Food & FamilySelling Seed, Canning Kraut and Racing Turtles are Brandt Family Tradition

First year that I got into seed business with dad. Together, we hired the most new Krueger dealers that year.

Greg Brandt grew up in the seed business on a farm near Westbrook in southwestern Minnesota, but he took quite a different path before making it his career.

Upon graduating from high school in 1985, Greg attended vocational school for electricity and electronics. A job as an electrical inspector for Windings, Inc., took him to New Ulm. He worked his way into a position as Quality Assurance manager and was involved with inspecting parts for NASA, as well aircraft instrumentation for President Regan’s helicopter. He enjoyed his job immensely and switching careers wasn’t on his mind at the time.

“One day my dad gave me a call said he’d grown his seed business to a point where he needed to divide the territory,” says Greg. “He asked me to join him, and honestly, I couldn’t tell him ‘no.’ Dad had worked so hard to get his seed business to that point, so I decided to assist him. Then in 1995, Krueger divided the state of Minnesota in half. Dad covered half as a District Sales Manager, and I covered the other half. We worked together until 2004.”

Now after working for nearly two decades in the seed business, Greg says he can’t imagine working in any other industry. He really enjoys the strong relationships he has with his dealers. Greg appreciates how, as an independent company, Latham Hi-Tech Seeds keeps its focus on helping farmers.

Makayla & Speedy. He really was speedy winning first place.

Greg also appreciates how the company puts family first and looks for opportunities to bring families together. His wife, Heather, and two daughters, Makayla (who will be 11 in two weeks) and Amber (age 9), have enjoyed attending Latham’s summer sales meetings. They also greatly enjoy spending weekends at by the Boy River near Longville where they enjoy feeding the ducks and racing turtles. It’s become their tradition to catch turtles in the spring and race them on Wednesday afternoons at the Longville Turtle Races. Longville is just a short drive from Nisswa, where turtle racing originated 47 years ago.

This coming Labor Day weekend Greg, Heather and their girls will be soaking up the final days of “summer vacation”. The day after Labor Day school resumes. Heather will begin her thirteenth year as a special education teacher; both girls attend elementary school in New Ulm.

Anyone who’s heard of New Ulm knows the community is deeply rooted in German heritage, so it really came as no surprise to me when Greg served brats and kraut at our From the Field spring planting broadcast. What did surprise me is that the kraut was homemade – and that Greg had a hand in making it. It was so good that I had to ask for his recipe! Thankfully, his mother has agreed to share it with all of us on TheFieldPositon.

For those of you needing directions on how to sterilize jars and seal lids, click here for Sauerkraut in a Mason jar.

Brandt Family’s Homemade Sauerkraut

Ingredients:

  • 3 heads of a cabbage
  • 3 T. salt

Directions:

  • Using a vintage -wooden cabbage slicer, we shred the cabbage. Then we pour the shredded cabbage into a larger Tupperware® bowl and sprinkle the salt over top. Mix well and then dump the salted cabbage in an original 30-gallon Red Wing crock. (The Brandt’s “kraut crock” has also been handed down and is approaching 100 years old.)
  • Repeat until the crock is full.
  • Once the crock is full, work all of the cabbage like you’re kneading dough. The more you mix it, the more juices get flowing.
  • Cover the kraut with a large plate (inside the crock)
  • About a 10-pound field rock that goes on top of the plate
  • Place kitchen towel over the top.
  • Each day, remove the towel, rock and plate. Mix the cabbage well. Then replace the plate, rock and towel. Repeat for 7 consecutive days.
  •  On the 7th day, you’re ready to can kraut into pint jars. IF there isn’t enough juice, add a little water into each jar.

COOK’S TIP: 10 medium-size cabbage head will make about 16 pints of kraut. Mom likes to add caraway to some jars.

Best Management Practices for Drought

Dry growing conditions in 2012 are prompting questions this fall about soil fertility, herbicide carryover and seed product selection. Implementing best management practices this fall will help reduce stress for crops next spring.

Conserve Soil Moisture
When soils are dry, farmers must conserve remaining moisture. This may mean holding off on disking and cultivating, so as not to let moisture escape in the process. Keeping the harvested crop’s residue on the ground’s surface also will help conserve soil moisture.

Test for Herbicide Carryover
Herbicide breakdown may be slowed greatly in drought conditions. The best time to test for carryover is between late October and mid-November. By this time, soil temperatures remain below 50° F – a point at which herbicide breakdown is minimal. If you take residue samples before this time, herbicide levels could be greater than those that will be present at the time of 2013 planting.

Select Seed Products
Since dry conditions could increase the chances of herbicide carryover, farmers may want to select seed for 2013 with greater tolerance to the herbicide used during the 2012 drought year. Another option might be to alter your crop rotation to avoid planting a crop susceptible to the herbicide used.

Whether you want to plant corn, soybeans or alfalfa – Genuity® Roundup Ready 2 Yield® or LiberyLink®, SmartStax® RIB Complete, Herculex® XTRA or Agrisure® GT – Latham Hi-Tech Seeds has the products and our trait packages to fit your needs. Call your local Latham® rep or 1-877-GO-LATHAM (1-877-465-2842). The time is now to plan for the 2013 growing season!

Southeast North Dakota Crop Report: August 29, 2012

Soybeans are reaching maturity and dropping leaves, but that may not mean harvest will come anytime soon. Low areas of the field and area with heavier soil types have held more moisture, so the soybeans are still very green and healthy. It will take longer for these soybeans to reach maturity. The difference in maturities within the same field will delay harvest and increase the need to watch combine settings to maximize grain quality.

Some hand-shelled samples of corn has moisture in the upper 30s, so it’t won’t be long before it’s dry enough to combine. With daytime high temperatures in the 90s, dry down will be quick. It won’t surprise me if corn harvest is finished this year before soybeans.