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The Rural Voice, 2003-06, Page 45steer was acceptable in the beef ring, and how it should be fattened. 1 think there was some worry about whether the other beef ring members would find the meat from our animal up to snuff. When the meat arrived it was my mother's task to cook and store the cuts for the week. Sunday dinner always involved a big roast, but all the meat had to be cooked so that it would keep better in the cellar cupboard where it was stored. I wonder now how we all escaped food poisoning from spoiled meat. I think perhaps it was re -cooked before eating to kill the bacteria. My mother agonized at times, wondering if a certain cut was still safe to eat. The winter was much less of a problem. The slaughter of one of our own pigs was done on the farm, and we ate a lot of pork in the wintertime. The day of the pig butchering was one I dreaded. I cannot describe this event because I stayed as far away from the scene as I was able to. The cut-up carcass was stored in the summer kitchen and lasted for many weeks. I never was able to eat the strong tasting pork liver. Despite mother's careful cooking and tenderizing it made me gag. I discovered later that elsewhere in the province people had smokehouses cured bacon and ham, and made spicy sausages. I assume that people of German origin did more of this, but farm people in our area were mostly Scottish or Irish in background and the smokehouse was not part of the culture. What a pity! Later my parents rented a meat locker in a nearby village where we could store the meat from our own animal and the Beef Ring disappeared. Some time in the early 1950s that all changed again. We bought a huge freezer that sat in the back kitchen packed with meat, ice cream, and our own frozen fruits and vegetables. Also in the early fifties we got a refrigerator, which elimin- ated the childhood task of running up and down stairs before every meal. What luxury to simply open a refrigerator door to make dinner! In the short space of 10 or so years we moved from farm habits centuries old into the modern day world.0 T.S. Fabrication custom fabricators of post pounders, dump trailers and all types of manure spreading equipment LH it, TS Fabrications ray Manure tankers from 650 to 6800 Gal. Solid manure spreaders from 3 to 30 Ton wwwbomford-turner.com The flagship range of heavy duty reach mowers specifically designed to suit local authorities, contractors and other professional users. Many municipal & farm models available. T.S. Fabrication WALTON. ON 1-800-265-9682 (FAX 519-887-9011) LUCKFNOW GRAIN BUGGIES • 2 models - 400 and 600 bu. • Hydraulically operated from the tractor • Unloading capacity 400 bu. in 3 minutes LUCKNOW MIXER WAGONS Stationary, trailer or truck mounted • All mixer wagons use a 4 auger design for even mix HELM WELDING LTD. QUALITY CRAFTSMANSHIP BUILT "RIGHT HERE IN ONTARIO" Lucknow, Ont. (519) 529-7627 JUNE 2003 41