Heraldnet.com
SATURDAY, JULY 4, 2009 10:48 am
LocalNorthwestNation & WorldPoliticsSpecial ReportsPhotosColumnistsMultimedia 
Blog
Michelle Dunlop
Tests continue on Boeing's 787
Your town news
Mike Benbow
Business editor Mike Benbow's insights into all things business.
•Latest: State's new commerce director shares his business principles
Steve Tytler
Steve Tytler answers your questions about real estate.
•Latest: New rules create an appraisal nightmare
 
WEEK IN REVIEW
Friday
Armed man shot by deputies in Arlington
Police ID make of vehicle in fatal hit-and-run
Boeing's 6-month tally: 1 net order
Thursday


One fire rips through $2 million home, another ...
Swine flu claims 2nd victim in Snohomish County
Jetty Island firefight continues; hot weather ...
Wednesday


Fire District 1 negotiates to take over service...
Snohomish County population rising fast since 2...
Honey's owners indicted by feds
Tuesday


Mobile home tenants along Snohomish River told ...
Lincoln to leave Everett in 2013
Put on your sailor's cap and explore Naval Stat...
Monday


Disabled people will be left without a ride
You'll soon have 4,500 reasons to trade in that...
Pay hike deserved, Monroe chief says
Sunday


1,670 local students in county are without homes
Monroe's business gets done in secret
$9 million to be sought for U.S. 2 in federal t...
Saturday


Use of local parks spikes
Gay-friendly shift at 2 churches
Racist graffiti scrawled on cars in Everett nei...
 

ADVERTISEMENT

Business   Print This Article  Email This Page  Subscribe Now! facebook digg reddit del.icio.us fark stumble

Kevin Nortz / The Herald  (click to enlarge)
Silvana Meats employee George Allen hangs a rack of smoked turkeys in preparation for the upcoming holiday. Allen estimates the company will sell nearly 800 birds before Thanksgiving.
(click to enlarge)
Silvana Meats butcher Rick Oosterwyk works on a cut of beef. The small meat market can prepare up to 8,000 pounds of beef in a day.
 
ADVERTISEMENT

 
CONTACT THE HERALD
Mike Benbow, Business Editor
benbow@heraldnet.com
 
Published: Monday, November 19, 2007

Local meats you can't find at the grocer

The holidays bring a rush of business to this small meat packer, which specializes in locally raised, hormone-free goods and offers items that can't be found at chain grocers.

SILVANA -- Even if they weren't on strike, Hollywood writers couldn't concoct a better setting for Silvana Meats Inc.

In the real world, you get off I-5 at Exit 208 and head west on the Pioneer Highway through a series of well-kept farms. Pass the sign that says "Entering Silvana, Our 4-H clubs welcome you." Then drive by the big red barn on your right, continue past the flock of sheep, cross over the river and look for the business with the cows painted all along the front. Hint: It's on your right across from the aging grain building and silo.

John Kalberg didn't concoct this setting. He bought a meat packing business there in 1985 with his father, who's since passed away. Since then, Kalberg has added a retail and online sales operation and a smoker, but the business still carries the feel of an old-time butcher shop.

Kalberg and his employees cut their own meat, any way you like it, and make their own jerky, sausage and other meat products. They also smoke their own turkeys and dry-cure their own hams rather than inject them with brine and spices.

Kalberg said he and his father operated under three rules still at use today. "Honesty, quality and giving the customer something they couldn't get at the grocery store."

"We've made ourselves unique," he said. "More and more grocery stores are going into all prepackaged meat. Wal-Mart gets all their meat from the Midwest."

All Silvana Meats products come from Washington state. The beef "is naturally grazed." None of the products contain hormones. "A lot of people are interested in the health issues of meat," he said.

In addition to custom cutting the meat, the company will even make sausage from a customer's old family recipe. "People will come in and say, 'My uncle used to make this in Wisconsin,' " Kalberg said. "I'll make it and if it's good, I'll keep making it (for other customers)."

Don Bayes, who grew up on a farm and taught agriculture in Stanwood schools for decades, remembers taking his students into Silvana Meats to show them how beef or other farm-raised meat is prepared for the table. "It beat my reading something to them for a week," he said.

Today, he drops in regularly for a ham or a half slab of bacon. His wife is partial to their roasting chickens, which Bayes said are "bigger than usual" and "not raised in a box".

A fundraising auctioneer for a variety of nonprofit groups, including many sporting clubs, Bayes regularly takes Silvana bacon to his auctions, asking people to play dollar poker for a chance to win it. "People go crazy over that," he said. "Everybody pulls a dollar out."

November is a busy time for Kalberg. He expects to sell 600 to 800 hams during this holiday season. He said he already has 100 orders for smoked turkeys for Thanksgiving and expects to sell 800 prime ribs during the holidays.

While nearly every community used to have its own meat packing house, Kalberg says he's one of the few remaining and perhaps the last in the area to make its own dry-cured hams.

Asked about the reasons for Silvana Meats' success, Bayes said the sales numbers speak for themselves.

"If you saw their list of clientele, you'd see this is not just a local place," Bayes said. "On the weekends, people come in from all over. It's good to see a little private enterprise surviving against the Wal-Marts and the Safeways. They've got their product and nobody's going to crowd them out."

Bayes also likes the service.

"If you had a fancy party coming up and you wanted 12 nice steaks, you'll wind up at Silvana Meats if you know your way around," Bayes said. "You just go in there and you tell them what you want."

Pat Maher of Everett agrees.

"We've been going there for years and we love it," he said. "Last time we had a relative dropping by and we went up and got a nice T-bone, extra thick. You just point at the thickness you want and they'll cut it for you."

Maher said he also finds "old world" products at Silvana Meats, that he can't find elsewhere. "My wife and I Iove their smoked chipped beef," he said. "It's a Pennsylvania Dutch affair where you make up a little gravy and put it on toast."

Tomorrow, Maher plans to head out to the shop to pick up the Thanksgiving turkey he has on order.

"It's a lot of fun," he said. "It's a nice drive in the country -- just 16 miles from our front door."


1. Snohomish County man dies of swine flu
2. Lynnwood bank reprimanded by government
3. Police ID make of vehicle in fatal hit-and-run
4. Armed man shot by deputies in Arlington
5. IRS joins puppy mill investigation
6. Jetty Island ready for sand castles
7. Boeing's 6-month tally: 1 net order
8. Warriors & Patriots: Many American Indians served before getting full citizenship rights
9. Movin' out
10. Marshals seize swindler's home
Enterprise Newspaper Snohomish County Business Journal
Warriors looking for balance
Three Scots vying for QB slot
Jackson looks for another title
Decorated veteran continues to serve as active volunteer
City Council reviewing sign regulations
Wildcats get a peek at newcomers
Lynnwood still in rebuilding mode
Shoreline feels a kindergarten growth spurt
Leave the patriotic pyrotechnics to professionals, cities urge
The Enterprise Online Newspaper

TODAY'S TOP JOBS
 View All Top Jobs 
Top Cars
Top Homes


ADVERTISEMENT