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Short answer: You need to ask for it - but it's available.
Update:
This article was originally driven by the idea that Grass-Fed Beef contains much more Omega-3 fatty acid than Grain-Fed Beef. It turns out that the Grass-Fed is indeed much better than the Grain-Fed - but the tone of the article implies that the volume of Omega-3 found in the Grass-Fed is very high when, in fact, it is not so high. The figure quoted in many articles is 60% more than what is found in Grain-Fed Cows - which is arguably not a massive amount. Nevertheless, additional research suggests:
- We don't need massive amounts of Omega-3 in our diets. The health issues that we face are best served by reducing bad fats and maintaining a balance of good fats in our bodies. Again, please see the references below and search the Health web sites for additional information.
- There are additional benefits to Grass-Fed Beef that are not referenced in this article. Please check the references at the bottom and Google for additional references.
- The beef you buy may be fed a mixture of grass and grain. Canadian cows are not always outside due to the weather. The farmer or rancher who is raising them may feed them grains as well as hay while in the barn. This will reduce the level of Omega-3 fatty acids in the meat.
I've been on a bit of health kick lately. Recently I found out
something that is quite shocking - you're not going to like it - but
you need to know. Don't worry - I'll also tell you how to work around the
problem:
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| Credit: Daniel Schwen via Wikipedia | |
Remember all those old cowboy movies - how the cows are driven
out into the fields so that they can graze on the grass? That's
not what happens these days.
The Problem
It turns out that most cows no longer eat grass. Apparently they
don't get to roam around the fields anymore, either. It turns out that
a cow will fatten-up real quick if you feed him grains but not so
quick if you let him walk around eating grass and hay. To get the cows
to fatten-up as quickly as possible, the farmers are apparently
feeding a grain mixture (mostly corn,) to the cows.
Here's the punch line:
It turns out that grass is full of Omega 3's. If you feed the cows
with grass, they produce milk and meat that is rich in Omega 3's. Cows
used to be machines that converted sunlight into healthy milk and
meat. If you feed grains to the cows - well, grains are mostly carbs
and, as with humans, cows store excess sugar in the form of saturated
fat. So, grain-fed cows give us milk and beef that is rich in
saturated fat - but devoid of Omega 3's. Today cows are machines that
convert sugar into fatty milk and meat. This is not good.
Let me put it another way:
Those vegetarians who sound like over-zealous fear-mongers are
sort-of right in what they've been saying! The cow milk and beef that
was so good for our grandparents has turned into a major source of
saturated fat in our diets - essentially a slow-acting poison because
we eat so much of it.
It would be great if we ate grass-fed beef and drank grass-fed milk
most of the year. We could then enjoy a saturated-fat-filled grain-fed
steak on the barbecue from time to time with no ill-effects. But
that's not what we're doing - we're eating the bad stuff all the
time. Then, when we get into trouble, the doctors tell us to make sure
we get some Omega 3's to help solve all the health problems we've got
- but Omega 3's are hard to find in our society. So we're stuck trying
to find wild fish. Wild fish is hard to find.
Even that wouldn't be so bad if it was just the beef - we could
reduce the volume of steak and the number of burgers we eat without
having to become vegetarians... The problem is that the milk is
equally affected. Think about it: Ice Cream wasn't as bad for you a
hundred years ago as it is now. Cheese was good for you a hundred
years ago - now it's something you need to eat in limited
portions. Even butter was better back then - much better.
One hundred years ago we would have complied with our doctor's order by having a glass of milk. Today it's much harder.
Another sad bit of unwanted info: Apparently the cows walk around
dumping their waste but they don't get to go far - so they're walking
around on a mound of their own cow pies. At the same time, the grains
don't agree with the cows. They've got a stomach acid problem in
reaction to all the grains they eat because their stomachs are
designed to process grass. It seems that the cows are fighting a
losing battle against bad bacteria in their stomachs. Scientists think
that this battle, along with the fact that all the cows are walking
around on a mound of their own waste (ie: distributing the bad
bacteria among themselves,) will hasten the evolution of a strain of
bad bacteria that might turn into a serious problem.
