The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Inside the Devenick Dairy

The Devenick Dairy is set on the south side of Aberdeen

- Alison shaw

Cheesecake isn’t something you would find most farmers rustling up but for Kenny Groat it’s just one of the tasks he’s had to turn his hand to since deciding to diversify.

Just over a decade ago the family business, Bishopston Farm at Banchory-Devenick outside Aberdeen, was not big enough to support Kenny and his brother Ian, as well as father Richard, so they looked at the options for generating a different income using the same land.

Being a family of cheese lovers and milking a herd of about 200 cows seemed to make cheese the perfect solution.

Though they started with yogurt initially, soft cheese swiftly followed – both products being a quick turnaround in terms of cash flow.

Today the business has been transforme­d, with Devenick Dairy offering a wide range of cheeses, other products including the cheesecake­s and oatcakes and a new farm shop and cafe, the Tin Coo, featuring a soft play area, on-site butchery and viewing gallery where visitors can see live milking.

“It’s about keeping it real, the whole thing is about being a bit more open,” said Kenny, acknowledg­ing there is no hiding away from the authentic day-today business of farming – transparen­cy is a given, everything is on show.

And it’s a policy that appears to be starting to paying off.

Although it’s been a rollercoas­ter, with new challenges to overcome, it’s a lesson in metamorpho­sis.

Kenny’s grandfathe­r came down from Orkney 65 years ago and started with six cows. And though 10 years ago it was a fairly efficient, lean operation, operating over roughly 500 acres with about 500 head of livestock, including beef cattle, ewes, breeding rams and dairy cows, it was time for a change – led by the new generation.

Today the farm, scythed through by the Aberdeen Western Peripheral route which has accounted for the loss of at least 30 acres, is a completely different entity, inspired by New Zealand-style methods.

It is down to about 240 head of livestock – no sheep – and the dairy herd is moving completely to spring calving with no more milking until February.

“We’ve never done this before and it’s all based on how they do it in New Zealand, a grass-based system,” said Kenny.

“We have paddocks all over the whole farm with cow tracks which run to every paddock.

“It’s all based on trying to get more milk solids for cheese-making, something with a bit of high protein and a higher butterfat.”

This year, instead of using about 59% of their own milk and selling the rest to Muller Wiseman, they are aiming to process 90% of their own yield.

The cows produce between 7,200 and 7,900kg daily and clearly they will have a massive abundance of milk which will not only allow them to step up their storage and cheese-making capacity but will also see the launch of their own bottled free range milk – pasteurise­d, not homogenise­d, and with the traditiona­l cream on top.

They sell a dozen cheeses, including a variation on their original cheddar-style which has now become Smoked Deesider, and supply restaurant­s, supermarke­ts, farmers’ markets, garden centres and even another farm shop, delivering by van within a 120mile radius.

But while some farm shops may have struggled, Kenny doesn’t see Bishopston’s offering as competitio­n: “We do different things.

“Ours is unique – we focus on what we do here on the farm.”

The shop, once just a small hut, is hugely expanded. The butchery sells roasting joints, pork, sausages and rose veal, the latter surprising­ly well received.

There are gift hampers, cheese wedding cakes and a range of cheesy oatcakes. Then there are Experience Days where guests can learn the secrets of cheesemaki­ng, get their wellies on and be a farmer for a day with the Milking Time experience, or create their own bangers after a butchery demonstrat­ion.

And its Tin Coo cafe, which will celebrate a year in business in April, offers food based on the farm-to-fork ethos, utilising either their own homemade or locally-sourced ingredient­s and including such delicacies as the cheesecake­s, a Tin Coo burger and Picnic Bench Afternoon Tea.

Everything has involved adopting a new mindset, says Kenny.

Where once there were three staff, now there are upwards of 20, from van driver to butcher, cheesemake­r, chef, front of house staff and tele-sales.

“It’s been quite a learning curve for us but the route to survival is digging deep and just doing something different,” Kenny said.

“Keeping people engaged and excited and wanting to come back.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Tin Coo shop and cafe manager Craig Profeit and head butcher Tom Craigmyle.
Tin Coo shop and cafe manager Craig Profeit and head butcher Tom Craigmyle.
 ?? Pictures: Jim Irvine. ?? Cheesecake­s on display at the Tin Coo.
Pictures: Jim Irvine. Cheesecake­s on display at the Tin Coo.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom