re just doing one pig and don’t have the specialized equipment. The second works but is my least favorite. Scald and scrape is the best method if you have the time, hot water and equipment. This last method preserves the skin on the pig so that it protects the meat, you keep more of the fat, the bristles are recoverable and you can then make pork rinds, chicharones, jelly or leather. Scald and scrape is rather essential if you plan to do a pig roast.
These are things that you typically can not get from a USDA inspected slaughter facility. They are in such low demand in our country that it is typically not worth the time, expense and effort for meat processors to do the necessary USDA HACCP/PR++ requirements. If you want these look to custom slaughter at home.
What are the Offal?
Blood – Used in many sausage recipes as well as plant fertilizer. An excellent source of iron.
Casings – Traditionally sausages were packed in natural casings made from the cleaned intestines. Many sausage today are done with artificial casings. Look on the sausage package to find out what type of casing was used. We use natural casings.
– Intestines of a pig.
Stomach – Traditionally used like casings or for children’s balloons.
Bladder – Used like stomaches.
Balls –
Lungs – Fried up in some parts of the world. Rarely available in the USA.
Other Parts & Pieces
Well that’s not all of the pig! There’s more to be used even if you’re not planning to eat it.
What are the uses of a pig?
– Domestic pigs have four continuously growing tusks. These are found in both boars and sows but the boars have much larger and faster growing tusks. Younger pigs have thinner smaller tusks. These make excellent jewelry and are a good substitute for money. Good luck, fortune, fertility and strength are some of the special attributes of tusks in many cultures.
Hooves – The pig’s don’t actually have hooves like a horse, they’re more like nails. I’ve wondered if one might make guitar picks out of them. Someday I’ll try that. I know of no other use for them. Do you?
Manure – Pig manure is better than gold. Age it a bit in a compost pile and grow the most wonderful vegetables. Ideally have the animals spread their manure out over the pastures – saves you the labor. Our livestock have been turning our poor mountain soils into rich pastures and gardens. The manure is why I originally got livestock, I needed an organic source of nutrients for my gardens.
Compost – You can compost the manure, which means collecting it. I don’t generally do that as for the most part the animals spread it on the pastures. What I do compost is the dead bodies of livestock that die on the farm as well as the offal. This cycles the nutrients back to our land. Again, wonderful gardening.
Bush Hogging – Pigs are renown for their bush hogging ability. So much so that a mechanical tractor implement is named for them – the bush hog. Don’t over estimate them though. Three little pigs aren’t going to bush hog a large field. It takes large numbers to do a lot of work. But if you’re patient and use managed rotational grazing techniques they’ll gradually turn poor land into good land.
Tilling – If you want to have the pigs dig up the soil then mob graze them. See .
Nutrient Recovery – Pigs are great at using what would otherwise be waste materials. Old produce, field gleanings, waste dairy, whey are all good feeds for pigs. It is only now in modern times that the pig has become the primary consumer of cheap subsidized grains. Except, those grains are no longer cheap now that there is demand for the ethanol.
Nutrient Retrieval – Pigs and other animals are able to graze on pasture, turning what is not edible for us into high quality protein and lipids in a sustainable, environmentally friendly manner that creates habitat variety by maintaining margins of forest and field where the bio-diversity is greatest.
Caloric Storage – Livestock store calories. In the summer we graze them on pastures. They carry that energy over to the winter when we have no pastures or fresh foods available. In a northern climate this storage of summer into winter is essential to life. Herbivores die off in large numbers due to starvation during harsh winters because they lack this storage mechanism other than their own body fat. Omnivores and carnivores are able to get through the winter through hunting and ranching, by culling their herds of herbivores.
Oink – The soft grunts of a sow calling her piglets to eat can lull you to sleep at night.
Every bit the pig is useful, during life and beyond. Pigs were traditionally known as the mortgage lifters back before modern factory farming. In the past they were kept on dairy farms and known as the mortgage lifters because the sale of the pork saved the farm in hard times. The pigs ate any excess milk as well as the whey from butter and cheese making. These pigs would then get made into hams, bacon and cuts which helped make the dairy profitable. This was back before the head of the USDA told farmers to specialize, “to get big or get out.”
With the advent of the large scale grain farming in the mid-western states the problem became how to ship the calories to the cities efficiently. The grains were fed to pigs and cattle which were then shipped alive or processed into meats including hams and bacon. Thus the “pork belly” commodities market.
