Whole Hog Update #3: Nightly Spit-Roasted Leg

Magruder's Wild European-Berkshire heritage breed

Magruder’s Wild European-Berkshire heritage breed

The kitchen is a flurry of activity today as they put their finishing touches on many of the special preparations for this year’s Whole Hog Dinners. This weekend the last of the sausages were made including the zampone and blood sausages.

This year the 2013 Whole Hog menu will feature a roasted pork leg from two different farms. Kicking off the first night, Chef Rhodehamel will be spit-roasting a Red Wattle hog leg from Heritage Foods USA.

The following night, the menu will feature a leg from Mac Magruder‘s great Wild European-Berkshire heritage breed. We’ve been working with Mac’s hogs for the past few years and find this preparation to be one of the very best ways to experience this particular meat.

Thursday through Saturday the menu will feature legs from both producers on alternating nights.

We still have reservations available most nights, but your best options are on Tuesday, February 19th and Thursday, February 21st.

Call 510-547-5356 or reserve online.

2017-09-12T15:47:48-07:00February 18th, 2013|2013, Events, Happened already..., Magruder Ranch|0 Comments

Traditional Italian Butchery Dinners

Two Nights of Special Dinners Celebrating
Local Grass-Fed Beef and Traditional Italian Butchery

Friday, September 7, and Saturday, September 8, 2012

In conjunction with our It’s Complicated: Grass-Fed Beef discussion, Chef Jonah will prepare dishes that celebrate Oliveto’s close relationship with local cattle ranchers and also exemplify whole-animal cooking and Italian butchery. Using traditional techniques such as aging and curing, as well exploring lesser known classic cuts, the menu will offer a special selection of the very best grass-fed beef prepared in ways not often experienced outside of Italy. Please join us for this very special occasion.

All menu items will be offered a la carte and feature Mac Magruder’s beautiful grass-fed beef.

Saltimbocca di Manzo
Beef Heart Crostini with Salsa Verde
Sautéed Beef Liver
Grilled Flank Steak
Carne Cruda

Call 510-547-5356 or reserve online

2017-09-12T15:48:00-07:00September 7th, 2012|2012, Events, Magruder Ranch, Ranchers|0 Comments

It’s Beef Season

UPDATE: See the revised schedule

It is late spring and this is the time to be eating beef. The steers have been eating plentiful amounts of green grass (from our plentiful rains) and several important ranchers have presented us with offers too good to turn down.

First, Mac Magruder’s 8-month-old veal came in a couple of weeks ago. Then, the huge and delicious 4-year-old steer from Jack Monroe in Covelo. And next week Moira Burke, of Agricola: flora et fauna in Dixon, CA, will send us half of a 22-month Angus. These are all grass fed and grass finished animals.

Three Angus animals: 8-mos, 22-mos., 48-mos. We are first to admit, that’s a lot of meat! But we thought we could do some pretty neat things with them. The animals will all be hanging in our meat locker, aging, and at the appropriate time, Chef Jonah will prepare them for the menu over the next month. Here’s a schedule of these extraordinary (seriously though, this is some exceptionally tasty beef) offerings and events over the next few weeks:

Friday, June 17
48-mos.
Short Ribs
We wanted to get into these without too much aging. Such a fatty cut doesn’t benefit from a lot of age and can end up tasting a bit stale. We are salting these for twelve hours before braising them.

Friday, June 24
22-mos.
Flank Steak & Carne Crudo/Carpaccio — three animals
This will be a rare opportunity to taste the same cut/preparation of three similarly raised and fed animals from the same breed, but different in age. This should be an interesting demonstration on what characteristics are associated with the age of an animal.

Sunday, June 26
22- and 48-mos.
Osso Bucco
Our first of two classics from Milan. With three animals, we’ve got quit a few shanks on hand. These will be cut and braised in the classic preparation.

Wednesday, June 29
22-mos.
Cotoletta
Our second dish from Milan. Tender ribeyes pounded paper-thin, breaded, then fried.

Thursday, June 30
22-mos.
New York Top Loin

Friday, July 1
48-mos.
Bollito
This is THE way to eat mature beef in Italy. All the cuts you’ve been wondering about, in one bowl.

Saturday, July 2
48-mos.
Bollito
Because a good thing deserves repeating

Thursday, July 7
22-mos.
Rib Eye
No explanation required.

