Raw Milk Info
  • About

  • We are located in southern Colbert County.

    Our milk comes from a mixed herd of Guernseys, Jerseys, Holsteins, Brown Swiss and Ayrshires that are milked twice a day. They are kept on pasture with supplemental minerals available for their needs. At milking, they are given a specially formulated dairy ration.

    We strive to provide the freshest milk possible. We bottle milk every single day, empty the tanks and wash everything down to prepare for the next batch of milk. Milk is never over 24 hours when it's delivered to the stores.

    Milk is double-filtered. It is raw, not pasteurized or homogenized.
    Cream on top, milk on the bottom.

    All milk is sold by animal feed license per Alabama law.

     

    We no longer offer farm pick up.

    Our raw milk is found in the following stores:

    The Dairy Farm Store at 6833 Waterloo Road Russellville, AL
    Open Mon 2-6, Tues 8-12, Wed 8-2, Thur 8-12, Fri 2-6, Sat 8-12.
    Restocked daily.

    The Homestead Mercantile at 1833 Darby Drive in Florence.
    Open Monday- Friday 8-6pm.
    Restocked on Monday mornings.

    Ricks Farm Market at 3406 S Wilson Dam Rd in Muscle Shoals.
    Open Monday- Saturday 10-6pm.
    Restocked Monday, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday mornings.

    Triple 3 Ranch at 303 Co Hwy 333 in Hackleburg
    Open Monday- Friday 9-6pm, Saturday 8-4:30pm, Sunday 2-5pm
    Restocked on Saturday mornings.
    Preorders online here.

    7 Sisters Heritage Farm 151 Chestnut Circle in Hamilton, AL
    Preorders only. Pick ups on Saturdays
    Preorders here:

    Hometown Provisions 181 Frisco Street, Winfield, AL
    Open Tues- Fri 6a-6pm, Sat 7am-2pm, Sun 12-4pm
    Restocked Tuesday mornings.

  • Milk Life

  • We strive to provide the freshest milk possible. All milk is never more than one day old when delivered to the stores.

    Raw milk will last 7-10 days (and possibly up to 3 weeks) when kept below 40 degrees. We use a bulk tank to chill milk to 36 degrees within about 30-45 minutes of milking, and a refrigerated truck to get milk to the stores.

    Anytime milk reaches 40 degrees +, it begins to grow bacteria which causes milk to spoil.

    We highly recommend taking a cooler for transporting your milk home, and ice or ice packs-- especially during the summer months.

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