You know the story from last post? About walking around the pool with an dear old man, listening to his stories about his friend Johnny Walker? Well, in thinking about it, I began to wonder how a Scotch distiller wound up in the west in the early 1930s. Did he come here to start up an American branch of the family business?
Prohibition ended in 1933. The business would have taken a while to build. Scotch whisky is aged, which would take some years. I have no doubt that it would have been a profitable enterprise but it would have taken a while to be generating the money required to run a ranch of the size that Mike so fondly described all those years later (circa early 1990s).
Down a rabbit hole I went.
Johnny Walker whisky is made only in Scotland was the first thing I discovered.
More reading lead me to learn that there is no records of the distillery decendents trickling in to America. They were doing well in the family business and proud of their heritage.
I was a bit dumbfounded. Mike was an old man, a stroke patient, and sometimes he could get confused and irrational if he was tired. Those moments were the exception to the rule. Or so I thought. 35 years later, I began to wonder.
I typed in Walker Ranch, and up popped a pile of entries. There were several huge operations, but I think it is most likely the Walker ranch that is now an historical site. The business started out in lumber. The ranch grew in physical size and added cattle/beef production which allowed James Walker to pay off his debts and grow the ranch even more. Minerals were discovered, to include gold, and an English company came in to handle that part of the family business.
At that point, I could see how the son of a man who owned a steel mill out east and a ranch owner's son from out west could cross paths in a private boarding school.
But...Mike's comment that 'the boys' would never make fun of how a boy's father made his money was, I guess, a general comment meant to not to say that Johnny (Johnnie) Walker was that Johnnie Walker. More, I guess that those children of privilege did not speak of their fathers' money and where it came from.
So...that was an interesting detour.
We went up to make sausage with Levi and Mattie. That was great fun. We got there at 9:30. A whole hog, split in two halves lay on two large folding banquet tables. There had been a 2 hour school delay, so they'd already processed (and ground) the first hog. Mattie already had 18 jars of pork going on the biggest canner I have ever seen in my life.
Levi separated the sides into three portions, front legs, back legs, and rib cage and everyone grabbed a knife and went to work. The meat cut from the bones was collected by Andy, who took it out to the grinder, and returned for more cuttings when he was done. In this way, we were finished with that part of things in no more than an hour. A neighbor had come over to shoot the breeze and it was a happy time.
280 pounds of meat was brought in and turned into sausage. The sausage stuffer was a hand crank, but it was efficient. As quickly as the basin filled with sausage, Reuben and Andy hung the ropes on six sturdy poles for the smokehouse.
It was a nice way to get a lot of work done in such a way that it did not seem like work at all. It was also amazing to watch 8 and 9 year olds wielding very sharp knives with such expertise.
We had a nice lunch of fresh sausage with fried onions and pie for dessert.
I came home and made cheese. It was something called 'Farmer Cheese'. It was not what I wanted. It is more like a cream cheese. I turned it into an herb cheese, and it is delicious on crackers. It was not a failed experiment, to be sure.
I also saved two legs from the bones to make a good broth. It will make a good soup base. I ended up with 7 quarts.
Shel Silverstein is always good for a laugh.
Live and let live.

I watched my best friend's family chop up a half cow on their kitchen table when I was a teenager. Didn't bother me at the time. They had a big family and three boys to feed.
ReplyDeleteI guess sausage is how you preserve meat without a freezer, that and canned meat. I hadn't thought of that but it makes sense.
Sounds like you had a good day.
I just can't get over the speed that work gets done.
DeleteA busy, productive day. Many hands make light work, and all that.
ReplyDeleteIt was fun to be a part of.
DeleteI'm not sure I could ever call a day of hog butchering great fun but I can see how important that work is and how so many people could get the job done quickly.
ReplyDeleteLove the Silverstein poem.
You had to be there, I think. We process our own venison, but this was processing on a scale I never saw before.
DeleteI'm trying to wrap my head around that much sausage and canned meat, but when you realize they don't have refrigeration it makes perfect sense. I too love the Silverstein poem.
ReplyDeleteThey actually do have refrigeration. The ice house gets filled with pond ice, which is cut when it is thick enough. The house is filled full. It is so well insulated that the ice holds until the following ice cutting. No freezers, though. I have never seen that quantity of meat in my life though. When you consider that their family contains 3 strapping teenage boys, I can see that they would need a lot of food.
