Welcome to another edition of the Real Food Kitchen Tour. This week we’re featuring Jill Winger, author of The Prairie Homestead.
What’s a Real Foodie?
A “real foodie” is someone who cooks “traditional” food. We cook stuff from scratch using real ingredients, like raw milk, grass-fed beef, eggs from chickens that run around outdoors, whole grains, sourdough and yogurt starters, mineral-rich sea salt, and natural sweeteners like honey and real maple syrup.
We don’t use modern foods that are either fake, super-refined, or denatured. This includes modern vegetable oils like Crisco and margarine, soy milk, meat from factory farms, pasteurized milk from cows eating corn and soybeans, refined white flour, factory-made sweeteners like HFCS or even refined white sugar, or commercial yeast.
We believe in eating wholesome, nutrient-dense foods that come from nature. So we shop at farmer’s markets or buy direct from the farmer, or we grow food in our own backyards.
This Week’s Real Food Kitchen Tour: The Prairie Homestead
Jill with her Brown Swiss
This week we travel to Wyoming to visit Jill Winger’s homestead kitchen. She has a beautiful cow and an absolutely adorable daughter. Her blog is full of really helpful posts, from how to naturally clean your chicken coop to a recipe for soaked buttermilk biscuits.
Go check out her post on how to survive a blizzard – you have to see the photo of the view from her front door.
Name: Jill Winger
Blog: The Prairie Homestead
Location: Southeast Wyoming
Size of Kitchen: 14 x 14 (maybe?)
Things You Love About Your Kitchen: My island is probably my most favorite part of our kitchen. When we purchased our 100 year old farm house, it had very little counter space and NO dishwasher. My handy hubby crafted the island from scratch and made room for a lovely new dishwasher (as well as putting in a tile backsplash, and rewiring/replumbing the whole thing!). We also moved the sink to the island, providing me with much more counter space. Even though it’s small, I love that my kitchen has lots of character and is cozy on those wintery days.
Things You Would Change: Somedays I wish that the kitchen was a little more open to the rest of the rooms in the house. Typical of older houses, the rooms are small and boxy. If I had my wish, the kitchen would flow into the dining room and living rooms. But, I still love it nonetheless.
Favorite Tools & Gadgets: I couldn’t live without my big stainless steel stockpots! I use them constantly, especially for dealing with all the milk that comes from our milk cow. I’m always working on a big batch of yogurt or cheese. I also adore my slow cooker (for cooking beans, homemade broth, soups, and chili) and my food processor (homemade butter, peanut butter, slicing and chopping)
Biggest Challenges Cooking Real Food: Remembering to plan ahead. Our weekly “schedule” (I use that term loosely…) moves fast and changes often. Unfortunately, you can’t whip up a batch of sourdough tortillas or pinto beans 30 minutes before it needs to be on the table. I’m still working on incorporting more menu planning into our lifestyle and learning to make some items ahead and store them in the freezer. Some weeks it works, some weeks it doesn’t.
Current Family Favorite Meal: We had a bountiful summer of food grown on our homestead. Currently, our favorite meals are simple ones made with food from our property: grassfed beef steaks served with potatoes and veggies from our garden, or breakfast for dinner: antelope sausage (we love to hunt and always have a supply of game in the freezer), homegrown potatoes fried in coconut oil, and scrambled eggs from our chickens.
Favorite Cookbooks: Nourishing Traditions, Joy of Cooking, and a variety of real food blogs.
Kitchen motto
LOVE this!
View of the island and main work area
Main workspace
Oldie but goodie
The first dishwasher this old farmhouse has ever seen
Another island shot
I love the color scheme!
Keep my most used resources readily available
My lovely antique butter mold is on the left.
How cool!
Spice drawer.
I used small half pint mason jars with colorful scrapbook paper labels to organize my herbs and spices. In my opinion, there is nothing sadder than a meal without flavor! I’m in my spice drawer multiple times a day.
Handy in the pantry
Part of my pantry. My slow cooker, Nutrimill, and my small buckets of hard white and hard red wheat (we store the big buckets elsewhere)
The little gardener
Our 18 month old daughter already has an intimate relationship with her food. She loves picking fresh veggies from our garden, collecting eggs, and “helping” take care of our dairy goats, cattle, and horses. She already knows where her food comes from!
The beginning of our garden this year
Hello
Oakley, our raw milk supplier. This photo was taken in early summer before she calved. She is a Brown Swiss.
Beautiful!
