Posted on 09/19/2009 5:43:40 PM PDT by Diana in Wisconsin
(People looking for humanely raised local meat, or just a better-tasting burger, are joining up to buy directly from the ranch. Not to mention it can cut the cost by 80% compared to store-bought meat.)
Picture a meat eating, bone sucking, finger-licking carnivore not exactly the face of an environmentalist, right?
But a new crop of meat eaters are greening their eating habits by demanding to know the face of their food in a quest for better quality meat that not only tastes better, but also comes from humanely treated animals.
Known as cowpoolers, these people band together to buy beef in bulk directly from their local farmers and ranchers. And since the average size of one cow runs at about 700 pounds, theres plenty of meat to go around.
According to many estimates, a pound of strip steak purchased through cowpooling costs between $3 and $5 -- compared to the equivalent $16 slab of meat at Whole Foods. So not only is cowpooling is better for the environment (its local), better tasting (say its adherents), but it's also better for your bottom line.
Though the term cowpooling has only recently become trendy, the idea of splitting cows among a group of people is a well-known concept, especially among rural folks like PJ Nikolic, a union carpenter based in Momence, Ill. My family and I have been buying whole cows directly from farmers since I was little, Nikolic says. The quality of the meat is 100 times better than the kind in the store. Plus, youre helping to support local farmers.
Though Nikolic wouldnt exactly call himself an environmentalist, he says that doesnt mean he wants to eat cows that have been given steroids or hormones.
I like that the cow is what the cow is, theres no growth hormones added, he says. Plus, naturally grown meat is so much more tender. It creates an overall better product in the long run.
Beth Osmund, who owns Cedar Valley Sustainable Farm in Ottawa, Ill., along with her husband, Jody, says she recommends cowpooling to large families or groups of people who have a lot of freezer space as an economical way to buy high-quality meat.
A whole cow will usually yield about 550 pounds of usable meat, which will easily last at least a year in the freezer, she says. Plus, as compared to retail prices and to our CSA prices, its considerably less per pound, so its more economical to buy the whole cow.
Though Osmund doesnt have any hard data on how much cowpooling has helped increase her sales, she says that overall the business has been doing pretty well this year, despite the economic times, or maybe because of it.
I think more people are eating out less, they are nesting more or focusing inward on food, she says. Also, people are increasingly concerned about the health and well-being of animals as well as their own well-being.
Buying an entire cow, or any whole animal for that matter, can be intimidating for most of us who were raised on meat that comes in neat little shapes and packages. But farms like the Osmunds make the process easier by walking their customers through all the steps, like advising them on what cuts of meat to expect (such as round steak, New York Strip, or ground beef), and going over jargon like hanging weight, which is the weight of the animal before slaughter.
People are a little intimidated by talking to the butcher for their cutting instructions, but we have the advantage of working with a really terrific butcher that will talk people through the process and ask all the questions, Osmund says. Its really a pretty simple process.
Finding enough people to share an entire animal is another challenge, especially for city dwellers who dont know the names of their next-door neighbor, much less whether they want to split a cow with them.
To fill this gap, websites are slowly cropping up that provide online forums where people can hook up to buy meat, rather than just hook up.
Tamar Adler, co-founder of The Bay Area Meat CSA in San Francisco, created her site after coming across people looking to get local meat.
I wanted to create a virtual community where people could find their neighbors and do for themselves what I had been helping them do, which is go in on a whole animal, she says.
The result is a site thats centered on the idea of community-supported agriculture, Facebook-style, which also contains tips like how to split a cow among 20 people.
People interested in sharing a whole animal can first look on the site to see if one of the 27 groups listed is in their area, or, if not, start their own group. They can then write on the groups message board to seek out people interested in purchasing meat together.
The overall goal is to use whatever open-source technology is available to help people build the kind of real world communities that are so hard to find right now and use that community mindset and all the benefits of a community to develop a relationship with the people who grow their food, Adler says.