Having our own on-farm butcher shop will let us more easily do unusual specialty cuts. Check out our Order Form and Cut Sheet for a list of cuts the we do standard on the . On the By-The-Cuts order form you’ll notice how the pricing changes as you work your way down from the High-on-the-Hog cuts to the oddments. The most cost effective way to buy pork is to buy a whole pig all at once, and even cut it yourself as shown in the By-the-Pig section at the bottom of the order form which is where the cut sheet comes into play.
If you are interested in the cutting your own meat, check out master butcher
about meat cutting. We apprenticed with him for 18 months to learn the art of meat cutting. He is a delight to work with. Check out the trailer on .
Fresh vs Frozen vs Cured vs Smoked
One thing that causes some confusion is the term ‘Fresh’. Consumers tend to think of the dichotomy being ‘Fresh’ vs ‘Frozen’ but in pork it is ‘Fresh’ vs ‘Cured’. Curing is the application of salts and spices to the meat, typically in preparation for smoking.
As to fresh vs frozen, realize that most restaurants buy their pork, fish and other meats in frozen or immediately freeze it. This maintains quality when done properly. The best is the special blast freezers that butchers often have which will very rapidly cool and freeze the meat so that tiny micro ice crystals are formed rather than the longer ice crystals produced during a slow freeze. The longer crystals puncture the cell walls and release cellular fluid degrading the meat. Thus for the best results, have the butcher blast freeze the meat and then keep it at the lowest temperature possible.
Speaking of freezers, colder is better, chest freezers are better than upright freezers and automatic defrost is a no-no since it periodically thaws and melts the contents of the freezer damaging the food.
When thawing meat, do it slowly. Thawing in the refrigerator the night before is ideal. Never thaw in the microwave – unless you like to eat shoe leather.
Challenge Yourself
Challenge yourself to eat a new part of the pig. Try the ultra-lean high protein heart thin sliced and fried with onions. Fry up some ears into crispy treats. Learn to make chicharones. There’s a lot more to a pig than tenderloin and pork chops. Learn to be an adventurous chef and eat like the farmer’s family.
You may also like the article:
Our family apprenticed for 18 months with a master butcher Cole Ward to learn the art of meat cutting. Cole has now retired after 45 years behind the meat counter and he travels farm to farm doing butchering for small groups as well as workshops to spread his knowledge of the craft. Cole has brought out a wonderful set of . You can get Cole’s video direct from him and autographed:
If you like smoked pork you may be interested in the topic of nitrates on
near the bottom.
Outdoors: 62°F/60°F Sunny, Breezy
Tiny Cottage: 68°F/65°F
Daily Spark: Oink if you like bacon.
+A live pig typically weighs about 250 lbs. Hanging weight after slaughter is about 180 lbs. Typically the cuts come out to about 120 to 150 lbs depending on how their cut (e.g., bone-in vs bone-out) and additional processing like hams and bacon might be about 20 lbs to 40 lbs depending on what’s smoked. Sausage might be 15 to 25 lbs or about 10% to 14% of a pig. On average hot dogs and kielbasa, both of which are smoked sausages, represent about 2% to 5% of the pig the average pig over the year for us.
+HACCP/PR is the USDA’s protocol requirements that must be in place detailing every step of the process to ensure safe food. They stand for Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Points / Pathogen Reduction. This program was put in place in the late ;s to protect the public’s health. Some say that in the process they have made it difficult to have innovative solutions and limited creative products. Is it worth it? Certainly at some levels. The further you are away from the source the more controls you need.
Sponsoring Advertisements:
Related posts:
About Walter Jeffries
Tinker, Tailor...
This entry was posted in
and tagged . Bookmark the .
Oven, Spit & Pit Roaster Pigs!
See available sizes on
Photo by Sariann Lehrer of
Jeffries Family Farm
Walter Jeffries: Tinker, Tailor... A bit eclectic & a tad eccentric: A Quantum Farmer. Also lucky in cards.Holly: I always wanted to be a farm mom! Multi-generational farming with our kids.
Google Search:
Subscribe To Blog
Pastured Pigs & Pork
Our family raises pigs on pasture in the mountains of Vermont and delivers weekly to stores, restaurants and individuals. Look for our label in stores and restaurants... We hope you enjoy our pastured pork!
, half & whole pigs available direct via our
and at local
A Favor Please…
If you enjoy my blog please do me the favor of making links to articles you enjoy and to my blog's main page at
because links are what build the power of the web through sharing information.