Check Out the Previous Real Food Kitchen Tour Posts
Real Food Kitchen Tour: The Prairie Homestead
Real Food Kitchen Tour: Bubbling Brook Farm
Real Food Kitchen Tour: Taste is Trump
Real Food Kitchen Tour: CHEESESLAVE
Real Food Kitchen Tour: GAPS Diet Kitchen
Real Food Kitchen Tour: Holistic Mom
Real Food Kitchen Tour: Radically Natural Living
Real Food Kitchen Tour: Amanda Brown
Real Food Kitchen Tour: Pamela Montazeri
Real Food Kitchen Tour: Cracking an Egg with One Hand
Real Food Kitchen Tour: Yolks, Kefir & Gristle
Real Food Kitchen Tour: The Okparaeke Family
Real Food Kitchen Tour: Holistic Kid
Real Food Kitchen Tour: Artistta
Real Food Kitchen Tour: Nourished & Nurtured
Real Food Kitchen Tour: May All Seasons Be Sweet to Thee
Real Food Kitchen Tour: The Horting Family
Real Food Kitchen Tour: Hybrid Rasta Mama
Real Food Kitchen Tour: Granola Mom 4 God
Real Food Kitchen Tour: Real Food Devotee
Real Food Kitchen Tour: Real Food Forager
Real Food Kitchen Tour: The Leftover Queen
Real Food Kitchen Tour: Health Home & Happiness
Let Us Tour Your Kitchen
Are you a real foodie? Do you have a kitchen that you’d like to see featured on CHEESESLAVE?
Please email me at annmarie AT realfoodmedia dot com. Either send me a link to a Flickr set or email me your photos (minimum of 5, but more is better). Note: Please send me LARGE photos. Minimum 610 width. If they’re too small, I can’t use them.
Oh, and please send the answers to the above questions (at the very top of this post).
As much as I’d love to include all the photos I receive, I can’t guarantee that I will use your photos in the series. I’m looking for creative, good quality photos.
Some ideas for photos:
- Show us what’s in your fridge or what’s fermenting on your counter
- Take some snaps of some of your favorite kitchen gadgets, or show us how you organize your spices
- Got backyard chickens? Send some pics!
- How about a lovely herb garden?
- Kids or pets are always cute!
- Try to include at least one photo of yourself, ideally in your kitchen
And no, you don’t have to have a blog to be included in the tour.
Photo credit: A warm welcome Project365(3) Day 10 by Keith Williamson, on Flickr and photos by Memories by Michelle
Disclosure: cmp.ly/4 and cmp.ly/5







{ 18 comments… read them below or add one }
Oh, I love that spice drawer. Well, I really like the whole kitchen!
second that!!!!
What an excellent idea. When we’re done with our utility kitchen (aka summer kitchen) I’d love to pass along photos of both of our kitchens as well as what we love with regards to honest homegrown food.
Thanks so much for featuring my kitchen this week! I thoroughly enjoyed it!
Wow, what a beautiful kitchen!! I absolutely love how your toddler already knows where her food comes from!! I’m trying very hard to instill this in my boys (ages 7 and almost 2). Even though we get our food from a local market and Whole Foods, I still teach my boys about why I buy what I buy (grassfed meats, pastured poultry and eggs, local/organic produce, etc.). My older one is asking a lot of questions and even though he’s still picky, intelectually he knows what’s better for him. My little one loves everything!! I show him different fruits and veggies and get him to touch different textures. Beautiful photos!!
I love this – the kitchen is really cute! I would never think that it’s a true farm house!
I LOVE Jill’s blog! She’s great and it’s loads of fun to get a peek into her kitchen. Thanks Jill, for opening that up to us. I’m SO stealing your spice jar idea. I already use jars for everything else…
Aw thanks Chaya! And steal away!
My husband is an electrician so I love how light and bright your kitchen is!
I love it.
Molly– My hubby is an electrician too, which is exactly why there are so many lights!
Lol!
Love the milk from Brown Swiss! We jumped around with raw milk a bit until we landed on a nearby farm with Brown Swiss cows. Yum!
Beautiful kitchen! I love seeing kitchens that have some of the same “strange” things on the counter that mine does. Ferments, dripping whey, kombucha….
Hi Jill, You have a fantastic site, Just looking thru your site made me hungry for all the good food that is made naturally, reminds me of my young days with all that good home cooking, Boy do I miss that.
Bryce
I truly am inspired by your spice drawer! I have a spice drawer but mine is blah compared to the one you have. I like the idea of using 1/2 pint jars and the different colorful top labels. Thanks for sharing this with us. Your whole kitchen is wonderful!
Julie
that’s the second time i’ve seen that julia child quote in a kitchen and i love it!
Nice kitchens and great blog! Im a kiwi so butter is close to our hearts!
Cheers
libby
I love the spice draw and the Julia Child quote so much. And it’s gorgeous seeing Jill’s little girl in the garden. She’s off to such a great start in life already.
Jill’s husband did a great job with the island. Handy to have a handy-man husband!
Your kitchen is SPOTLESS! I am jealous!!! I feel like I have 900 things on my counters!!
Oh trust me Allison! It rarely is that clean! I only cleaned it up for the picture- it usually looks like a bomb went off on my counters.
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