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The Dish Café is an eclectic culinary delight bringing unique flavor combinations and fresh ingredients to your table. We’re committed to regionally grown fruits and vegetables, grass fed beef, and hormone free pork and poultry. We avoid artificial sweeteners, food dyes and genetically modified ingredients wherever possible.
Our concept was created by a group of partners who wanted to offer healthy food choices to a community that’s quickly discovering the health benefits of natural and whole ingredients.
We purchase our beef from Swift Level Farm in Lewisburg. Swift Level steers are farm raised and live on an all grass diet. Swift Level does NOT apply any “non organic” (chemical) matter to the land or water nor do they feed any grain or hormones to the cattle. They eat pasture grasses and hay, organic kelp and drink clean spring water. They process in a USDA, Animal Welfare Approved facility and dry age for a minimum of 45 days (ABOUT).
Experience a slice of history with a behind the scenes tour of the Hatfield & McCoy Moonshine distillery. Hatfield & McCoy Moonshine is the very first authentic mountain moonshine ever legally produced by the Hatfields and McCoys. Situated in the southern mountains of Gilbert, West Virginia, this moonshine has been hand made following a family tradition passed down for generations.I made my way to this distillery (the GPS takes you up this one-lane road and doesn't quite connect you there so just be on the lookout for signs once you get into Gilbert. I actually drove about 20 miles out of the way until I got cell phone service to call them and then made my way back. I was determined).
Handed down for generations, the recipe used to make Hatfield & McCoy Moonshine is as authentic and original as the mountains and streams that bear the family names. The original recipe belongs to Devil Anse Hatfield and is currently produced in small, handmade batches, six days a week, in the micro-distillery in Gilbert, West Virginia, on original Hatfield land.Have you had a chance to go check it out? The facility seems lovely, and I'll have to keep an eye out to see if they host events here. Until then, here's some more background in case you need more convincing to grab a piece of this state's history.
Simply said, there is moonshine and then there is real authentic moonshine. You cannot mass produce moonshine and keep the tradition and quality of the small batch craft moonshine. With one taste, the “old timers” will tell you Hatfield & McCoy Moonshine is second to none.
Hatfield & McCoy Moonshine is a premium white corn whiskey that is hand crafted from 100% West Virginia grown corn, carefully fermented, and then distilled in copper kettle stills in small batches using the same authentic proprietary recipe handed down for over 150 years. At 90 proof, our all natural, gluten-free family recipe will go down smooth but kick like a mule. Bold yet versatile, it can be enjoyed neat, chilled, or in a wide variety of mixed cocktails instead of vodka or tequila (ABOUT).
THE MOONSHINE:
Hatfield & McCoy Moonshine is the very first authentic mountain moonshine ever legally produced by the Hatfields and McCoys. This moonshine has been handmade following family tradition passed down for generations. With a taste as original as its name, our moonshine is home fermented, home-distilled, and home bottled in small batches in our distillery located in the southern mountains of Gilbert, West Virginia.
THE FUED:
The Hatfield-McCoy feud began in 1875 between rival families of Devil Anse Hatfield and Ol' Randall McCoy. The story of “The Feud,” now over 135 years old, has become a modern American symbol of the perils of family honor, pride, justice, and vengeance.
HOW IT BEGAN:
The most notorious family feud in American history involved the Hatfields of West Virginia and the McCoys of Kentucky. During the American Civil War, the feud leaders from both families were staunchly pro-Confederate, and Randolph himself served in the Confederate Army during the opening years of the war. However, Randolph’s younger brother, Asa Harmon McCoy, enlisted in the Union Army. He was discharged from the Union Army on December 24, 1864 after suffering a broken leg, and returned home. Soon after his return, Jim Vance, uncle of Devil Anse Hatfield, and a member of the "Logan Wildcats" (a Confederate home guard organized by Hatfield) put Asa Harmon on notice that the Wildcats would soon be paying him, "a visit." Asa Harmon McCoy tried to escape by hiding out in a local cave, but was tracked to his hideout and killed. No charges were ever filed but it was widely known that Vance and members of Hatfield’s Wildcats were directly responsible for his death.
THE LAND DISPUTE:
In the late 1870s, Devil Anse Hatfield was involved in a land dispute with Randolph McCoy’s cousin, Perry Cline over a 5,000-acre tract of land that both held title to. Hatfield brought a civil suit against Cline. Hatfield won in what was seen by the McCoys as a Hatfield friendly court. Perry Cline's relationship to the McCoys was through marriage. He had four siblings married to McCoys. Most importantly, his sister, Martha "Patty" Cline was married to Asa Harmon McCoy. Asa Harmon was killed in 1865, by Devil Anse’s uncle, Jim Vance. In 1886, Martha and Harmon’s son, Lewis Jefferson "Jeff", was killed by Cap Hatfield.
THE HOG:
In the fall of 1878, Randolph "Randall" McCoy brought charges against Floyd Hatfield for stealing one of his hogs. This allegation was a very serious offense at the time, as hogs were extremely valuable to the farming economy. Due to the statements made by Bill Staton, who was related to both families, the case was decided in favor of the Hatfields. The ruling further inflamed the feud, as Randolph McCoy viewed the outcome as unfair. Later, brothers Sam and Paris McCoy were accused, tried, and acquitted of the death of Staton when the judge ruled Staton’s death an act of self-defense by the McCoy brothers.
