The post KellyBronze, The ‘Rolls-Royce Of Turkey’ Is Coming To America appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Paul Kelly’s family farm in England has been selling $500 heirloom turkeys for two generations. Now, after a decade breeding them in Virginia, KellyBronze birds are looking to gobble up America’s Thanksgiving market. After two decades of breeding what the Times of London once called the “Rolls-Royce of turkey,” Paul Kelly wanted to learn from experts with generations of knowledge in America, where turkey farming originated. But once the Briton arrived in 2003, and after spending several weeks visiting turkey farms across Virginia, West Virginia, North Carolina, Massachusetts and Pennsylvania, Kelly was “amazed” to find no farmer or butchery maintained the American traditions, including dry-plucking and hanging, that have set the Essex, England-based KellyBronze apart. Then again, when a frozen American Butterball costs about a $1 a pound and you’re asking customers to pay around $15 a pound—or nearly $500 for a 32-lb. turkey—high quality has to come with more than a high price. “I thought, it’s almost impertinent for an Englishman to take turkeys to America,” says Kelly. “But there’s an opportunity there. I started looking, and we took it big.” Kelly, 62, is now the owner of the only USDA-approved turkey plant in the U.S. that dry-plucks and hangs its birds, which many believe creates crispier skin and better flavor. Since purchasing 130 acres in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains in Crozet, Virginia a decade ago, Kelly has opened America’s first newly built turkey hatchery in years. KellyBronze, which sells its turkeys at Eataly and other high-end retailers across America, had 2024 revenue of $28 million. About 4% of that comes from the U.S., but Kelly expects that to be 25% within three years as he increases production in Virginia—and he is aiming for annual revenue will hit $80 million by 2028. Founded in 1971 by… The post KellyBronze, The ‘Rolls-Royce Of Turkey’ Is Coming To America appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Paul Kelly’s family farm in England has been selling $500 heirloom turkeys for two generations. Now, after a decade breeding them in Virginia, KellyBronze birds are looking to gobble up America’s Thanksgiving market. After two decades of breeding what the Times of London once called the “Rolls-Royce of turkey,” Paul Kelly wanted to learn from experts with generations of knowledge in America, where turkey farming originated. But once the Briton arrived in 2003, and after spending several weeks visiting turkey farms across Virginia, West Virginia, North Carolina, Massachusetts and Pennsylvania, Kelly was “amazed” to find no farmer or butchery maintained the American traditions, including dry-plucking and hanging, that have set the Essex, England-based KellyBronze apart. Then again, when a frozen American Butterball costs about a $1 a pound and you’re asking customers to pay around $15 a pound—or nearly $500 for a 32-lb. turkey—high quality has to come with more than a high price. “I thought, it’s almost impertinent for an Englishman to take turkeys to America,” says Kelly. “But there’s an opportunity there. I started looking, and we took it big.” Kelly, 62, is now the owner of the only USDA-approved turkey plant in the U.S. that dry-plucks and hangs its birds, which many believe creates crispier skin and better flavor. Since purchasing 130 acres in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains in Crozet, Virginia a decade ago, Kelly has opened America’s first newly built turkey hatchery in years. KellyBronze, which sells its turkeys at Eataly and other high-end retailers across America, had 2024 revenue of $28 million. About 4% of that comes from the U.S., but Kelly expects that to be 25% within three years as he increases production in Virginia—and he is aiming for annual revenue will hit $80 million by 2028. Founded in 1971 by…

KellyBronze, The ‘Rolls-Royce Of Turkey’ Is Coming To America

2025/11/16 19:07

Paul Kelly’s family farm in England has been selling $500 heirloom turkeys for two generations. Now, after a decade breeding them in Virginia, KellyBronze birds are looking to gobble up America’s Thanksgiving market.