A year before:
Questions & Answers:
I'm happy to answer questions in comments. Check the tag cloud and use search first to see if I've already covered the topic elsewhere and feel free to ask for more details. Also check out the . If you're not sure where to ask a question, feel free to leave it on this post, on the , the
Blog Donations
If you found this article on my blog helpful I appreciate anything you can offer to help with server costs:
Recent Posts
Pastured Piglets
Healthy, happy gilts & boars.
Raise your own quality meat.
Pastured Pork
Highest quality pastured pork.
All Naturally Raised.
From our family farm to your table.
Trade Farm Machinery
Browse new &
from dealers & private sellers.
Buy and sell new and used farm equipment online.
Sponsoring Information
If you would like to have a link here,
for information about sponsoring my blog. Note that I do not in anyway endorse these links. They're sponsoring advertisements from their respective producers. The same goes for ads elsewhere on the page. I thank them for helping to maintain the cost of the servers and blog.
Favorite Posts
Cute Pet Pigs [, ]
(326) (226) (209) (184) (144) (117) (116) (110) (107) (105) (92) (89) (80) (75) (74) (73) (71) (69) (67) (63) (59) (55) (51) (50) (49) (48) (47) (46) (46)
Popular Posts
(189158 Views)
(187006 Views)
(138039 Views)
(121882 Views)
(92789 Views)
(91030 Views)
(79293 Views)
(60609 Views)
(51094 Views)
(43384 Views)
(41013 Views)
(40466 Views)
(39991 Views)
(39197 Views)
(36552 Views)
(36303 Views)
(36028 Views)
(34444 Views)
(32940 Views)
(32703 Views)
(31585 Views)
(31252 Views)
(28643 Views)
(28544 Views)
(27833 Views)
(27376 Views)
(26106 Views)
(25520 Views)
(24672 Views)
(22001 Views)
Popular Pages
(427691 Views)
(219626 Views)
(174185 Views)
(160905 Views)
(92099 Views)
(85962 Views)
(84046 Views)
(79479 Views)
(62248 Views)
(52933 Views)
Random Lucky Posts
About the Cover
2015 October: Walter, Holly, Ben, Hope & Will with fall foliage in the mountains of Vermont.
Articles and Images: As is the default once anything is created, my articles, photos and drawings are copyrighted. If you would like to use my them, please ask me by . I will generally say sure! However do not use my photos without my explicit written permission as that is a copyright violation. For true non-commercial use I generally just ask for a link. If you want to use them commercially (e.g., brochure, web site, ad campaign, book, etc.) I will require appropriate payment. I ask that you don't steal and you do give fair credit to the creator. If you do use my works without my permission then I may sue you for usage, damages and attorney's fees. Don't steal - ask and be respectful.
Trademark: Sugar Mountain Farm is a registered trademark of Sugar Mountain Farm, LLC.
Comments: When you leave a comment you are automatically giving me, my blog and any assignees permission to publish that comment on the blog and in any other form. You retain copyright to your works but you implicitly give permission for me, the recipient, to publish the content. If you don't like that then don't leave comments. The same holds true for emails you might send with questions or comments. This is how the system work.
Disclaimer
Nothing here is a recommendation or advice. These are merely reports of what we've found useful. Use good sense and confirm everything with your own research and testing. Farming isn't a franchise of stamping out pink plastic pigs. You will need to adapt things to your own soils, climate, resources, management style and other factors. Don't use too sharp a pencil. There is no magic fix. Grow slowly. Void where prohibited. Walk on the grass. Watch out for turds.
This blog is powered by WordPress[, ] which I strongly recommend. I write my text on my Apple PowerBook G4. For photos I use a Casio Exilim EX-V8 compact digital camera as of 2008-05 (which I have repeatedly dropped on concrete, rock, ice, snow, dirt, mud and water). Photo management with GraphicConverter and
Photoshop. Before that I used Fuji FinePix (which died, was replaced, died again...) early Casio, Nikon CoolPix 900, 950 & 990 (great models) digital cameras and previously a Canon A1 SLR (fantastic and rugged but heavy) film camera with good old Kodachrome ASA 25 (my fav) color slide film.
Privacy Policy
Okay. Let's be real. There is no privacy on the Internet. Cookies are collected and transmitted. Logs are accumulated. The reality is every time you visit a web site or use email you're broadcasting your IP address and other data about your web browser and computer as well possibly yourself. To make it more interesting the NSA is probably watching as may well be other agencies of various governments and corporations.
