I like to grill and cook chicken and beef.After doing some research online and watching some Good Eats...I was inspired to look for some places around VA/NC that raise and sell grass-fed beef and free-range chickens.Understanding I would be paying more for the better beef (and now that my wife is saving us money with her couponing), I decided to search the internets and found Tender Grass Farms (http://tendergrassfarm.com/). I did a little producting searching and ordered some steaks, ground beef, and chickens.I ordered 27 pounds of meat (mostly beef) for $200.I ordered it today.It will arrive tomorrow frozen in dry ice.I'm pretty excited.The farm is in VA, so that's why it doesn't take long.Just wanted to start a thread about a better quality meat than the corn-fed, hormone-filled meats we are eating today.I mean, seriously, have you ever seen a cow graze in a corn field?Anyone else go for the "more natural" type of beef?
8/29/2011 11:18:00 PM
man i tell you whatmy wife started buying all our beef and chicken from our friend's farmer neighborSHIT IS WAY DELICIOUSER THAN GROCERY STORY OFFERINGS[Edited on August 29, 2011 at 11:34 PM. Reason : there's a cow field directly across the street from my neighborhood. i want to eat them]
8/29/2011 11:33:30 PM
free-range chickens are skinny as hellfresh beef is nasty/gamey as hellit's common in my culture to have ceremonies/celebrations where we kill and eat chickens/cows/pigs so yeah I know from experience[Edited on August 29, 2011 at 11:34 PM. Reason : not sure what definition of "free range" you have, after looking at wikipedia]
8/29/2011 11:34:19 PM
my dad actually helped make the report for NC on Grass Fed beef.its really nice to see some of the stuff they found and read about it if you are eating it.http://www.mocagbiz.com/outreach/gfbeef/MOCGrassfedBeefFINALREPORT.pdftake a look...and there is a good place out in Greenville that we got ours from when the survey was done. I will try and get the name of the place.and yes, farm raised is better than mass produced. also depends on the way you cook it.
8/30/2011 12:16:14 AM
So, you buy a bunch of meat to ruin it in the freezer?That sounds like a far better solution
8/30/2011 12:31:55 AM
corn fed cattle just tastes better than grass fed
8/30/2011 1:04:45 AM
My dad bought and raised a pig last year...the sausage was ok, but the the bacon was easily the best bacon Ive ever had.He bought two this year...Im highly looking forward to their demise
8/30/2011 2:12:30 AM
all i eat is chicken and beef (rarely do i eat pork. maybe once a month, and i eat meat of some type every meal).as far as the chicken goes, i haven't really tasted much difference between free-range and steroid-induced... the biggest difference is size. When you're on a budget like I am, the steroid-induced chickens are the most cost efficient. I'm ok with that.As far as beef, there's more of a distinct difference in flavor between grass fed and corn fed, but I still prefer corn fed due to, as i said before, price and value. I can sacrifice the warm fuzzies and a slight taste difference for the savings. That said, if there was a more economical way to mass-produce grass fed beef and free-range chickens, I'd be all for it. Things being what they are, though, I'm not bothered by it at all.[Edited on August 30, 2011 at 2:40 AM. Reason : .]
8/30/2011 2:40:23 AM
I care most that the chicken is given vegetarian feed and neither are given antibiotics. Secondary to that is that the beef doesn't stand knee deep in shit. Rare Earth Farms at the farmers market rules.
8/30/2011 6:56:38 AM
The meathouse is grass-fed & free range. So is almost all the stuff at the farmers market. Why are you getting it shipped, when there is plenty in the area.
8/30/2011 7:46:11 AM
Yea. Your hippie friends are going to be PISSED when they hear you're killing the earth by having meat shipped to you instead if buying locally.[Edited on August 30, 2011 at 7:56 AM. Reason : Duh]
8/30/2011 7:56:05 AM
Not sure where you get your info from but hormones aren't used on chickens.
