Growing Seed is a Coombs’ Family Tradition

Growing seed has been a family tradition for the Coombs family of Latimer for five generations, spanning 65 years. Clara Coombs, along with her son Ralph, began raising seed oats for Willard Latham in 1947. A few years later, Ralph’s son, Harold, began working with him. And walking in their shadows, from the time he was old enough to toddle, was Harold’s son John. Today the legacy lives on as John’s son, Andy, joins the operation.

“My grandfather traded work with Willard,” said John Coombs, who’s been farming since 1973. “They both had a nose for business: Willard liked wholesale/retail end of the business. My grandfather liked the details of production and getting a premium for his crop, so the partnership between the two really worked well. I have lots of good memories.”

John remembers how the two gentlemen’s relationship ran so deep that Willard even borrowed Ralph’s new 1949 Chevy pickup to Des Moines to pick up seed treatment. That pickup could pull a wagon holding 100 bushels of oats, which is quite a contrast to the 950 bushels of soybeans they can haul today with their semi.

“We still enjoy driving Grandpa’s Chevy and enter it in a couple of local parades each summer,” says John. “While we’ve had lots of fun over the years, I appreciate how new technology helps us do our jobs better. Soybean yields have doubled since I started raising seed. And new harvesting equipment makes it much easier to combine whole beans in the fall. Whole beans are key for quality seed; we pay particular attention to avoid splits.”

“We’re fussy in what we do,” adds John. “We like to get clearance before we go to the field in the spring. We try to groom the crop through the summer and keep the weeds out. We realize when we contract with Latham that “quality” is stamped on the bag, so we want to do all that we can to raise the highest quality beans.”

As spring planting gets underway, John and Andy are looking forward to working together. Andy graduated in 2007 from Iowa State University, where he majored in Ag Studies. Upon graduation, he went on the wheat harvest with a crew of four ISU students. They started in Frederick, Okla., on the Texas border, and combined their way through Kansas and Nebraska before heading to North Dakota. In North Dakota, they would cut wheat by day and canola by night. Andy says that he got more experience fixing equipment over the course of a few months than he ever would’ve imagined!

Andy, the middle of the Coombs children, is engaged to be married on July 28 to Emily Carr. John and his wife, Beverly, are also the proud parents of four daughters:

  1. Jennifer, their firstborn, works in human resources at Principle in Des Moines. Her husband, Brian, is an architect and they have a daughter, Annabelle.
  2. Jill serves as activities director for Walnut Ridge Senior Living community in Des Moines, and her husband, Derek, works for Wells Fargo mortgage. They have a son, Elias.
  3. Amy lives in Salt Lake City, Utah. She is Program Coordinator with the Internal Medicine Residency Program at the University of Utah. Amy’s husband, Kyle, is attending the University of Utah where he is studying in computer science.
  4. Youngest daughter, Laura, is enrolled in the master’s program in higher education / student services at University of Nebraska at Lincoln. She is engaged to Nick, a business student at Iowa State University.

With so many children to feed, John jokes that Beverly has had much practice honing her cooking skills. The family’s favorite is home-grown sweet corn. Another favorite is Almond Bars, so today Beverly is sharing her recipe with us.

Almond Bars

Ingredients:

  • 4 eggs
  • 2 c. sugar
  • 1/4 tsp salt
  • 1 c. margarine or butter, melted
  • 2 c. flour
  • 3 T almond extract

Directions:

  1. Beat eggs; mix in sugar and salt.
  2. Add melted butter.
  3. Fold in flour and almond extract.
  4. Spread in greased 9×19-inch pan.
  5. Sprinkle additional white sugar on top then top with sliced or slivered almonds, if desired.
  6. Bake 325° for 30 minutes. Enjoy!

COOK’S NOTE: These bars are quick and easy. You get the almond enjoyment with much less work than the traditional almond bars.

Easy Easter Desserts and Crafts

Six-week-old “Floppy,” a miniature lop, feasts on dandelions in my flower garden. (Obviously, I need to spend some time in my garden!)

Easter has always been a special holiday for me. From the time I was a small child, I’ve enjoyed attending Sunrise Service and then feasting on a big breakfast or brunch. The Easter Bunny visited our house while we were at church, and I couldn’t wait to get home and see what he had left in my basket. I also looked forward to late afternoon when my five cousins and I (plus our parents, too) would gather at my grandparents’ farm for our annual egg hunt. In addition to searching for candy-filled eggs, there was a bag of candy with each of our names on it.

It’s been nearly 50 years since the first Bruns family egg hunt was held, and our tradition is still growing strong! Literally. Now there are four generations – and 36 people – searching for plastic eggs in a two-acre yard. It’s not usual for cousins to play tricks on one another, finding and then re-hiding someone’s bag of candy in a tree, a flower box or even an old John Deere planter box. We’ve searched for eggs in all sorts of weather from wet and soggy conditions to snow banks. It looks like this year we could be in for a real treat with warm, dry spring weather.

We cut a branch off a tree, spray painted it and adorned it with dyed eggs.

