Category: Uncategorized

23 Mar 2020

Indian Hill Product Availability – old

Indian Hill Product Availability – old

Notice: We apologize if we missed your call today. Our internet and phone systems have been experiencing intermittent outages. If you’re having trouble reaching us, please email us — we’ll respond as soon as possible. Thank you for your patience and understanding.

We are excited to welcome you to our new Farm Market, across the street at 8300 Spooky Hollow Road.

You may shop in store or order in advance.
Email us at farm@green-acres.org
or call us at 513-891-4227 then press extension 1

Regular Hours: Tuesday – Friday 10:00-5, Saturday 9-2

Flowers

Vegetables

  • Acorn Squash ($2/lb)
  • Butternut Squash ($2/lb)
  • Cabbage (green, purple, savoy, tender sweet $2/lb)
  • Fennel ($4/each)
  • Garlic ($7/lb)
  • Honeynut Squash ($2/lb)
  • Kohlrabi ($4/lb)
  • Napa Cabbage ($6/each)
  • Pie Pumpkins (cinnamon girl $5/each)
  • Red Radish ($3.50/lb)
  • Watermelon Radish ($3/lb)

Root Vegetables

  • Beets (red/gold $4/lb)
  • Carrots ($6/lb)
  • Onions ($2/lb)
  • Turnips ($4/lb)

Leafy Greens and Herbs

  • Kale (Curly, Lacinato $4 per 1/2lb)
  • Lettuce Mix ($6 per 1/2lb)
  • Spinach ($6 per 1/2lb)
  • Fresh Herbs (cilantro, dill, parsley, rosemary, thyme $3/each)
  • Microgreens ($4/each)

Pasture Raised Meats and Eggs

    Our hens live outdoors on pasture, in a fully mobile chicken coop that is moved to fresh grass regularly. They are provided a corn and soy free supplemental feed. If you want to learn more about our mobile chicken coop, click here to see a video!

          Please note: All our meats are frozen.

            100% Grassfed, Grass Finished Lamb

            • Ground ($11/lb)
            • Leg of Lamb (bone-in or boneless $16/lb)
            • Loin Roast (boneless approx. 1/2lb each $24/lb)
            • Rib Chops (4 per pkg $20/lb)
            • Shank ($8/lb)
            • Shoulder Roast ($12/lb)
            • Stew ($12/lb)

            Lamb Offal:

            • Bones ($5/lb)

              100% Grassfed, Grass Finished Angus Beef

              • Back Ribs ($9/lb)
              • Brisket ($9/lb)
              • Ground Beef ($8.50/lb)
              • NY Strip Steak  ($22/lb)
              • Ribeye Steak ($22/lb)
              • Shank ($8/lb)
              • Short Ribs ($9/lb)

              Beef Offal:

              • Heart ($7/lb)
              • Suet ($3.50/lb)
              • Tallow ($18 per quart)

              Woodland Raised Berkshire Pork

              • Ham Slices ($8/lb)

              Pork Offal

              • Caul Fat (lacy net of fat, try wrapping around a lean cut like a loin roast or a whole chicken, to baste while roasting! $6/lb)
              • Kidneys ($2/lb)
              • Rendered Lard (Sale $12 per quart)

                  Pasture Raised Turkey

                  • Whole Turkey ($5/lb)

                  Pasture Raised Chicken

                  • Backs ($3/lb)
                  • Chicken Patties (plain, tomato basil $7.25 per pkg)
                  • Chicken Sausage Links (Sweet Italian, Hot Italian $7.25 per pkg)
                  • Party Wings ($4/lb)
                  29 Nov 2017

                  Glacier Survivors

                  Take a peek around our area and you may notice some evidence from our past. Ice age plants are among us and have persisted over the past 10,000 years since the last glacier left Cincinnati.  Many of these plants hit their evolutionary prime during the beginning of the Cenozoic era when mega-fauna, which includes mammoths and giant sloths, roamed freely across North America. The fruit attracted these very large animals that would then eat it whole, travel very far distances and go to the bathroom, leaving the seed to grow in a new place with a bit of natural fertilizer to help it along. However, many of the plants that relied on mega-fauna for dispersal went extinct at the end of the Ice Age.  That being said, there are a few that have persisted despite the changes in environment.  This type of plant is called an evolutionary anachronism, meaning it is out of place in its current time period. Plants like the Osage-orange tree, with its large “monkey brain” fruit found a way to survive despite the fact that there are no animals that can eat and disperse it that way it was intended. Other plants like the Honey Locust, with its large seed pods and huge thorns are remnants of a time when the tree needed to protect itself from the huge animals who brushed up against them. These trees help to remind us of our history and reinforce the fact that the only thing that is constant in our world is change.