After two decades of breeding what the Times of London once called the “Rolls-Royce of turkey,” Paul Kelly wanted to learn from experts with generations of knowledge in America, where turkey farming originated. But once the Briton arrived in 2003, and after spending several weeks visiting turkey farms across Virginia, West Virginia, North Carolina, Massachusetts and Pennsylvania, Kelly was “amazed” to find no farmer or butchery maintained the American traditions, including dry-plucking and hanging, that have set the Essex, England-based KellyBronze apart.

Then again, when a frozen American Butterball costs about a $1 a pound and you’re asking customers to pay around $15 a pound—or nearly $500 for a 32-lb. turkey—high quality has to come with more than a high price.

“I thought, it’s almost impertinent for an Englishman to take turkeys to America,” says Kelly. “But there’s an opportunity there. I started looking, and we took it big.”

Kelly, 62, is now the owner of the only USDA-approved turkey plant in the U.S. that dry-plucks and hangs its birds, which many believe creates crispier skin and better flavor. Since purchasing 130 acres in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains in Crozet, Virginia a decade ago, Kelly has opened America’s first newly built turkey hatchery in years.

KellyBronze, which sells its turkeys at Eataly and other high-end retailers across America, had 2024 revenue of $28 million. About 4% of that comes from the U.S., but Kelly expects that to be 25% within three years as he increases production in Virginia—and he is aiming for annual revenue will hit $80 million by 2028.

Founded in 1971 by Kelly’s parents, Derek and Mollie, KellyBronze is 100% family-owned and has never taken any private investment, though there have been many offers over the years. The business has grown steadily for the past six decades with little debt, and it currently has none. “I have slept at night knowing that every decision we made, we could afford to make, rather than hoping it worked,” says Kelly, who admits that the business is challenging as the bulk of revenue comes in November, December and January. “But, in America, bang, we bought the farm, we built the plant, not having sold one turkey. We were taking risks but risks we could afford.”

Kelly acknowledges the high price of his turkeys can be a “problem” but he is quick to point out that his birds are also three times the age of the typical frozen turkey, and lose 3% of their weight during hanging, and it’s all done by hand, which increases labor costs.

“People aren’t buying it to save money, are they?” asks Kelly. “The sales of amazing wines and the best champagnes go through the roof at Thanksgiving in America, the same as here at Christmas. Not everyone can afford it, but for those that can, it’s there.”

In the U.K, KellyBronze supplies high-end butchers and retailers like Harrods and Selfridges. The Royal Family as well as chef and restaurateur Gordon Ramsay have also supported the brand for years.

The Eaten Path: “We are never going to be Butterball,” Kelly says. “We are a small niche player and we just want to be producing the best possible turkey we can for Thanksgiving.”

KellyBronze


In addition to Kelly’s 130 acres in Virginia, the family owns 90 acres across Scotland and England, where it rents another 140 acres. There are also now 13 British farmers raising turkeys for KellyBronze, including British celebrity chef Jamie Oliver, who started raising a flock five years ago, after spending 25 years as a customer. Oliver calls KellyBronze “the turkey equivalent of Wagyu beef or Pata Negra ham—simply the best of its kind.”

“I became a turkey farmer not out of necessity, but to support an extraordinary artisan family and their craft,” Oliver tells Forbes. “The Kelly family are a shining example of what’s right in British farming. They brought back values and methods that were nearly lost to history.”

Now, after more than 50 years in business, KellyBronze is finally ready to feast on America’s high-end turkey market. “We are never going to be a Butterball. We are never going to be big,” says Kelly. “We are a small niche player and we just want to be producing the best possible turkey we can for Thanksgiving.”


Kelly’s parents bought a small farm the year he was born in 1963. His father worked at a big poultry company and after many years he left so the family could start their own turkey business in 1971 when Kelly was 8 years old. Back then, the British turkey industry was producing what was known as “New York Dressed” birds because, as Kelly explains, “the whole tradition of what we do came from America.”

When Kelly returned to the farm after graduating from an agricultural college attached to Scotland’s Glasgow University in 1983, he pushed his family to take their farming to the next level. In 1984, he changed the family’s breed from a white Wrolstad turkey that originated in Oregon to “the old traditional bronze breed.”

