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Business and the Economy

From Free Range to Table, Kentucky Turkey Farm Helps Make Thanksgiving Special

This week Americans will come together to celebrate and give thanks. Thanksgiving has become a holiday for family, football and feasting.

WEKU's Cheri Lawson reports, for many families, the centerpiece of the celebration is the turkey. And hundreds of those turkeys will come from a Northern Kentucky farm.

The National Turkey Federation estimates that more than 46 million turkeys will be consumed this Thanksgiving.  At least 2500 of those will be purchased from Tewes Poultry farm in Erlanger.

Dan Tewes  steps into the industrial sized refrigerator  and brings out a 39-and-a-half pound turkey  that will kick off the holiday season for a group of  employees at the Cincinnati Northern Kentucky international airport .

Tewes poultry has been a family affair since the early 1900’s and now Dan and his wife Darlene own the farm. Dan has  been raising and selling free range turkeys all his life. On this day, nearly 1500 of the birds roam the barn

No bones about it,  Tewes says this time of year either makes or breaks his business and, he-says, raising free range quality turkeys is hard work.

Dan: "I had to put extra straw down to keep them dry."

This week a few thousand people will flock to the Tewes farm to pick up their main course. Darlene says, with 2500 fresh turkeys to prepare from start to finish,  it’s a blessing that family comes back to help before the big holiday.

Darlene: "We have about probably 70  family members  that come and help us that weekend. But we have a lot of extended family cause my husband is one of 17 children . There are 80 grandchildren in the family and now we have great grandchildren who also  help us. So everybody knows their jobs and everybody you know, from little kids on up, my husbands siblings , some of them are in their 70’s now and they still come. So everybody that comes in here gets a fresh turkey."

Just a week before Thanksgiving  and the phone is ringing off the hook.  Allison Tewes has taken more than 60 orders before 11a.m. 

Allison: "People just love it..some guy called today and he just said he wants the biggest one ..whatever one the biggest one we have, he said he wants it."

Satisified customers return year-after-year.  Blanche Shuh says her family will gobble up more than one Tewes turkey.
 
Blanche: "Thanksgiving is so special. We have a big family.  Nine kids. My son-in-law is from France and he’s a wonderful cook and he’s having Thanksgiving and he gets his turkeys here.  He knows good food.  You know, fresh. He believes in it.

And we all love going to their house on Thanksgiving for that reason. So what I intend to do is fix a turkey for myself because when you go to somebody else’s house you don’t get leftovers. So I want to have a turkey which I’ll fix today and tomorrow and slice it and freeze it and have it while I’m still having the wonderful memory of Thanksgiving at my son-in-law's.

When it comes to cooking the bird, Darlene Tewes says she enjoys trying new things, whether it’s on the grill or deep fried. But husband Dan says, as far as he’s concerned, there’s only one way to eat a turkey

Dan;…"On Thanksgiving Day I want a fresh turkey right out of the oven"

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Business and the Economy ThanksgivingTewes Poultry FarmTurkey
Cheri is a broadcast producer, anchor, reporter, announcer and talk show host with over 25 years of experience. For three years, she was the local host of Morning Edition on WMUB-FM at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio. Cheri produced and hosted local talk shows and news stories for the station for nine years. Prior to that, she produced and co-hosted a local talk show on WVXU, Cincinnati for nearly 15 years. Cheri has won numerous awards from the Public Radio News Directors Association, the Ohio and Kentucky Associated Press, and both the Cincinnati and Ohio chapters of the Society for Professional Journalists.
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