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Taste Alberta's Farms and Ranches

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If you imagine a week at a Rocky Mountain dude ranch means a
steady diet of cowboy biscuits and beans, consider this.


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1179 Words; formatted to 65 Characters per Line
Distribution Date and Time: 2007-02-28 10:12:00

Written By:     Travel Alberta
Copyright:      2007, All Rights Reserved
Contact Email:  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]



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Taste Alberta's Farms and Ranches
Copyright (c) 2007 Travel Alberta, All Rights Reserved
Written by: Travel Alberta
http://www.travelalberta.com




If you imagine a week at a Rocky Mountain dude ranch means a
steady diet of cowboy biscuits and beans, consider this.

A recent foray into the Alberta foothills for a mini ranch
vacation had us dining like well-heeled city slickers on cowboy
cuisine with a regional Alberta twist. From the platters of
whisky marinated bison flank steak and chili-spiked sweet
potatoes, to the mixed baby greens drizzled in local black
currant vinaigrette and colourful vine-ripened tomatoes stuffed
with wild rice, we enjoyed a steady diet of contemporary ranch
food, created with fresh ingredients from local farms and
ranches.

Even in the spring, when grain and vegetable crops are just being
seeded here on the high plains, there is local food in the
larder, whether it's fresh tomatoes from a nearby green house,
locally-ranched game or wild berry syrup for your breakfast
pancakes. And on guest ranches like Mac MaKenny's historic
Homeplace Ranch in the rolling foothills of southwest Alberta,
less than an hour's drive from Calgary's international airport,
you can combine a love of horses and haute cowboy cuisine in one
rustic ranch vacation.


Feast on Favourite Local Foods

It's all part of a new Flavours of the Foothills program cooked
up by MaKenny and his neighbors in the foothills just 50 km (31
miles) south of Calgary.

On any given week, guests at the ranch can expect to start the
day with a big cowboy breakfast of eggs, home fries and strong
coffee, and return from horseback riding along spectacular Rocky
Mountain trails for a feed of Alberta beef steak or grilled B.C.
salmon.

But during one special week in September (Sept. 29 through Oct. 6
this year for $1,288 Cdn pp), local food, and the producers who
provide it, are the focus. Every meal features Alberta food
products in home-style ranch recipes, and guests can tour area
farms to see elk and bison being raised, the art of turning local
honey into mead (honey wine), berry farms harvesting black
currants for juices and jellies, and hothouses filled with
tomatoes hanging heavily  on the vine.

Of course, you can create your own tour anytime in this authentic
cowboy country that his home to farms and ranches. But Flavours
of the Foothills brings it all together for you in one package.

This weekend, ranch cook Dawn Albin is testing out her bison
drying and pounding skills, serving up trays of pemmican, a
traditional prairie First Nations food, created using both
historic and contemporary recipes.  While the authentic balls of
dried saskatoon berries and shredded bison jerky, bound together
with rendered bison fat, provide an interesting combination of
meaty and tart berry flavours, I'm partial to the meatballs made
with ground bison and berries. They're similar to the pemmican
patties I created for my book about indigenous Alberta cuisine,
High Plains (Fifth House Books), and perhaps better suited to
modern palates.


Canadian guest ranches

Experience Bison Tongue, Sweet Mead and Ales

It's a similar case with rancher Terry Church's bison tongue
appetizer. While First Nations' families prized the tongue of
the animal they relied on almost exclusively for food, shelter,
clothing and tools, they probably didn't poach their bison
tongue with pickling spices and serve it in creamy slabs atop
crostini with a drizzle of wild berry reduction like Church. And
they likely didn't wash it down with a selection of local ales
and lagers from Big Rock Brewery, Chinook Honey Company's sweet
mead or a tangy black currant punch from Kayben Farms.

At MaKenny's Homeplace Ranch, riding is always on the menu and
with his patient wranglers and careful instruction, it may be the
best place for a greenhorn to saddle up for a riding and ranch
vacation. But even in this pristine setting, among the tall trees
and historic ranch buildings, after a few days in the saddle, you
may be ready for an outing.

That's where the food tour kicks in. From the Homeplace Ranch,
tucked into the foothills near Priddis, we made our way south to
Whiskey Creek Greenhouse where Carmen Ditzler and Greg Perry tend
a forest of beefsteak, green zebra and orange roma tomatoes. If
they're busy at work, visitors can simply pick up a bag or a
case of tomatoes, weigh them on the scale at the door and plunk
their cash in the honor bowl.


Explore the Cowboy Trail

The Cowboy Trail continues south through Turner Valley where you
can stop in at the Route 40 Soup Company for chef Mark Klaudt's
creative take on regional foothills fare, from his famous hand
crafted soups (also available in jars to go) and homemade
crackers, to salads, wraps (like smoked trout with chili infused
Chinook honey or seared bison and wild mushrooms), and dinner
entrees like Alberta Wild Paella with venison sausage, pheasant
and smoked perch.

Enroute to Okotoks, Chinook Honey Co. sits up on a wind-swept
bluff with a wide angle view of the Rocky Mountains. There,
beekeepers Cherie and Art Andrews produce sweet clover and
fireweed honey, and have a honey bee interpretive centre,
complete with a buzzing glass "observation hive". In their
country store you can buy all kinds of edible honey products,
plus a full line of Planet Bee apitherapy  natural medicines
derived from honey, bee pollen, royal jelly and propolis (the
resin produced by bees to seal their hives). It makes a
fascinating and tasty stop, especially considering that the
Andrews plan to make their own fermented honey wine (aka mead)
soon.


Ranch vacations Take Your Pick at Black Currant Orchard

Next in line is a stop at Kayben Farms where the Kolk family have
a nursery, garden centre and large black currant orchard. You can
pick the berries yourself or take home some of their natural
currant juices, jellies and jams.

Finally, at the O'Connor ranch, elk, bison and caribou are
raised to supply the Canadian Rocky Mountain Resorts hotels and
restaurants, including the upscale Buffalo Mountain Lodge in
Banff and the historic Ranche restaurant in Calgary. Over
platters of their elk bacon and bison smokies, we learned about
their original Rocky Mountain Cuisine and how it can be cooked in
your own kitchen with products purchased directly from the ranch
or over the Internet.

Then back at the ranch, it's chow time again.

When visiting his historic 1912 homestead in southern Alberta,
MaKenny and his crew immerse you in real ranch life, whether
you're saddled up on the trail, learning how to quietly
communicate with one of his happy horses, or listening to his
family stories around the fire. But he also has a way of
including everyone in his extended farm family, and it's not
long before you're roped right in, wandering into the kitchen to
pour your own coffee, or digging into the dough with the cooks to
make a batch of the fat cinnamon buns that arrive hot from the
oven.

MaKenny knows that the fastest way to share culture, history and
lifestyle is over a feast of favourite local foods, and you'll
learn a lot while you pass the potatoes at his table.




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