THE ROMANCE:
Randolph's daughter Roseanna McCoy entered a relationship with Devil Anse's son "Johnse" Hatfield and later became pregnant with Johnse’s child. Upon learning of the affair, Randolph became extremely upset and disowned her. Roseanna, unwanted by both families, moved in with her aunt Betty Blankenship. Johnse later married Roseanna’s cousin, Nancy McCoy. Roseanna’s baby died before her first birthday and the abandoned Roseanna died at the age of 28. The peak of the feuding occurred when three of Randolph’s sons (Roseanna’s brothers) killed Ellison Hatfield, brother of Devil Anse, on election day in 1882. The McCoy brothers were arrested and taken for trial, but Devil Anse organized a large group of followers and intercepted them. Devil Anse retaliated for the killing of his brother by executing Tolbert, Pharmer, and Randolph Jr. without trial.
THE NEW YEAR'S MASSACRE:
It was January 1, 1888. Randolph’s house was burned to the ground and numerous family members were slain by the Hatfields, including two of Randolph’s children. His son Calvin was killed in the shootout as was his daughter, Alifair, who was shot to death as she tried to flee the burning house. Randolph’s wife Sally was badly injured when she attempted to comfort Alifair, suffering several broken ribs and skull fractures. With his house burning, Randolph and his remaining family members were able to escape to the woods; unfortunately, his children, unprepared for the elements, suffered frostbite. He moved his family to Pikeville, Kentucky, where he lived out the remainder of his life in bitterness and grieving. He operated a ferry in Pikeville for some time. By the end of the feud, he had lost seven of his children and his wife.
VENGEANCE:
Shortly after the New Year’s massacre, Kentucky deputy Frank Phillips and a posse of McCoys chased down Jim Vance and Cap Hatfield, killing Vance. Phillips’ posse rounded up nine Hatfield family members and supporters and hauled them off to jail. The feuding and warfare brought in political leaders of Kentucky and West Virginia. The Governor of West Virginia, E. Willis Wilson, accused Kentucky of violating the extradition process and appealed the matter to the Supreme Court of the United States. Kentucky Governor Simon Bolivar Buckner sent his Adjutant General to Pike County to investigate the situation. In May 1889, the Supreme Court decided against West Virginia (Mahon v. Justice); the nine Hatfields would be tried in Pikeville.
NEARING THE END:
Private detectives hunted down many Hatfields, though Devil Anse was never tried nor jailed. In 1890, Ellison Mounts was executed in Kentucky for his part in the McCoy killings. He was one of the men captured along with Mahon. The feud started to wind down with Mounts’ execution.
Last year a new, Hampshire County, West Virginia, farm owner and his crew were out generally clearing some land when this one particular oak tree was felled. As it came crashing down, a large family of flying squirrels bailed out and scattered.
So in honor of those squirrels, the Flying Squirrel Ranch & Farm was born. And soon, some attractive farm-based ventures will follow.“I was mortified,” said farm owner Stephen Settimi. “I said right then and there that I would never cut down another dead tree again because there are things living in them.”
Settimi’s current passions are his farm and starting a farm distillery. He moved to rural Hamshire County from Washington, DC, with exactly that thought in mind. His Rada Craft Distillery (the venture’s official name) is now fully licensed (Brilliant Stream).
Flying Squirrel Ranch & Farm is located in the Potomac Highlands of Appalachia. We’re about equal distance from Washington DC, Baltimore, and Pittsburgh. We employ a full green- cycle farm-to-table and grain-to-glass operation. We grow and harvest corn, grapes, nut, and fruit trees for eating and craft distillery operations. A small garden and fish pond provides food and sustenance for us human residents while marauding wildlife eat what we can’t harvest quick enough. Distillery byproducts and water recovery is used for feed, fertilizer, and irrigation. Most of the 30 acres is left wild for the native flora and fauna. The 5 acres of pasture land carries a small creek and fishing pond. The meadow has many medicinal herbs and wildflowers. A frighteningly fast 500’ zip line runs from the barn facility at the top of the hill to the meadow below. Aside from overnight camping, fishing, and hiking, our mini craft distillery offers free tasting of a variety of artisan-made spirits such as whiskies, gin, rum, liquors and of course, "moonshine”. When not in production cycle, the large 3200 square foot barn with lofts serves as an events and gathering facility. Nearby Rada is the Potomac Eagle Scenic Railroad offering a train tour along the Southern Branch of the Potomac River running from Romney to Petersburg where travelers often catch glimpses of Bald Eagles or bears. Other nearby attractions are Civil War battlefields and historic towns of Moorefield, Romney, and Keyser (Flying Squirrel Ranch).
Marketing. Appalachian. Storyteller. Author. Instructor. Columnist. Farmers market board member. Community volunteer. Candace127@gmail.com CandaceRoseNelson.com
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