Farm To Table: KellyBronze dry-plucks and hangs its turkeys in the American tradition, which many believe creates crispier skin and better flavor.

KellyBronze

He also started bringing the birds outside where they could roam, dust-bathe, and peck in peace. The Kellys also started dry-plucking and then hanging the birds—at first for 7 days and now for 2 to 3 weeks. It was an expensive approach to a type of poultry that is traditionally quite cheap.

“It was a race to the bottom,” he recalls of British turkey farmers at the time. “We were the laughingstock of the industry.”

That first year, the Kellys had an annual revenue around $300,000 (or about $930,000 today). Despite the slow sales, the family doubled down. In 1987, the Kellys bought a former dairy farm for $90,000 at 10% interest over 10 years. The buildings and 5 acres of grasslands (where Kelly later built a house and now lives) helped the family expand its breeding and allowed them to build a small processing facility. “It was a huge step for us but gave us the space to supply the increased demand that came,” Kelly says. “It proved to be the best investment ever.”

By 1990, “the butchers were phoning us,” and by 1994, sales had skyrocketed to $1.2 million. After adding local farmers to their network throughout the 1990s, in 2001, KellyBronze was appointed by then-Prince Charles’ organic food brand Duchy Originals to farm its Christmas turkeys.

In 2003, revenue reached $3.8 million and Kelly was ready to broaden his understanding of traditional techniques and learn from farms in the United States, where it all began. The first turkeys are said to have been imported to England back in 1526, when a trader named William Strickland brought back six birds he obtained from Native Americans during an early voyage across the Atlantic. Eating turkey at Christmastime became fashionable at King Henry VIII’s court, cementing the turkey’s place as a symbol of festivity. The birds then traveled back across the Atlantic, as the colonists at Jamestown in Virginia had shipments of domesticated turkeys arriving on boats from England.

And while no turkey was ever formally recorded at the Pilgrims’ first Thanksgiving with the Wampanoag in Plymouth, Massachusetts in 1621, they were plentiful in the region. Benjamin Franklin once famously called the turkey “a much more respectable bird” than the bald eagle and “a true original Native of America. Eagles have been found in all countries, but the turkey was peculiar to ours.” He even described turkey as “a bird of courage.”

Born To Be Wild: KellyBronze is now producing 4,600 turkeys in the U.S. this year, and Kelly’s hatchery has the capacity to produce 15,000 “poults” every month.

Levon Biss for Forbes

Kelly says the stock he is raising in Virginia is inspired by “the original traditional turkey that was produced in America hundreds of years ago with the Pilgrims.” In 2014, he brought his turkeys back to the continent they originated on, buying his farm for $750,000, and spending another $2.75 million on infrastructure upgrades—with help from a $1 million bank loan that’s already been paid off.

KellyBronze is now producing 4,600 turkeys in the U.S. this year, and Kelly opened his own hatchery in 2018, which has the capacity to produce 15,000 “poults” every month. It’s currently at 5,500 per year and Kelly wants to open another on the East Coast and one on the West Coast.

Doing business in America isn’t easy. For one, sales are super lumpy—95% of Kelly’s U.S. sales occur at Thanksgiving—and KellyBronze might get hit with tariffs from the Trump Administration’s trade war. Kelly shipped turkey eggs from the U.K. to his U.S. hatchery just before the tariff start date. Next season, if the tariffs continue, the eggs could face charges of a few thousand dollars.

“My dream would be for people to order it in January or February of every year. They put their name on one and we’ll grow it to order,” says Kelly, whose son, Toby, 31, and daughter Ella, 28, are now running parts of KellyBronze. “The potential is huge.”