Saturday, July 9
48 mos.
Prime Rib
The 48-month steer has a huge rib section. We’ll take the rack and slow roast it (12 hours) and carve prime rib in the dining room, for as long is it lasts.

We’ve got lots of other cuts, so you’ll be seeing corned beef, beef braises, meat balls, pepperoni and other cured meats. We expect you’ll do you’re part.

Beef Dinner Sneak Peek

magruder_cows

Although this is our first Beef Dinner, it has been a long time in the making. Based on close relationships with local ranchers practicing alternative methods of raising grass-fed beef, Chef Canales has obtained a wealth of knowledge in regards to butchery, aging and cooking technique over the past six years. This, along with the construction of our meat locker, and numerous requests from our customers has finally resulted in the 2010 Beef Dinners.

The menu is still being finalized but two items have been leaked:

Grilled bone-in Rib Eye with duck livers

Smoked manzo brisket

UPDATE: see the FULL MENU

As for wine, beef needs a wine that is still somewhat tight, fruit-driven and full of tannin. Therefore, we’ll be featuring an array of glass wine selected for their tannic prowess, including:

Barolo:
Castello di Verduno 2002
“Vigna Castellero” Barale 1999

Brunello di Montalcino:
“Corte Pavone” Loacker 2000
“Riserva” Canalicchio di Sopra 2001
Casanov di Neri 2001 and 2005

Taurasi:
“Radici” Mastroberadino 2000 & 2003

Chianti:
“Vigna del Sorbo” Fontodi 1999

We are excited to be sharing this event with the ranchers who have made so much of this possible. Moira Burke of Agricola: flora et fauna will be in attendance on Thursday night, Bill Niman will be here Friday, and Mac Magruder & his family will be with us on Saturday. All of these ranchers will be available to chat in the cafe before dinner. Additionally, we will also be serving Highland beef from Larry Walters of Cedarbrook Ranch and Piedomtese beef from Ken Silva.

Oliveto Beef Dinners 2010

October 14, 15, and 16

For our upcoming beef dinners, we are inviting a few notable local beef ranchers to join us each night so our patrons can meet them. We’re pleased that Mac Magruder will join us on Saturday, October 16th. Mac is probably one of the first grass-fed cattle ranchers in the alternative-to-feedlot era from northern California, and probably well beyond. For the past twenty years he’s been developing a very well-thought-out system of grazing and pasture management, and in the process has invented a business for himself which is enriching all of us. When interest in grass-fed beef took-off several years ago, it was Mac’s beef that showed us how tasty it could be.

Chef Paul Canales has been working with whole beef animals from Mac and other local cattle ranchers for the past three years. He’s been learning about breeds, diet (there’s considerable variation in grass-fed beef), maturity, aging, butchery and how best to cook each cut. So, Paul wanted to present these Beef Dinners as a way of showing some of the various, unexpected, and delicious things he’s learned.

Mac will be here with his wonderful family: wife, Kate, daughter Grace, and Ben–the new son-in-law. They’ll be in the cafe available for chatting from 5 to 6 PM, then have dinner with us upstairs; they’ll be back down in the Café to socialize after dinner.

We’ll be posting additional information/menus, and announce other guest ranchers’ dates in the coming weeks on the Oliveto Community Journal. But we recommend you reserve now.

2017-09-12T15:48:36-07:00September 4th, 2010|2010, Events, Happened already..., Magruder Ranch|0 Comments

Magruder Jam

A great visit yesterday to Mac Magruder’s cattle ranch (they raise hogs and lambs too). It is truly a wonderful place. The whole story is coming, but we had to get this out right away:

“Never Enough” written by Ben Provan. Performed by Ben with very new wife Grace Magruder-Provan, along with Kate and Mac Magruder, at their ranch on the banks of the Russian River headwaters in Potter Valley, CA.

2017-09-12T15:48:40-07:00June 30th, 2010|Magruder Ranch, Ranchers|0 Comments

This Just In – Puglian Chicories

Starting tonight through the weekend, we’ll be serving Barciole di vitellone e cicora: scaloppine of Magruder Ranch milk- and grass-fed vitellone stuffed with Knoll Farm puglian chicories.

