Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:MD Farmer
Buying meat "on-farm" is possible, but you won't find any that will be butchered on-site due to MDA/USDA/health department regulations. We send out our steers to a local USDA butcher we use and then get everything back about a month later (dry aging, cut-to-order, vacuum packaging and flash freezing takes time), and then either people pick up their beef from our farm or directly from the butcher we use.
Farmers will base price on the "hanging weight" of the carcass after 2 weeks of dry aging at the meat locker. Most people will do what's called a "cowpool": buy either a quarter or half and split with a neighbor, family member or friend because you get a LOT of beef in those increments and you will need an appropriately sized freezer to accommodate it all.
MD Farmer: I'm located in the Darnestown area in MoCo. Can you recommend a farm to buy from in my general area (Poolesville?)
I don't know anyone that far down from us - we are about 45 minutes north of you in western Frederick County. But - butcher shops we use are Hemp's Meats in Jefferson and Three Springs Meats in Sharpsburg. Friends of ours also use Wagner's in Mt. Airy and are happy with what they have gotten back, and for hogs; Shuff's up in Thurmont is highly recommended and we've used them when we have bought and split a hog with friends a few years back. They do their own smoking of hams and bacon too. You can call those places and maybe they can connect you with someone who has available beef or pork - Tracy Cleary @ Three Springs is really great about that - it's a woman owned business and she has a FB business page.
If you have a catch-all anonymous email address, you can leave it here and I can respond later today after a farm vet visit is over. We just got a steer back from processing last week and I have 2 quarters available.