Farm Fresh
Pure Luck Farm and Dairy offers award-winning artisan goat cheese, made withlove
Pure Luck Farm and Dairy doesn't often open their doors to the general public. Since becoming one of Texas’ first Certified Organic Farms in 1988 (and, later, a Grade A Goat Dairy in the mid 90s), Pure Luck and its small staff of six family members have barely had time to catch their breath, let alone give tours of the farm. Luckily, thanks to Slow Food Austin, a small handful of devoted fans were recently given the opportunity to see the goat dairy and herb garden up close.
Walking around the grounds, it’s very apparent that sisters Amelia and Gitana manage and run their farm not with pure luck, but love. The fact that Pure Luck's cheese has accumulated numerous accolades, earning awards and attention year after year, is just an added bonus.
First and foremost, the Dripping Springs farm is the family's home, and has been since the late 1970s. The house was the vision of their late mother, Sara Sweethardt—and it just so happens that they produce really awesome goat cheese there, too.
Pure Luck is home to roughly a hundred goats, specifically Nubian and Alpine breeds. Despite the fact that the dairy now uses conveniently automated pumps in its day-to-day routine, they family is pleased to teach visitors how to milk the goats by hand, encouraging samples of the fresh, sweet milk.
Surprisingly, each goat breed produces a unique flavor of milk, which can frequently change due to a variety of factors. It’s all a science that Amelia Sweethardt has tinkered with and mastered while producing Pure Luck’s signature cheeses, such as June’s Joy or Del Cielo. In fact, her Hopeless Bleu has taken home American Cheese Society awards five years in a row. No wonder it’s rumored that President Obama noshed on Pure Luck cheeses on his recent visit to Austin.
The tour of the farm ended with a memorable picnic spread that featured a variety of Pure Luck cheeses: classic chevre, fresh ricotta, Santa Teresa, Sainte Maure, extra-aged Hopeless Blue, feta dressed with extra virgin olive oil and freshly picked herbs from the farm, plus a few other goodies. John Antonelli of Antonelli’s Cheese Shop provided the homebrew and locally baked ciabatta. We broke bread and devoured the farm’s fruits of labor, and for a brief period of time, we felt like we were part of the Pure Luck family.