DeleteFor awhile on Facebook, it showed me a lot of home canning people. They can everything. Butter, even. I forget how they prepped it, but there was canned butter. Some peoples' basements have enormous amounts of food in jars.
ReplyDeleteMy sister likes to make pots of soup and can the excess. If I open a bag of dried beans, I rehydrate them all and can the excess. Next time that I need beans, I can save a step: they don't need soaking. I have seen the butter too. I just toss mine in the freezer.
DeleteThat's a LOT of sausage! I wish I liked it. That Silverstein poem strikes a real chord these days. I used to consider myself a people person--not so much anymore.
ReplyDeleteI know. I feel like never leaving home sometimes. But my beliefs compel me to join with other likewise minded.
DeleteI grew up on a property and we did butcher our own meat when I was young. It was always a big day - the killing done just before sundown and the quarters brought up to the washhouse and hung overnight - then in the morning it was all hands on deck. My uncle was the sausage king who had the knack - and the washing out of the washout required afterwards was always our job.
ReplyDeleteWhat is a washout?
DeleteI remember hearing my dad complaining about offering to help a neighbor butcher a hog. This guy wasn't the shiniest apple in the basket and after my dad came home, absolutely exhausted, he shared that all the neighbors had arrived at dawn to help as preplanned, only to have found the guy was still in house, drinking coffee and there was no roaring fire, no giant kettle of water boiling to drench the carcass in, and the hog still laying in the mud happy as a pig eatin' cinders. That was NOT how things were done in that neighborhood. The hog would have been shot, ready to string up and gut, and the water ready to scald the hog for scraping, before disjointing and processing. The errant hog owner provided weeks of conversation over coffee by all the neighbors and anyone else they care to tell.
ReplyDeleteThey had been processed and hung the previous evening. They were ready to go first thing. It made me laugh that they were half done when we got there at 9:30!
DeleteMaybe he just meant the Johnny Walker thing as a joke?
ReplyDeleteI cannot imagine butchering a pig. That is so far outside my zone of experience!
Mike's stroke left him pretty much unable to control his emotions. If he was mad, you knew it. Sad, likewise. Making a joke? He would have been laughing his ass off.
DeleteThe ins and outs of sausage making is interesting and I can see how it could be fun, and get messy.
ReplyDeleteCripes Andrew...we were mixing the stuff up in a fiberglass portable bathtub! It cracked many years back, but is perfect for this, and easily sanitized.
DeletePeople don't know how good home made sausage is. there are many recipes for home made sausage and then it can be smoked.
ReplyDeleteIt really is excellent. We made two types of sausage. Italian and just what was described as 'good sausage' from a mix of pepper, salt, paprika, ginger, brown sugar. Very good.
DeleteI have never made sausage but I used to can beef. As a townie I would purchase a half or quarter from a friend and have it "cut for canning". Basically the butcher would cut the whole thing in "hunks". I would cut it into what I am going to call chunks and process in a pressure canner. I don't know how often they process sausage but I would try to get at least 50 quarts of beef for the year. And a few pints for fun. It is the easiest meal ever, you can open a jar with noodles or to make sandwiches. And it is so tender. My friend used to can chicken too but I never tried that either.
ReplyDeleteAnyway - interesting and fun when you are with people who know what they are doing.
That is how Mattie does her pork.
DeleteThe sausage making was an interest read. All those sausages should keep them going for quite a while.
ReplyDeleteThey have nine children. 3 of them are strapping teenage boys. Have you ever seen teenage boys eat? It really is impressive.
DeleteI had two sons and I do remember constantly trying to fill them up - Lynne
DeleteDebby, you commented elsewhere about painful fingers…. Have you made any dietary changes recently that could have caused a reaction? For me, almonds are the unexpected trigger, fwiw.
ReplyDeleteNot that I am aware of but I will be mindful. It is just the most distal joints in all 8 fingers. It is not unbearable but it is definitely something I notice when using my hands.
DeleteThat was a rather saucy post.
ReplyDeleteA post with some real meat on it.
DeleteWow, well done! I would love to see that being done. Far different from our very small processing!
ReplyDeleteI have made farmer's cheese often, and especially like it with caraway seeds. We are lucky enough to get fresh milk so sometimes at the end of the week I have a bit left over to make the cheese. It's nice for yogurt too.
You're turning into a regular homesteader, Debby! Isn't it fun?