For this dish, Chef Canales will be using chicories that were grown by Rick and Kristie Knoll of Tairwa’ – Knoll Farms in Brentwood. Rick and Kristie grew these chicories from seeds Oliveto co-owner Bob Klein brought back from one of his annual trips to Italy. Bob had stayed with his friends, Armando and Rosalba of Masseria Il Frantoio, Ostuni in Puglia, and they offered him seeds from some of the more favorable chicories they grow.

In turn, Bob made a charming video about Armando and Rosalba that tells the story of their passion for community and a love of good food. It is the basis for their incredible guesthouse and the motivation behind much of what they do. Tonight, we’ll be serving some of those fabulous chicories with a nod to our friends.

2017-09-12T15:48:54-07:00October 29th, 2009|Magruder Ranch|0 Comments

In the Kitchen with Chef Canales: Dry-aged beef

This morning, Chef Paul Canales took a moment to show us some of the beef he’s been aging. Mac Magruder delivered a manzo six weeks ago, and the rib-eyes are now being prepared to go on the menu this weekend as tagliata & (maybe) wild mushrooms.

Chef Canales also gives us a heads up on the porcini forecast for next week, tells us what “hard crack” means, and introduces us to Pablo “Tigre” Gavito.

2017-09-12T15:48:54-07:00October 15th, 2009|Magruder Ranch|0 Comments

This Just In: Vitellone and Chanetrelles

beefA month ago we took delivery of two vitellone (young beef), each around 600 lbs., from Mac Magruder. Primarily raised on mother’s milk with some grass-feeding, the meat has been aging in our meat locker. Chef Canales has been adjusting his aging times to find the right balance between the delicate veal, and the characteristic aged-meat flavors. Tonight we will be using the loin, and Friday we will be serving the rib eye. They will be on the menu as tagliata, served with braised Torpedo onions from Brookside Farm in Brentwood. These animals are fairly small, and there isn’t a huge amount of this meat. We might still have some on Saturday, but perhaps not.

If we’re out by the time you get here, we hope you’ll be consoled by ravioli tondi of fonduta Val d’Aostana with summer Chanterelles:

Ravioli tondi of fonduta Val d'Aostana with Chanterelle mushrooms

Ravioli tondi of fonduta Val d’Aostana with Chanterelle mushrooms

Most of the Chanterelles available this time of year are from Eastern Europe. We’ve been holding out for the ones we get from Northern California and Oregon, and they’ve just arrived. These Chanterelles are drier and more concentrated, with a nutty flavor. In addition to the pasta, we’ll also be serving them in a ragout with late summer vegetables and orange-scented black and white riso.

2017-09-12T15:48:55-07:00September 10th, 2009|Brookside Farm, Magruder Ranch, This Just In|0 Comments

Magruder Ranch – Profile

Established 1973

Owner

Mac Magruder

In the family for five generations, Mac Magruder’s mother grew up on the ranch and Mac’s father grew up in Mississippi, studied as a banker, and then went into the Navy before he married Mac’s mother and took up ranching.

Mac graduated from the University of Washington in 1976 with a degree in sculpture, a profession which he seriously considered pursuing full-time before returning to the ranch. Mac’s father had a substantial pear orchard, but Mac decided on a different route and devoted his energy to cattle.

The prospect of raising cattle the right way held his interest. He found that customers/restaurants were interested in and supportive of what he was doing, which he found affirming.

Seasons

Calves are typically born in the last winter or early spring, but Mac is beginning to calve in the fall as well. January – March are slow months for slaughtering.

Challenges

Getting the public to understand that without ranching, we will no longer have open space. Getting the public to understand that you are what you eat. That it is in everyone’s best interest for those who eat beef to eat beef from cattle raised in a healthy manner.

Principles

Mac employs a controlled, rotational grazing system, which is a sustainable way to graze. The idea is to take responsibility for the land. He does not use any hormones or antibiotics.

Practices

Mac markets cows of different ages. The taste of cow varies with age.

Length of relationship with Oliveto

2 years at time of post

Location

Potter Valley, Mendocino Country

Products

Cattle – 450 head

Secondary products: hill hogs – 100 head, sheep & lamb

Distribution

Restaurants, individuals who have storage for large cuts

2017-09-12T15:48:59-07:00July 16th, 2009|Magruder Ranch, Ranchers|1 Comment
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