Ranchers can also use the site to promote their products as long as the meat is good, clean and fair. Though Adler admits that she doesnt inspect the ranches, she does talk with each rancher to discuss his/her practices to make sure that they meet the sites standards.
Not a day goes by without a rancher contacting me to talk about their product, says Adler, whos hoping the site will branch out to other areas of the country like New York and Georgia.
The sites users arent just limiting themselves to cows, however.
Sally Sweetser, a commercial real estate appraiser in Martinez, Calif., recently went in with seven other local residents to buy a Berkshire hog from Wind Dancer Ranch, a small family farm in Northern California that humanely raises heritage livestock.
She said shes become more conscious of where her food comes from and how its processed in part after seeing the documentary Food, Inc., which takes an inside look at the industrial food system.
I didnt want to become a vegetarian, so I figured that if were going to eat the animals, at least they could be treated well, Sweetser says.
...not allowed by the buyers: some particular associations of feedlot owners. Here’s an example from the small operations. One of the “organic” operations is owned by a teacher and a local government worker (”partners,” apparently “gay”). The two are related to corporates (one big Republican property developer and one Republican importer) work to stop any new property owners from building new houses.
...also saw many other small businesses shut down or prevented from starting by “environmentalist” members of such families. That’s why I’m also now politically “unaffiliated.” Our country is ruled by such bipartisan families at all levels including state and county. The corporate heads each donate to both political parties, pay lobbyists to continue social programs (to keep the potential competition—working class families—down).
I’m in the Northwest, near Kansas, BTW. ...left the Midwest, because it was getting to be the same way there but with more violence and drug involvements by “pillars” of those communities.
Thats because you are in flyover country. If its from the NE or West then its smart and trendy.
Multiply those by 3 to 5 bucks and you have what it costs around here.
“I share a pasture with an Angus bull.”
So you’ve been put out to pasture?
Actually there are new govt regulations for farmers markets and anyone selling or growing food.
/johnny
The gooberment can pound sand. I shall grow my food as I have always done, and trade or sell or give it away, as I have always done.
If they want me, they can come get me. This pasture has 3 bulls and one mean old grump with guns. It ain't necessarily safe for city boys with slick-bottomed loafers and a warrant to arrest for unlawful vegetables.
/johnny
I would guess this is much like the small dairy farms in the SW who got forced to stop selling to small buyers, instead having to sell through the co-op (racket).
EAT MOR CHIKUN!!
/johnny
Oh good grief, this goes on all the time here in the boonies.
We just split a Black Angus we a co-worker. It was 1100 lbs when it went to slaughter. We paid $300 to the rancher and $150 to the butcher and got over 225 lbs of meat. It is so good unlike anything you get from a market.
When working full time and trying to keep the cows in hay got to be too much, we had all our three cows butchered--two of them went totally into hamburger--and it was THE BEST hamburger I've ever eaten.
And of course every time we butchered a cow, my husband would relate the story of the time he and his brother-in-law decided to butcher a cow they'd raised together so that each could keep a half. As they stood over their respective sides of beef with knives keenly sharpened for the task at hand, the brother-in-law looked up and asked, with a totally straight face: "How in the heck are we supposed to know where to cut when there ain't no dotted lines?"
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I shop at HEB but it’s a Texas chain so you wouldn’t have them around you. We ate down the freezer a couple months ago to help save on the budget but now with good sales it’s full. Also found some off brand polish sausage for about a dollar so bought two of two flavors so hope they’re good. Can’t imagine how we’d be able to afford the prices around you.
It’s named after H. E. Butt so the old joke is that HEB was going to buy out Piggly Wiggly and become Wiggly Butt, lol!
http://www.heb.com/services/storeReview_showWeeklyAds.jsp?storeid=24
Nah. I eat cute little deer first. ;) I don’t think I’ve had beef in 15 years.
Dolly Parton is in negotiations with Piggly Wiggly, Harris Teeter, and Big Lots for a merger.
She’s going to call it “Big Wiggly Teeters!!”
Oh, you are sooo bad, lol!
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