Lemonade Stand Evolves Into Goat Fu LINDA WILLIAMS Bedford Co. Correspondent NORTH BENTON, OHIO (Portage County) Sharen O’Brock of North Benton, Ohio!, has been reading Lancaster Farm ing since she can remember. It’s brought her a lot of valuable tips in the small farm ventures she has enjoyed with her husband, Ken. Among them, her successful career in making goat milk fudge which has given her good reason to proudly display the sign, “capri culturist,” on the side of her bam. “The story,” the petite, bib overallea, Sharen says, began when her girst child, a daughter, was only one year old. They bought her a goat. Both goats and children began to multiply. Some years later there were five O’Brock children and 72 goats. “We were giving goat’s milk to everything and it all thrived,” Sharen remembers. “We had fat veal calves and healthy baby pigs as well as meeting our own fami- Today Sharen with children Sharen O'Brock and favorite, high-producing goat. Sharen and the herd which provides the milk for her fudge. Children’s Money-Making Project Turns Into Mother’s Career ly’s milk needs.” As the O’Brock children grew into the “lemonade stand,” era, they began clamoring for ideas on wayks to make money. It was Ken O’Brock who suggested “Goat Milk Fudge,” like his mother used to make. Using a standard fudge recipe, Sharen substituted goat milk for cow’s milk, mixed up some fudge, put it in a cardboard box, and set the kids up in business on (he front porch. The entrepreneurs were so suc cessful, they soon looked for other fudge markets and began carrying their wares' to a weekly farmer’s auction in nearby Damascus, Ohio. “When we sold out almost im mediately, we thought we really had something going,” Sharen re members. “Next we approached some local gift shops and farmer’s markets. We put our fudge in neat white boxes and we woe in busi ness.” raised and gone, is the sole pro prietor, goat milker, fudge maker, bookkeeper, goat breeder, and marketer of her fudge today dis played in boxes depicting goat scenes. Nearby Berlin Lake provides an excellent summer-based clientele with June, July. August, and Sep tember being her peak fudge months. “I sell up to 800 pounds a month in the summer,” she ad mits. Her wares bring $2.25 a half pound box. Fudge in flavors of peanut but ter or chocolate is made in the neat and spacious kitchen the O’Brocks added to their new home, which has replaced the ori ginal ... the one where the kids sold fudge from the front porch. There are no preservatives, only the goat milk, sugar, oleo, peanut butter or cocoa, vanilla, and salt. The fudge is shaped on cold marble slabs as Sharen watches her grandchildren from the sunny window that overlooks a delight ful play area. Three days a week she finds time to babysit despite her busy schedule. Ken has worked in nearby Ak ron at General Tire for more than 30 years and, in addiiton, runs a part-time windmill business. “But I don’t mind doing every thing myself,” Sharen says. “I find such enjoyment and contentment in milking my goats. It’s my quiet time, my time to relax.” When the milking is finished, it is stored in a stainless steel, water cooled cool er. Attention to cleanliness is ap parent and Sharen has had no trou ble passing the Ohio state inspec tion required to sell her fudge. She milks seven Alpines and has an additional seven kids and bucks. Sharen oversees all of the breeding, seeking bucks that have strong bloodlines to produce does witih high productivity. Goat milk average is about 2,000 pounds with a special Alpine/Sanneu cross that gives 3,940. Now that her children have left home. Sharen buys the feed for the animals that was once raised on the farm. “The only thing I add to their diet is comfrey,” she says. “That adds a lot of protein and seems to keep by herd healthy.” O’Brock farm animals include chickens (Sharen also sells eggs), the goats, a pot-bellied pig, an ag ing collie and a Yellow lab pup. Some people just seem to have more hours in their days than Sharen O’Brock at work In her fudge kitchen. others. Such is the case with Shar- mu itipi e projects, en who besides goats, fudge. o *Brocks' youngest son, chickens, a garden, lawn, large David, is part of the International house, and grandchiWren finds 4 . H Youth Exchange and is the time to lead two 4-H dubs One is 1994 representative to Estonia, strictly goats while the other has Reading Terminal Market To Host Pa. Dutch Festival PHILADELPHIA This year marks the twelfth year that Read ing Terminal Market celebrates the traditions, foods and crafts of the Pennsylvania Dutch with a festival scheduled for Thursday, August 4 through Saturday, August 6 from 10:00 am to 4:00 pm. This year’s festival features many of the favorites from past years including: Johnny Clay poole, the hex sign painter, whose work is nationally known and on display at the Philadelphia Zoo as well as the Smithsonian Institute. Not only will hex signs be painted, but a Market window will get a dazzling new look as well with a four-foot painted hex sign. Amish craftsmen will be featur ing wall hangings, toys, wooden clocks, braided rugs, homemade brooms, cedar crafts in all shapes and sizes, old-fashioned wooden wagons, among many other tradi tional specialties. The Market’s beloved Pennsylvania Dutch mer chants will be selling homemade ice cream, chicken pot pie, peanut clusters, funnel cakes, donuts, canned and jarred goods using only the freshest produce from their summer crops, and many more delectable items. The festival will also showcase live farm animals on Saturday (outside, Arch Street sidewalk) including sheep, goats, chickens and a cow. with milking demon strations by Levi Fisher every hour. Free pony rides will foe available for children on Saturday. Entertainment will abound on Business #4 * 4 t?' Saturday with the Stone Mountain Boys (a gospel group) and a stroll ing musician. In keeping with the PA Dutch Festival’s tradition, a group of Amish women will once again demonstrate their talent in Center Court (all three days) as they sew the finishing stitches on a hand- made quilt which will then be given away as the grand prize on Saturday. Other prizes include: a lunch and dinner for two, ice cream, baked goods, gift baskets, crafts, and gift certificates. To be eligible to win, sign up at the Market beginning Wednesday. July 27 at any of the Amish coun ters. Drawings for prizes will be held on Saturday, August 6 at 3:00 pm. Special parking for the PA Dutch Festival will be available on Saturday only, on the north ‘ side of Arch Street (between 11th and 12th streets), and on the 12th street underpass between Race and Arch. The Festival is free and open to the public. Reading Terminal Market is one of the world’s largest indoor farmers’ markets, offering an unparalleled variety of farm pro duce in season, Amish foods, ethnic restaurants, and fish, meats. poultry, and flowers from over 70 merchants under one roof. Recen tly renovated and air-conditioned, this 102 year-old market still func tions as the region’s only authen tic farmers’ market Located at 12th and Filbert Streets, the Mark et is open Monday through Satur day from 8:00 am to 6:00 pm. •v t* *