More from Forbes

ForbesMeet The Billionaires Behind A Food Empire Built On Dessert ToppingForbesFor Hooters’ Original Founders, Saving The Chain Is A Higher Calling: “America Needs Us.”ForbesMeet The Florida Sugar Barons Worth $4 Billion And Getting Sweet Deals From Donald TrumpForbesHow Kettle & Fire Turned Bone Broth Into A $100 Million Business

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/chloesorvino/2025/11/16/the-rolls-royce-of-turkey-is-coming-to-america/

Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact service@support.mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

This Exclusive Cayman Getaway Tastes As Good As It Feels

This Exclusive Cayman Getaway Tastes As Good As It Feels

The post This Exclusive Cayman Getaway Tastes As Good As It Feels appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. 1OAK’s Sand Soleil sits on Grand Cayman’s iconic Seven Mile Beach 1OAK Exhausted and professionally burnt out, I arrived at 1OAK’s Sand Soleil in search of the type of restoration that could still my mind and get me writing again. The seven-day culinary experience was a no-brainer for me as a food writer. The integration of an epicurean getaway with pure Cayman luxury seemed to be the perfect spark for my creativity—private chef dinners, deep dives into Caribbean flavors, and hands-on masterclasses, all located within a serene, oceanfront villa. I had finally arrived. With the last rays of the sun setting behind Grand Cayman’s famous Seven Mile Beach, casting a warm golden glow across the water, I tasted Chef Joe Hughes’ ceviche for the first time—cubes of wahoo cured in lime, with charred pineapple and a subtle, nutty crunch. Chef Joe Hughes’ love for bright, Asian-inspired flavours came through in this wahoo tataki layered with Vietnamese herbs, ripe papaya and mango, cashew and cilantro, all brought together with a nuoc cham. Jamie Fortune Something softened. For the first time in months, I began to feel present. Sophia List, the brainchild of the 1OAK experience, heard me well. With an intuition honed by years of curating luxury, she matched me with what she called “a vision realized.” List told me Sand Soleil—like the other 1OAK homes on Seven Mile Beach and in West Bay—was created to feel like a real sanctuary. For her, it’s the laid-back alternative to a busy hotel, a place where you get privacy and elegance without any fuss. “We wanted to introduce the Cayman Islands to something truly special—an ultra-luxury experience that combines exquisite design, maximum privacy, and a sense of calm,” she shared as she guided me through the four-bedroom villa. “We are so excited to…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/12/06 14:01
How Pros Buy Bitcoin Dips With DCA Like Institutions

How Pros Buy Bitcoin Dips With DCA Like Institutions

The post How Pros Buy Bitcoin Dips With DCA Like Institutions appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. “Buy every dip.” That’s the advice from Strike CEO Jack Mallers. According to Mallers, with quantitative tightening over and rate cuts and stimulus on the horizon, the great print is coming. The US can’t afford falling asset prices, he argues, which translates into a giant wall of liquidity ready to muscle in and prop prices up. While retail has latched onto terms like “buy the dip” and “dollar-cost averaging” (DCA) for buying at market lows or making regular purchases, these are really concepts borrowed from the pros like Samar Sen, the senior vice president and head of APAC at Talos, an institutional digital asset trading platform. He says that institutional traders have used these terms for decades to manage their entry points into the market and build exposure gradually, while avoiding emotional decision-making in volatile markets. Source: Jack Mallers Related: Cryptocurrency investment: The ultimate indicators for crypto trading How institutions buy the dip Treasury companies like Strategy and BitMine have become poster children for institutions buying the dip and dollar-cost averaging (DCA) at scale, steadfastly vacuuming up coins every chance they get. Strategy stacked another 130 Bitcoin (BTC) on Monday, while the insatiable Tom Lee scooped up $150 million of Ether (ETH) on Thursday, prompting Arkham to post, “Tom Lee is DCAing ETH.” But while it may look like the smart money is glued to the screen reacting to every market downturn, the reality is quite different. Institutions don’t use the retail vocabulary, Samar explains, but the underlying ideas of disciplined accumulation, opportunistic rebalancing and staying insulated from short-term noise are very much present in how they engage with assets like Bitcoin. The core difference, he points out, is in how they execute those ideas. While retail investors are prone to react to headlines and price charts, institutional desks rely…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/12/06 13:53