8/30/2011 8:27:03 AM
^I was wondering that myself. No need to freeze a shitload from VA when you can get that stuff all over NC. Especially in the triangle. Hell I am loving the variety here in Carrboro with Weaver Street Co-op and the farmers market maybe a mile away from my apartment.As for grass vs. corn, I have to say that the chickens don't have a terrible life. I have grown up around my uncles farm where he raises chickens for Perdue, and they have a pretty damn nice setup in his 3-4 houses. They are kept nice and clean, get fed and watered regularly, and have a good temperature set for them at all times. Shit they did not even lose power during the hurricane because he had a big ass generator setup for them. So yea antibotics and hormones aside, the chickens have a pretty nice life, even in a "factory" farm.[Edited on August 30, 2011 at 8:34 AM. Reason : ]
8/30/2011 8:31:32 AM
8/30/2011 8:35:33 AM
^^ your uncle's farm is nothing like a a lot of the problem factory farms then (which is a good thing).Many true factory farms the birds are overfed with low quality food and kept restricted to very little movement. This allows them to grow the birds as big as possible in a short amount of time without hormones and also results in a higher saturated fat content than normal chickens would have (and is not always reported correctly). Sure they're bigger but they are more unhealthy.I really don't care too much about the quality of life for the chicken itself so I don't really approach the whole organic / free range/ etc. debate from that angle, but I do care about the quality of my food.And no, hormones are not currently approved for use in poultry (though plenty are for beef). Just antibiotics (which is also not great for us).[Edited on August 30, 2011 at 8:44 AM. Reason : ]
8/30/2011 8:43:09 AM
8/30/2011 8:47:57 AM
Eh again I don't really care about the condition of them so much, but I know some use the argument of "free range is more ethical". Also the people that say that hogs get beat and abused just for the pleasure of the farmers. My uncle has about 3 hog houses that are maybe 10 years old and I have never seen anybody mistreating the animals. Hell they also had power during the entire hurricane as well.If you are making the choice solely based on the quality/taste then so be it. But I have never personally understood people that claim that all farmers are abusive, as I think it is easier, less stressful, and ultimately more profitable for everybody to keep the animals happy and content.
8/30/2011 9:26:41 AM
^What about antibiotic laden meat and the likelihood of creating super bugs.
8/30/2011 9:34:33 AM
^That would obviously fall under quality & taste. Hell I am considering getting milk from Maple View Farms because it is antibiotic and all that other BS free for my kids, who love milk. I don't think their milking herd are magically treated better than cattle in 95% of other farms though. I was specifically talking about groups or people who claim to not eat meat because the animals live terrible lives of abuse and degradation.[Edited on August 30, 2011 at 9:44 AM. Reason : ]
8/30/2011 9:41:03 AM
most of them do live pretty crappy, unsanitary lives, it just doesn't bother me as bad as the quality of the food that results (as bad as that may sound). You have to be careful even with "free range" and "organic" too with as terrible as the FDA is at defining and qualifying.
8/30/2011 9:57:06 AM
8/30/2011 10:01:30 AM
After watching Food Inc and reading all kinds of Paleo articles I would like to eat grass fed beef but it is so expensive. The one time I went to The Farmer's Market to buy some the guy working at the Rare Earth Farms booth was really nice and informative. I guess I need to find someone to split some cow with but I don't even know if I have enough freezer space or how to deal with the large cuts of meat.[Edited on August 30, 2011 at 10:50 AM. Reason : .]
8/30/2011 10:49:19 AM
some more sites that sell naturally fed free-range meats, including specialty meats such as bison, rabbit, pheasant, elk, venison, etc.http://www.blackwing.comhttp://www.grasslandbeef.com
8/30/2011 10:53:07 AM
8/30/2011 11:14:58 AM
if you want free range animals, start hunting deer and waterfowl. I personally don't want you douchebags encouraging the spread of blackleg and brucellosis because you're willing to pay a farmer more not to vacinnate his herd.That, and beef chock full of zeranol and trenbolone marblizes better. less saturated fat, higher concentrations of unsaturated fats, and higher Omega-3 contents sound like a good thing to me. Zeranol and Trenbolone also increase feed efficiency, which means the animal converts more of what it eats into tissue. If you're a conservationalist, you should be able to see higher herd yield per acre as a good thing.
8/30/2011 11:32:27 AM
8/30/2011 12:06:45 PM
Yea, multiple studies have shown that omega 3 content, polyunsaturated fat, and saturated fat contents are consistently better (respectively higher and lower) than the hormone pumped beef regardless of what they say about the hormones. The hormones let them grow faster though meaning they are ready for chop and sale quicker.Also, as far as vaccines and antibiotics, no one is saying it is bad to use them period. Like ^ said, it is the overuse that is becoming a problem. They are pumped with so much stuff as a preventative measure even when they probably don't need it that they are becoming less effective and in turn there is growing concern that the antibiotics are becoming less effective in humans as well.[Edited on August 30, 2011 at 12:19 PM. Reason : ]
8/30/2011 12:13:26 PM
8/30/2011 12:15:58 PM
My study is better than your study.
