Country Zest Holiday 2020 Edition

Page 54

Photo by Crowell Hadden

Ovoka Farm from the top of Ashby’s Gap.

Where’s the Beef ? Try Ovoka Farm

T

By John Sherman

hrough my window I see the first light touch the top of Ashby’s Gap above Paris and wash red down the hillside, down over pastures broken by stone walls, and over the homestead of Ovoka, the great house, the outbuildings, the barn, the silo. Over black cattle wandering the hillside. For some years, the property was in jeopardy of being developed. Its present owners, Karen Way and Guy Morgan, bought the farm in 2008 and expanded the eight-bedroom, columned mansion, built in 1820. Since then, they’ve reassembled the original property to over 700 acres of its original plat, including the recent addition of 64-acre Liberty Farm—Ovoka’s original grazing land. Remarkably, Guy was raised just over the ridge from Ovoka. As a young boy, his grandfather took him to visit with then-owner Reed Thomas. “All I can remember were the peacocks and Dobermans,” Guy said. After high school, he enlisted in the submariner service, went to the University of Maryland and spent the next ten years playing in a band he formed called the “Nine Day Wonder.” (His grey hair still falls to shoulder length.) He went on to form—-and sell—-the country’s largest private electric company, headquartered in Chicago, where he met Karen, an energy lawyer. When they purchased Ovoka, Karen and Guy realized their vision of a working farm where they could raise their own meat. They started their first herd with Angus stock from the local Livestock Exchange. It was dinner in one of San Antonio’s top restaurants that Guy ordered a steak from a Japanese breed he had never encountered—-Wagyu. “After tasting the melt-in-your mouth beef,” Guy recalled, “I knew I had to learn more and I knew I had to bring Wagyu to Ovoka.” A full blooded Wagyu steak is almost pink—-not red—-from the intense marbling that permeates the meat. The cooked meat is so rich it’s often described

54

Photo by John Sherman

Guy Morgan and Karen Way at Ovoka. as “buttery” or “foie gras.” “Because of its high content of monounsaturated fatty acids,” Guy said, “Wagyu’s melting point is lower than the human body temperature.” The amount of marbling makes full-blooded Wagyu the highest priced beef in the world, commanding as much as $200 a pound. Costco recently offered $100 off a four-steak package, down to $400. Karen pointed out that most retail meat labeled “Wagyu” has only a small percentage of the actual breed, so prices can be lowered while still maintaining its cache. She cautioned consumers to read the labels carefully. “American-Wagyu” are typically a cross between a full blood Wagyu bull and a full blood Angus

Go Green Middleburg | Holiday 2020

heifer—-a half-and-half split known in the trade as “F-1 beef.” “Pure bred Wagyu is extremely rich,” Guy said. “Americans want the size and beefy taste of an Angus The combination has created its own niche in the meat world.” Today the herd includes about 80 full blood heifers and 250 F-1s and F-2s (3/4 Wagyu and 1/4 Angus). “At the end of this season, we’ll have 60 new full blooded Wagyu calves that will be the next generation of Ovoka’s Heritage beef ’s genetics,” Guy said. Karen, a practicing lawyer, also manages the farm and the day-to-day cattle operations. “Beyond buying or selling and raising our stock, I’ve enjoyed getting out and introducing our beef to local restaurants, like Field and Main and Hunter’s Head, under Ovoka Heritage Wagyu Beef.” Karen also manages Ovoka’s donations to local food banks through the Piedmont Environmental Council’s distribution network. The farm has donated thousands of pounds of its Heritage Wagyu beef and Mangalitza pork. “Our work doesn’t end with a one-and-done donation,” Karen clarified, “Ovoka is committed to supporting the long-term hunger relief efforts of groups like FISH, so at each harvest, we’ll ensure consistent deliveries.” At some point, the couple hopes to slaughter their own beef on the property and personally oversee the butchering. “Our goal is to be as self-sufficient and selfsustaining as possible,” Karen said. Guy sees the opportunity to expand their offerings. “Take a pig,” he said. “The American style is to give you back a ham. The Europeans take the same ham and break it down into ten completely different cuts. We want to do the same.” And down the road, smoking and creating charcuterie. “When Guy brought us back to his home in Virginia,” Karen said, “we never even dreamed of finding a farm as breathtaking as Ovoka, never mind watching our cattle grazing the hillsides.”


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

Cup of COFFEE

3min
page 58

How Sweet It Is at Sweet Bay Farm Sweet Bay Farm is 127 acres.

2min
pages 56-57

Where’s the Beef? Try Ovoka Farm

3min
page 54

Carry Me BACK A Country Ham and a Fancy Chandelier

2min
page 53

Nimbus Farm Alpacas Offers A Backdrop For Style

1min
page 52

Millwood Equestrian Back in the Saddle Again

2min
page 51

Riding To Preserve Priceless Open Space

2min
page 50

Schwartz Making Lots of Dough at Red Truck

3min
page 49

Color Long Branch an Artist’s Delight

3min
page 47

Say Cheese Please!

3min
page 46

A Gem of an Idea to Support Survivors

3min
page 45

ZEST

1min
page 40

Country Zest Holiday 2020 Edition

2min
page 39

Fauquier Habitat Keeps Building For Future

3min
page 38

For Lorraine Early, A Magic Carpet Rid

3min
pages 36-37

Exceptional Design for Luxury Living You Can Bet the Mortgage on Sabrina Sutton

3min
page 44

Mapping the Past While Preserving the Future

3min
page 35

PIEDMONTROOFING Standing Seam Metal

1min
page 34

Country MATTERS Saving the Countryside Is a Group Effort

3min
page 33

OATLANDS: House and Gardens

1min
pages 30-31

The Adams Family Is a Perfect Fit at Trinity

3min
page 28

Safety First at the Ashby Inn

2min
page 27

CZ Books Holiday 2020

1min
page 26

Food & WINE BOMBS AWAY & A HAPPY NEW YEAR

1min
page 25

BEAGLES

1min
page 24

Dr. MacMahon: Don’t Stop Gargling

1min
page 23

They Plant Trees to Help Protect the Planet

2min
page 22

Plant Trees, Plant Hope

3min
page 20

Kat Gemmer, Kat Gemmer HOW DOES YOUR GARDEN GROW

3min
page 19

Blessing of the Animals

1min
page 17

Preserving the Life and Times of Jack Dawson

2min
page 16

Little Girl Pals Now Doctors in the House

2min
page 15

Perspectives on Childhood, Education and Parenting

3min
page 14

A visit of presidential magnitude

3min
page 12

Fighting for Our Feathered Friends is ABC

3min
pages 10-11

THE EGG AND I

1min
pages 8-9

Another Christmas, Another Generation

2min
page 7

Quail & Hound Farms

2min
page 6

Signs of So Many GoodChristmas Times

3min
page 3
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.