Yes, if you're diligent and industrious you can use
and other tools to try and protect your privacy. However, unless you actively do that, and even then, don't expect privacy on the web. Remember that email is a postcard open to all who want to read it as it passes through their servers. That said, I am not making any conscious effort to use all that data for evil so take a deep breath and don't worry about it since there isn't a lot you can do about it.
If you're under 13 realize that animal sex does get discussed on this site - we're a farm. If your parents haven't had that discussion about the facts of life with you yet I suggest you explain it to them.
might help. Other than that this site is completely child and adult safe as far as I know.
Typos & Edits
If you find a typo or something that needs editing please
with a sentence fragment to identify the offender and the URL (link) to the page. One of the wonderful things about the web is being able to fix mistakes.
Don’t visit:
The Jeffries Family Farm
Walter, Holly, Will, Ben & Hope
All Natural Goodness
Sustainably & Humanely Raised
Our family raises pastured pigs on Sugar Mountain in northern Vermont, delivering our fresh pork and roaster pigs to stores, restaurants and individuals weekly. Look for our label in stores throughout Vermont.
, half & whole pigs available direct via our
and at local
Roaster Pigs Available:
See available sizes on
Select Month
October 2015 &(13)
September 2015 &(19)
August 2015 &(18)
July 2015 &(23)
June 2015 &(24)
May 2015 &(29)
April 2015 &(19)
March 2015 &(18)
February 2015 &(17)
January 2015 &(26)
December 2014 &(27)
November 2014 &(28)
October 2014 &(27)
September 2014 &(17)
August 2014 &(28)
July 2014 &(29)
June 2014 &(30)
May 2014 &(30)
April 2014 &(25)
March 2014 &(28)
February 2014 &(21)
January 2014 &(16)
December 2013 &(25)
November 2013 &(22)
October 2013 &(27)
September 2013 &(23)
August 2013 &(23)
July 2013 &(16)
June 2013 &(21)
May 2013 &(15)
April 2013 &(15)
March 2013 &(21)
February 2013 &(16)
January 2013 &(25)
December 2012 &(25)
November 2012 &(23)
October 2012 &(21)
September 2012 &(20)
August 2012 &(17)
July 2012 &(13)
June 2012 &(19)
May 2012 &(27)
April 2012 &(33)
March 2012 &(21)
February 2012 &(15)
January 2012 &(26)
December 2011 &(18)
November 2011 &(22)
October 2011 &(20)
September 2011 &(21)
August 2011 &(25)
July 2011 &(12)
June 2011 &(11)
May 2011 &(21)
April 2011 &(16)
March 2011 &(21)
February 2011 &(11)
January 2011 &(10)
December 2010 &(16)
November 2010 &(15)
October 2010 &(17)
September 2010 &(19)
August 2010 &(20)
July 2010 &(24)
June 2010 &(20)
May 2010 &(9)
April 2010 &(11)
March 2010 &(15)
February 2010 &(19)
January 2010 &(17)
December 2009 &(17)
November 2009 &(14)
October 2009 &(24)
September 2009 &(17)
August 2009 &(20)
July 2009 &(19)
June 2009 &(16)
May 2009 &(8)
April 2009 &(11)
March 2009 &(25)
February 2009 &(10)
January 2009 &(9)
December 2008 &(14)
November 2008 &(22)
October 2008 &(20)
September 2008 &(9)
August 2008 &(10)
July 2008 &(6)
June 2008 &(12)
May 2008 &(13)
April 2008 &(10)
March 2008 &(16)
February 2008 &(17)
January 2008 &(15)
December 2007 &(20)
November 2007 &(22)
October 2007 &(19)
September 2007 &(13)
August 2007 &(14)
July 2007 &(19)
June 2007 &(14)
May 2007 &(18)
April 2007 &(22)
March 2007 &(26)
February 2007 &(27)
January 2007 &(31)
December 2006 &(31)
November 2006 &(29)
October 2006 &(14)
September 2006 &(5)
August 2006 &(10)
July 2006 &(10)
June 2006 &(12)
May 2006 &(12)
April 2006 &(10)
March 2006 &(19)
February 2006 &(23)
January 2006 &(30)
December 2005 &(29)
November 2005 &(25)
October 2005 &(29)
September 2005 &(31)
August 2005 &(4)
March 2005 &(1)
April 2014
Blog Donations:
If you found this article on my blog helpful I appreciate anything you can offer to help with server costs:
Subscribe to Blog:
Protect Freedom

我要回帖

更多关于 pig是什么意思 的文章

 

随机推荐