Being an NHF member, no doubt you are well aware of what
has been taking place with regards to how we produce and
grow food. In particular, factory faming has made
considerable inroads into the beef industry, destroying
“common sense” in exchange for easier profits. Smaller
farms have been replaced with large confinement facilities
that produce a steady stream of year-round supply of
meat. Although the food is cheap and convenient, factory
farming has created a variety of problems, not the least
of which is lack of nutrients and the introduction of
pharmacology and growth hormones into our meat (and
dairy).
Unnatural and Unhealthy Diets
Animals that are raised in a factory-farm environment are
given diets totally unnatural and unhealthy. These diets
are designed to boost productivity and lower feed bills.
The main ingredient found in factory farm beef is grain,
which has been kept at an artificially low price by the
government. To further cut costs, the grain may contain
many of what the industry calls “by-product feedstuffs.”
This is George Orwell’s “1984” terminology for municipal
garbage, stale cookies, poultry manure, chicken feathers,
bubble gum, and restaurant waste, to name a few.
Adding insult to injury, it was not until 1997 that the
USDA finally put a stop to feeding cattle, well, cattle.
That is right, the feeding of cow parts to cows - in
effect, turning herbivorous animals into cannibalistic
carnivores - was condoned up until just eight years ago.
It may have seemed like a good idea at the time, but the
long-term consequences are still unknown. This unnatural
practice is believed to be the underlying cause of “mad
cow disease.”
That bright-red, packaged beef many consumers believe
means fresh at your local grocer is in fact not. It is in
reality full of antibiotics, hormones, and even food dye.
In addition, factory farm beef is high in total fat,
saturated fat, and calories. Instead, healthy beef has a
dark purple color to it, more like wild venison or elk.
Grass-fed and grass-finished beef have a variety of
advantages over store-bought meat, not the least of which
is supporting small, independent farmers who have had the
conviction and character not to be pressured by the
large-production corporations. Raising beef in a pasture
or “grass farming” has its challenges. For instance, to
earn the certification of USDA “certified organic,” the
cow must be totally free of all hormones and antibiotics
throughout its entire life. If ever a cow becomes ill or
suspected of illness, it is immediately removed from the
“certified organic” program. This is something
non-certified organic beef or “natural” beef cannot
legally claim. Certified organic grass-fed and
grass-finished beef are never fed grain, and even the
pasture they graze on must be deemed totally free of
pesticides, herbicides, and nitrate fertilizers.
Look for certified, organic grass-fed and grass-finished
beef. Natural raised beef or “free range” or even “grass
fed’ mean nothing. A natural beef label may tell you what
it may not contain, but it will not differentiate as to
what it does actually contain. In addition, the cow’s
diet is not required to be organic. The USDA requires no
methods of inspection to determine what is or is not in a
natural beef product. Likewise, a cow can be designated
as “grass fed” even if the last 4 months of its life is in
a feed lot eating grains and “by-product feedstuffs.”
As in George Orwell’s book, USDA terminology does not
necessarily mean what we think it means. Likewise,
clever marketing phrases designed to confuse the consumer
and create the illusion that establishes a higher retail
price are prevalent. It pays to be an informed consumer.
So Why Switch to Grass-fed and
Grass-finished Beef?
The number one reason is that it is good for the
environment. Raising cattle on pasture is better for them
and the environment rather than in a conventional feedlot
operation. Transporting huge amounts of antibiotic- and
hormone-laced manure for dumping is not good for the dumps
soil or the groundwater. Pasture-raised cattle become a
welcome source of organic fertilizer and not a
waste-management problem.
Raising cattle on pasture requires knowledge and skill by
the ranchers and farmers. Cattle surviving in a feedlot
and pumped with hormones and antibiotics really only
requires a low-paying, stressed factory worker. No care
or humane treatment is bestowed upon the animal.
Grass-fed and grass-finished beef is lower in total fat.
If the meat is very lean, it can have one-third as much
fat as a cow raised on grain. Corn-fed beef may look
pretty, and is definitely tender; but, once again, the
meat is high in the wrong kind of fat. Grass-fed and
grass-finished beef is lower in fat and consequently
calories too. The greater the fat content, the greater
the calories.
Omega-3s: Your grass-fed/finished animal has two to four
times more omega-3 fatty acids than grain- or corn-fed
meat. Omega-3s are called the “good fats” because they
are vital to every cell and system in your body. Omega-3
fats are the most heart friendly and have been shown to
reduce blood pressure as well as regulate the heartbeat.
In addition, omega-3 fatty acids help combat depression
and Alzheimer’s disease as well as help reduce the risk of
cancer.
Feedlot cattle, whose primary diet is designed for
fattening (weight-gain), lose omega-3s fatty acids to the
point of actual total disappearance. So much for a
grass-fed cow spending the last four months confined to a
feed lot.
Finally, grass-fed and grass-finished beef are rich in
conjugated linoleic acid. This is another type of fat
typically known as CLA. Pasture-raised beef contains
three to five times more CLA then feedlot animals. CLA
has been shown to be a powerful defense against many types
of cancers and tumors.
When you get back to the pasture, you will find animals
that feed on what nature intended. No grain, corn,
antibiotics, or hormones, and definitely no “by-product
feedstuffs.” When you get back to the pasture, you are
also supporting small independent grass farmers. You are
safeguarding the environment, promoting humane animal
welfare, and eating good nutritious and organic food.
Above all, you are not ingesting whatever pharmaceutical
cocktail “they” decided to subject the beef too.
John Vnuk is an NHF member and a former member of the
NHF Board of Governors who lives in Eagle, Idaho with his
wife Dawn and their three boys, Jeremy, Jeffrey, and
Jameson. Mr. Vnuk is currently the president of Wildridge
Healthy Living LLC of Eagle, Idaho, a company that only
distributes certified organic meats and products. For
additional research material or information on today’s
“meat crisis” visit
www.idahoproducts.com or call the author at 1 (208)
830-9939.