Nuns On The Ranch Give A Heavenly Twist To Beef

Sister Elizabeth feeding Yoda, a water buffalo calf at the ranch. The nuns bought the buffalo to make mozzarella.i
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Sister Elizabeth feeding Yoda, a water buffalo calf at the ranch. The nuns bought the buffalo to make mozzarella.

Sister Elizabeth feeding Yoda, a water buffalo calf at the ranch. The nuns bought the buffalo to make mozzarella.



Sonja Salzburg/for Harvest Public Media

Many beer aficionados are familiar with the rare breweries run by Trappist monks. The beer is highly sought after, but it’s not the only food or drink made by a religious order. Many abbeys and convents have deep roots in agriculture, combining farm work with prayer.

Just five miles south of the Colorado-Wyoming border you’ll find one of these places. Idyllic red farm buildings sit in the shadow of the main abbey, all tucked in a stony valley. At the Abbey of St. Walburga, cattle, water buffalo and llamas graze on grass under the watchful eye of Benedictine nuns.

Sister Maria-Walburga Schortemeyer runs the abbey’s ranch. Other sisters volunteer their time to work. The list of agricultural activities is long. In addition to the cows and llamas, they raise chickens and bees, most of which are used within the abbey’s kitchen. The water buffalo are the newest addition, brought on in April 2014, and milked to make mozzarella cheese. But because the sisters need a health certification for their operation, the cheese making is currently on pause.

The biggest moneymaker on the farm comes from the beef cattle. The sisters are very aware of their marketing edge, Schortemeyer says.

“We have kind of a corner on the market — you know, nuns selling natural beef. People just kind of believe in it,” she says.

The farm buildings sit in the shadow of this, the main Abbey of St. Walburga, all tucked in a stony valley.i
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The farm buildings sit in the shadow of this, the main Abbey of St. Walburga, all tucked in a stony valley.

The farm buildings sit in the shadow of this, the main Abbey of St. Walburga, all tucked in a stony valley.



Sonja Salzburg /for Harvest Public Media.

They’ve been in the grass-fed beef business now for about seven years. Because their operation is so unique, they’ve never had a problem selling out their product.

“Some of our customers want it because of the beef,” Schortemeyer says. “Some of them want it because they know how [the animals are] being are cared for. We didn’t have much trouble, and now we always have a waiting list for the beef.”

To keep the baby cows safe from the region’s numerous predators, the nuns employ a set of unorthodox security guards — the aforementioned llamas.

“We have seen them chase a mountain lion off the property,” Schortemeyer says. “Llamas have various weaponry. One of them is their breath. They also kill with their front feet. They try to disembowel you — if they were upset with you.”

That’s right, a disemboweling guard llama raised by nuns. The sisters say the llamas usually save their spit and hooves for intruders, not the nuns who feed them.

From left: Sisters Maria-Gertrude Reed, Ann Lee, Maria-Walburga Schortemeyer and Elizabeth Baumgartner. The Benedectine nuns blend work and prayer on the farm run by the Abbey of St. Walburga, located near the Colorado-Wyoming border.i
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From left: Sisters Maria-Gertrude Reed, Ann Lee, Maria-Walburga Schortemeyer and Elizabeth Baumgartner. The Benedectine nuns blend work and prayer on the farm run by the Abbey of St. Walburga, located near the Colorado-Wyoming border.

From left: Sisters Maria-Gertrude Reed, Ann Lee, Maria-Walburga Schortemeyer and Elizabeth Baumgartner. The Benedectine nuns blend work and prayer on the farm run by the Abbey of St. Walburga, located near the Colorado-Wyoming border.



Sonja Salzburg /for Harvest Public Media

When many religious orders were founded centuries ago during the Middle Ages, agriculture was more than a way of life; it was a way of survival. Monasteries were self-sustaining, growing the food they ate. While farming has become less common as we’ve urbanized as a society, Schortemeyer says the abbey’s farm is more than just a quaint business. Other sisters have questioned the ranch’s value, but Schortemeyer says it keeps the sisters connected to the outside world.

“When our neighbors are suffering from drought or suffering from flooding, we can totally relate to them. We’re not above and beyond. … It’s good to be at the mercy of the environment, and so that other people know we don’t live some ethereal life,” she says.

Benedictine monasteries, with orders like the Trappists and Cistercians, use the motto Ora et Labora, meaning prayer and work. That motto doesn’t represent separate ideas to the sisters. All day long, prayer and work are intertwined.

“Praying with the scriptures is like chewing your cud,” Schortemeyer says. “So all through the day, we’re ruminating on it. We chew, chew, chew, swallow, regurgitate. So it’s not just ‘the Lord is my shepherd,’ it’s ‘the Lord is my cowboy.’ “

In their simple farm clothes of plaid shirts, jeans and Carhartts, it can be easy to forget the women are nuns — save for the fact they still wear the familiar fitted white coif covering their heads.

Back at the main abbey, Schortemeyer dons the traditional black and white habit. No more Carhartt jacket. With farm work done for the morning, it’s time for prayer. It won’t be long before they’re headed back out to the ranch to round up some rogue llamas.

This story comes to us from Harvest Public Media, a reporting collaboration that focuses on agriculture and food production.

Article source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thesalt/2014/12/22/371485558/nuns-on-the-ranch-give-a-heavenly-twist-to-beef?utm_medium=RSS&utm_campaign=news

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