White Oak Pastures
Family-owned regenerative farm in Bluffton, Georgia. Whole-animal butchery, Holistic Planned Grazing, carbon-positive at the farm scale. The clearest US example of meat as medicine when raised on healthy land.
Sources you can trace from the farm to the plate.
Food is the second input, and the shortest supply chain wins. These are sources you can trace to a farm, a bay, a family — the opposite of the anonymous shelf.
Family-owned regenerative farm in Bluffton, Georgia. Whole-animal butchery, Holistic Planned Grazing, carbon-positive at the farm scale. The clearest US example of meat as medicine when raised on healthy land.
Meat from ranches managed for the land first — holistic grazing that rebuilds soil and pulls carbon down, the same logic as White Oak Pastures at a wider supply. Grass-fed, no antibiotics or added hormones, with the regenerative sourcing stated openly rather than implied. For when meat-as-medicine means caring as much about the ground it came from as the plate it lands on.
Tuscan single-estate olive oil, cold-extracted within hours of harvest. The benchmark for what extra-virgin olive oil should taste like — peppery, alive, traceable to a single grove.
The first company to harvest sea salt from the Oregon coast in a century — flake salt pulled from the cold, clean water of Netarts Bay and finished by hand. Single-source and traceable to one bay, which is the whole point: you can taste where it comes from. The finishing salt that makes everything else you cook taste like you meant it.
UMF-certified raw Manuka honey from New Zealand. Antibacterial, traceable, third-party-tested. Honey that still does what honey is supposed to do.
Heirloom beans grown out by a small Napa company that pays farmers in Mexico and the US to keep near-extinct landrace varieties alive. The opposite of the anonymous commodity bag: every bean has a name, a place, and a season, and they sell out the way good wine does. Cook a pot once and the supermarket version stops making sense. The clearest argument on the food shelf that 'staple' and 'extraordinary' aren't opposites.