8/30/2011 12:16:18 PM
well you just have to look at the study. It's like the whole thing with ethanol or high fructose corn syrup. Sure, their research says there is no problem - what about all the research in academia that is showing the opposite?Remember, a lot of tobacco companies had plenty of studies saying how safe smoking was in the 50s, but who paid for the research to back their claims?Don't get me wrong, I still eat a good burger or BBQ sandwich every once in awhile if I am out somewhere with friends or at a friend's house for dinner and I don't fret over where it came from. But the stuff that I consume on a regular basis I try and be a little more selective with. Is it worth it? It is to me. (I don't ever eat meat at home anymore though).[Edited on August 30, 2011 at 12:26 PM. Reason : ]
8/30/2011 12:21:17 PM
All of the people involved with those studies had no incentive to flub anything like the cig companies did.I trust all of the work done in them, I know the people and they are all legit, honest scientist
8/30/2011 12:24:49 PM
8/30/2011 12:25:18 PM
^^ sorry, I should have been more clear. I agree with you. I'm saying the studies backing the fact that hormones have provided better health content are generally funded by the industry who is pumping them full of hormones. Same as the people who claim ethanol isn't harmful to engines or your body doesn't know the difference between sugar or high fructose corn syrup.I'm not sure where eleusis got the info from, but most 3rd party studies I have read (if not all) found that the free range cattle had higher marks in most if not all categories they were checking versus the factory beef with hormones. Europeans already stopped buying most beef from the US within the past 10 years because of the hormone controversy after a bunch of their research proved there was more harm than benefit with Zeranol and Trenbolone being two of the things discussed. US factory farmers won't stop because it would lower their yield so they have to come up with a different excuse for why they use the hormones.[Edited on August 30, 2011 at 12:39 PM. Reason : ]
8/30/2011 12:27:01 PM
8/30/2011 12:33:57 PM
8/30/2011 12:56:59 PM
Actually I think most people were talking about antibiotics being the biggest problem. I also stated that a lot of the research proved "more harm than benefit" when discussing hormones meaning that though some benefits were seen, the potential side effects are not really worth the risk or in many cases the positive impacts were overstated.And I know what you are saying about grass fed versus corn fed and I also know exactly what the studies are telling me. However, most of the beef factories are using corn-fed diets and then using the hormones to "catch up". Basically in an attempt to grow cattle as healthy as the grass-fed but as quickly as the corn fed. That is the problem. I'm just not really big on artificial enhancement. Maybe I'm old fashioned or just an overly stubborn mindset when it comes to health. I dono.[Edited on August 30, 2011 at 1:11 PM. Reason : ]
8/30/2011 12:59:12 PM
^^ Dear Lord no one in here has said anything negative about vaccines. Reading comprehension a little rusty today?
8/30/2011 1:05:28 PM
I won't get into the vegetarian vs. eating meat debate (I've been ~ 95% veg for almost 12 years and can't see that changing), but I do really like the local meat movement that has coalesced in the last few years. It makes sense to me economically, health wise for both people and animals, and environmentally that our food should come from nearby us. I don't think anyone mentioned buffalo burgers. Those were pretty tasty when I tried one several years ago.Less fat, good quality protein, and tasted pretty good. I also grew up near an ostrich farm and would eat those birds in a heartbeat. They were pretty ill tempered when we would visit.
8/30/2011 4:05:16 PM
My GF is in bio engineering and she insists that the grassfed meat is much better for you. I know when we went to whole foods the beef was from Yadkin County. I think one of the main reasons is because the Yadkin farmers don't use any artificial steroids, etc to mature the cow. And apparently without the steroids the cow can take another 2 years to mature, which is probably why it is more expensive.
8/30/2011 4:11:56 PM
8/30/2011 4:54:47 PM
Wow. This thread exploded.I am particularly amused by those of you who wondered why I got the meat from VA.I live in Newport News.And as far as what I will be doing with it, well...http://www.oldsmokey.com/Products/OSCG/oldsmokeycharcoal.html
8/30/2011 5:57:21 PM
Well that makes sense then And mmm smoked meats....
8/30/2011 7:58:13 PM
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8/30/2011 8:28:38 PM
good meat is good
8/30/2011 9:08:53 PM
The taste is different but the health risks are much greater with corn fed meet. e-coli is a byproduct of feeding cows corn and it not agreeing with their digestive system. you can eat grass fed beef raw. not rare. raw.
8/30/2011 9:17:23 PM
I often wonder about that meat at Whole Foods. I read some articles claiming their meat isn't as pasture raised as they want you to believe. I don't know if that's just some uptight hippies or truth though.
8/30/2011 9:18:57 PM
its truth and they admit it. they have a scale that explains how hardcore free range it is. one level means they let the animals out once a week, one level menas they let them out every day and one level means they are completely free range. its not exactly like i said but there are like 7 color-coded levels.
8/30/2011 9:31:36 PM
^They say they're beef was from Yadkin county farmers when I went in the other day.
8/30/2011 9:51:00 PM
^^^ Direct to farmers is best though. At least Whole Foods does pledge vegetarian feed and antibiotic free meat for EVERYTHING they sell.http://www.wholefoodsmarket.com/meat/welfare.php[Edited on August 30, 2011 at 10:24 PM. Reason : a]
8/30/2011 10:23:04 PM
Food Inc. sucked.It made the farmers seem like the bad guys and they arent.Plus these farmers are helping millions of people eat...thats why I hated it.
8/31/2011 12:59:14 AM