At Millstone Meadows Daylily Farm in Morganton, a couple found a
Transcription
At Millstone Meadows Daylily Farm in Morganton, a couple found a
Sharing their At Millstone Meadows Daylily Farm in Morganton, a couple found a home and a place to grow their passions — his for flowers, hers for food. Written by Sarah Fauser PHOTOGRAPHY BY MATT ROSE One of Mark and Sara Hord’s first dates in 2003 was a trip to the farm they now run together, Millstone Meadows Daylily Farm. 60 Our State April 2011 ourstate.com 61 Against the backdrop of Burke County countryside, guests come in large numbers to enjoy the farm-to-fork dinners at Millstone Meadows. O n a warm evening in Morganton, people sit around a long dinner table in Mark and Sara Hord’s backyard. The sun begins to set behind the mountains that surround the 35 acres known as Millstone Meadows Daylily Farm, where Mark and Sara work as a team. He grows the flowers; she cooks the food. Tonight, 80 guests share in their place and their passions. Mark mingles, pointing out his daylilies blooming all around. Sara finishes preparing the meal over an open fire. These farm-to-fork dinners connect people to this land with Sara’s homegrown ingredients and Mark’s flowers, but they also transport them to different areas of the world. Tonight’s theme: Tuscany. Mark and Sara load the table — savory sausages seasoned with fennel and garlic, pizza with fresh tomato sauce on a hand-tossed crust, and lots and lots of pasta. A wine distributor pours a fine selection of reds and whites from southern Italy to round out the palate. “I like to share,” Sara says. “And this is a great way 62 Our State April 2011 for Mark and me to share, through fabulous dinners with good people.” Anything for her Mark — tall, sandy-haired, and handsome — is a romantic. As a young flower enthusiast, Mark often visited Charles Henson, who owned the farm Mark now calls home. He bought daylilies from Henson and took them back to his garden at his home in town. Sara — petite, strawberry blonde, and a former Cosmopolitan magazine model — became the focus of Mark’s romance in 2003. When they met in June of that year, Mark took her out to the farm on a date. “Being a simple-minded guy, I thought I would take this pretty girl out to a place where there were pretty flowers,” Mark says. “I said to myself, ‘I’ll impress her with my knowledge of these pretty flowers.’” Little did he know how much he would impress her. After their trip to the farm, he continued to charm her. Sara spent her early years working as a culinary chef Sara Hord was a chef in Illinois and New Mexico before she came to Morganton and met her husband, Mark. ourstate.com 63 Sara Hord loves feeding people. She’s been cooking for years, all around the country. And now, several times a year, she and her husband open their Millstone Meadows Daylily Farm for people to come eat her cooking — particularly the many varieties of fruits and vegetables she grows — and gain a better understanding of where their food comes from. in Chicago, Illinois, and Santa Fe, New Mexico, and then settled in Morganton. She continued cooking and planted her own vegetable garden filled with carrots, cucumbers, celery, okra, and tomatoes. “Every year, I get crazy and plant thousands of [plants],” Sara says. “The same year Mark and I started dating, I had the worst time with the tomatoes. My 64 Our State April 2011 garden was so big, and I just didn’t have time to stake all of the tomato plants. We went out for dinner one night, and I asked him, ‘What did you do today?’ And you know what he says to me? ‘I staked all your tomato plants.’ I was like, ‘Oh my God!’” “Instant love,” Mark says, beaming. “I remember it was 95 degrees out that day, so I said “We call that the honeymoon bed, since all of the daylilies planted there were purchased on our drive home from our honeymoon.” Before Mark Hord took ownership of Millstone Meadows, he had to learn how to care for the 1,200 cultivars of daylilies. to myself, ‘If I can get him to do something like that for my tomatoes, I can get him to do anything,’” Sara says. “And I’ve been staking them ever since,” Mark replies. Making it their own After that first trip to the farm, Sara, like Mark, fell in love with the place and its quiet, serene surroundings. The couple got married and moved to the farm just one year after they visited on their date. Together, they renovated the 150-year-old log cabin and incorporated a mixed style that reflects their backgrounds; it’s both Southern and Southwestern. While Sara equipped the kitchen with wide countertops and an industrial stove, Mark turned his attention outside. Before Henson sold the farm, he made certain Mark knew how to care for the 1,200 cultivars of daylilies scattered around the property. “Charles mentored me initially on splitting them and taking care of the plants, simple fertilizing and how he transplanted them up here to sell them,” Mark says. “I got to researching daylilies and seeing what I liked.” Mark now has almost 1,000 flowerbeds. He’s creative in his design. In the cross-shaped bed, the ‘Canopy of Heaven’ daylily stands almost 40 inches tall with a curly, yellow, spidery bloom. Mark is partial to those tall, spidery ones. In the bed shaped 66 Our State April 2011 like an ice cream cone, the ‘Raspberry Candy’ daylily presents a bloom that looks like a pool of white chocolate with a raspberry-red center. “When Sara and I got married, that first summer we moved here, we decided that we didn’t have enough daylilies,” Mark says. “So we stopped at a huge farm down in the eastern part of the state and bought 70 more and planted them behind the house. We call that the honeymoon bed, since all of the daylilies planted there were purchased on our drive home from our honeymoon.” Wonders of the farm Every June, the peak month in daylily season, Mark and Sara hold The Daylily Festival for people who want to come experience the farm’s beauty and Sara’s cooking. “We bring in bluegrass music and have a neat day for the public to come out and enjoy,” Mark says. “If it’s not 95 degrees, we usually have up to a couple hundred people come to the farm that day.” Mark parades visitors between the beds of daylilies. He introduces them to Honky the goose and Charlie the peacock; the animals came with the farm. He lets them pause and listen to the water running in the three creeks that border the property. Visitors pick out daylilies to purchase — most go for about $5, depending on the variety. They also take home Sara’s homegrown fruits and vegetables. “While I don’t know as much, or am as crazy about, the flowers, I do know about food, so I like to educate as much as I can,” Sara says. “When people come 68 Our State April 2011 Mark and Sara Hord host regular farm-to-fork dinners at their farm. The next one is scheduled for April 23. to visit the farm, Mark educates them about the wonders of the daylilies, and I like to have them leave here a bit more sensible about where their food comes from and what they are eating.” Mark and Sara love to share — whether it’s a Tuscan-style dinner in their backyard or a festive summer afternoon among the daylilies. Mark shares his flowers, and Sara shares her food. And together, they share their love. Sarah Fauser was an editorial intern at Our State magazine in fall 2010. Go Millstone Meadows Daylily Farm 2595 Henderson Mill Road Morganton, N.C. 28655 (828) 433-7126 millstonemeadowsfarm.com Upcoming farm-to-fork dinners: April 23 and May 21. Morganton ourstate.com 69