Food and Drink
Olive Oil & Fig Balsamic Vinegar | Pasture 42
- Item Number
- 295
- Estimated Value
- 39 USD
- Sold
- 30 USD to lf85c4f37
The winning bid will go to FrontStream Global Fund (tax ID 26-3265577), a 501c3 nonprofit organization, which will send the donation to THE NEW VILLAGE SCHOOL (tax ID 263955916) on behalf of the winner.
- Number of Bids
- 5 - Bid History
Item Description
A pair of olive oil and fig balsamic vinegar for your table or pantry. Made and donated by Pasture 42, a farm in the beautiful Capay Valley.
This olive oil and fig balsamic vinegar duo are perfect for dressing your salads and dipping bread. Have you tried a balsamic drizzle on summer fruit yet? Or a drizzle of olive oil on your frozen yogurt? Both are delish and refreshing.
Frantoio Olive Oil, 500mL glass bottle for $23. A blend of three Tuscan varieties (Frantoio, Leccino, and Pendolino) with a mild, pleasant, green, fruity oil—the typical “Italian” flavor that many people are accustomed to.
Fig Balsamic Vinegar, 250mL glass bottle for $16.
Item Special Note
***FOR LOCAL PICK UP AT NEW VILLAGE SCHOOL ONLY***
Meet your Pasture 42 farmers:
Susan graduated from Southern Oregon University’s Environmental Education Masters Program in 2010. Appropriately enough, her focus during her studies was farm education. She delights in checking in with each animal every day, assessing health and happiness. On any given afternoon, you can find Susan working at the egg cleaning machine, labeling olive oil or churning out some fresh yellow butter.
Ken is a graduate of Stanford University. He was born and raised in Woodland, California on his family’s farm. There are stories that at the age of seven Ken was left on a tractor to rake alfalfa. He did fine for a few hours, until an unfortunate encounter with a tree. You can usually find Ken with a shovel or drill in hand, constantly working to build a sustainable farm system. He has been known to eat eggs with almost any other food you can imagine.
We believe first of all in sustainable farming practices. In the last few years “sustainable” has become a fashionable buzzword that has been so co-opted and misused that it has lost much of its meaning. Sustainability is the capacity to endure. As such, sustainability has both ecological and economic components.
On the ecological side, sustainable agricultural practices are those that treat the land and environment in such a way that they are preserved or improved over the long term. In this vein, we use no pesticides, herbicides, or synthetic fertilizers, refrain from giving our animals antibiotics or hormones, and use organically grown feed except when it is impossible to find.
A large part of sustainability, and one that we feel is often overlooked by many consumers in the push to consume organic foods, is buying locally. Buying locally both reduces food miles and keeps money in the local economy. We are currently looking for ways to get more, and ideally all, of our purchased inputs, especially feed, locally.
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