Throughout the years, my crafty mom has done many things to make the season extra special for us. Nearly every year we blew out and colored eggs for our egg tree. (I finally did this last year with my kids. Then I saved it in the basement, so we could use it again this year. Somehow I feel guilty about this.) We also colored hard-boiled eggs that were then turned into my mom’s infamous potato salad. (Since I can’t make potato salad like Mom, I don’t see any need to boil the eggs!) Another year Mom made Easter baskets, in the shape of a rabbit, for each grandkid. (I had fun doing this last year with my Girl Scout troop, too.) I also remember, as a small child standing on a kitchen hair, helping her mix up a cake that we then decorated as a bunny.

Perhaps this will be the year that my kids and I bake a Peter Rabbit Cake. It definitely fits my main criteria for a recipe: quick, easy and delicious! These criteria are also why I plan to try my hand at making Mosaic Jell-O for our family potluck this Sunday. Chances are, I’ll put my “Jell-O Salad” in a bowl instead of making bars. (I honestly can’t bear thinking of Jell-O as a bar. Bars, in my humble opinion, should be thick, rich and chocolaty!)

In case you’re interested in a new recipe for your own Easter brunch, I’m including recipes for some of my favorite breakfast casseroles below. I’m also including some cute ideas for Easter crafts to keep little hands and minds occupied.

Make your own Easter basket by reusing a plastic gallon milk jug.

Easter brunch ideas:

Easter basket ideas:

“Living to Serve” Defines this Northwest Iowa Volunteer

Learning to Do, Doing to Learn, Earning to Live, Living to Serve.

The FFA motto is comprised of just 12 short words but, when lived out, these words can make a big impact on rural communities. Just ask Pam Fuller of Paullina, a community of 1,044 in northwest Iowa.

Whether Pam looks for community service opportunities or whether such opportunities find her is a lot like asking, “Which came first, the chicken or the egg?” But the bottom line is that Pam has a passion for helping others. She has become a tireless fundraiser for high school organizations and activities in her area. Her current priorities include fundraising for Close Up, the nation’s premier non-profit, civic education organization, and for the South O’Brien FFA Boosters, a Booster Club for the South O’Brien FFA Chapter.

To help raise money for the Close Up students, who will spend one week of their summer in Washington, D.C., Pam started making lollipops 10 years ago. She makes 40 different flavors in shapes ranging from snowmen and tulips to hearts and balloons. Then she sells them at home tracks meets, as well as at home football and basketball games. If it sounds like she’s spending lots of time in the kitchen, she is! Pam spends about two to three hours making each batch of 50 lollipops, and last year she made over 6,500 lollipops. The biggest sellers are cotton candy, strawberry daiquiri and strawberry-watermelon. (If you’re ever in the area, these lollipops are a real treat! My kids are a big fan particularly of the strawberry-watermelon ones.)

In addition to making lollipops, Pam is currently busy planning a pancake fundraiser. It’s become a tradition for the Southwest O’Brien FFA Alumni Board to host a free-will breakfast the day before Easter. The menu includes pancakes, sausage and applesauce. This is just one of three fundraisers the FFA alumni host to help support FFA members’ trips to state and national convention. They also host a football tailgate that consists of hamburgers, chips and lemonade. During the basketball season, they’ve become known for their succulent pork loin supper with a side of baked beans. Today Pam is sharing their bean recipe on TheFieldPosition.

Pam, who’s a full-time substitute teacher during the school year, doesn’t take off summers from fundraising or working with high school youth. She and students involved with the Close Up program run a concession stand at the O’Brien County Fair. In addition to organizing the concession stand, Pam sells ice cream on the fairgrounds.

The Ice Cream Truck had become a fixture at the O’Brien County Fairgrounds after 25 years. So when the proprietors decided to retire, Glenn (Pam’s husband) saw it as an opportunity to keep the tradition alive. He bought the 1962 Chevy ice cream truck in 2009, and Pam started selling ice cream at the 2009 county fair. Her product offerings include soft serve chocolate and vanilla cones, sundaes and ice cream sandwiches, homemade chocolate chip cookies, plus Wizzards, which are similar to a Dairy Queen® Blizzard®. Pam also bought a smoothie maker and a sno-cone maker, and at the 2011 county fair, sno-cone sales topped her ice cream sales.

Year-round Pam serves her community in various ways. She’s active on church committees and launders and fits the school’s band and chorus uniforms. Early each morning she delivers the Sioux City Journal – and has done so for 31 years!

Pam and Glenn also enjoy spending time with their six children and nine grandchildren. This year they’re hosting two exchange students, one from the Czech Republic and one from Venezuela. It’s no wonder this family knows how to cook for a crowd! Perhaps their recipe for Big Batch Baked Beans is just what you need when your family gathers soon to celebrate Easter or reunites this summer. Pair it with Big Batch Brownies and you will easily be able to feed a small army.

Big Batch Baked Beans

    • 1 gallon of baked beans
    • 1 lb ground beef
    • 2 C. BBQ sauce (we use Cookies®)
    • 2 C. ketchup
    • 1½ lb. bacon
    • 1 C. brown sugar
    • 1/4 C. or less mustard

COOK’S TIP: Increase this recipe as you need. We fill a couple of electric roasters and let beans simmer forseveral hours.