The Simple Solution
We need to take action. Let's not wait for anybody to do it for us
- after all we're talking about our health here. Let's just do what we
need to do right now. Here's how:
Education is the key to fixing this problem. Start by telling
your friends: the food we eat today is not the same as the food our grandparents
used to eat - and some of the differences need to be (and can be)
corrected.
Next, find some Grass-Fed beef!
It turns out that there are quite a few farmers all over the
continent who are offering grass-fed beef. If you google
"Grass
Fed Beef" you will be surprised at the number of pages you get
back.
It turns out that there are already quite a few grocery stores that
are offering this healthy alternative. This is in response to a market demand
that already exists. This is not related to Omega 3's - many people have known
for a long time that grass-fed beef is
much more lean than grain-fed beef. See, for example, this
article from the CBC published in 2002. People have
been asking for it not to
reverse the ill effects of years of poor diet but rather as part of a
generally healthy lifestyle.
All you need to do is ask around for grass-fed beef. If you find
some - great, you can enjoy it. A few minutes on Google and I found
places here in Montreal where I can get Bison (which is apparently
often grass-fed.) I'll speak with my local grocers soon - the price
for grass-fed beef at a local grocery store might be as much as double
the price of grain-fed - but that's going to change as more and more
people come to understand the difference. As demand for the good stuff
improves the pricing should start to enjoy the benefits of
competition.
Another Solution
If you don't find any grass-fed beef in your area - that's not so
bad either. The wholesale price for grass-fed beef seems, from my
research so far, not to be very high by comparison with the retail price
of regular beef. The implication is that if you make the extra effort
to get the good stuff from a wholesale supplier you won't have to pay
so much of a premium for it.
Some farms offer direct retail service with no minumum
order. Unfortunately many farms don't. Wholesale orders often involve
a minimum purchase. One farm here in Quebec advertises a 250lb minimum
order on their web site (about 100kg.)
To get the good stuff you might need to get together with your
neighbors and place a group order. This doesn't have to be a
complicated process. If you look around your neighborhood you will
likely find several butcher shops - some big and some small. It
shouldn't be too difficult to find one butcher in your area who will
collect names of customers until he can justify placing an order for a
side of grass-fed beef.
To help the process move forward quickly: start by preparing a
small note - half a page - letting people know that you would like to
order some lean, Omega 3 rich, grass-fed beef. People can write their
names and phone numbers on the other half of the page. Post this on
the wall at the butcher shop and watch as people sign-up. When there
are enough names on the sheet, the butcher will know that he'll make a
profit. He'll sell the cuts from his first order of a carcass of
grass-fed beef and take it from there.
Marketing Counts
Keep in mind that the butcher has a business to run. He might feel
that his margin is too thin and the volume is too small at first; so
don't forget to keep-up the marketing effort: Remind the butcher about
the health benefits of lean beef, rich in Omega 3's.
Just keep
singing: Healthy customers buy more, no need to search for wild fish
to meet your doctors instructions, education and word-of-mouth
will improve demand, Omega-3's can help you clean-out your
arteries while grain-fed beef clogs them up - all that jazz.
Useful Links
Below are some links that I found through Google. Please look
around for grocery stores and farms in your area and let me know when
you find them! I'll be happy to keep a list of them so that other
people can find them quickly in your area. You can send an email with
this important information to: info at montrealfamily dot net.
Laura's Lean Beef Products
1-877-ITS-LEAN (487-5326)
P.O. Box 1399
STN B
Ottawa ON K1P 5R4
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http://www.laurasleanbeef.ca/
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Available at several
Loblaw's outlets in Ontario. From the web site:
At Laura's Lean Beef, we believe it is best to raise cattle the way
nature intended. We raise our cattle without the use of growth
hormones or antibiotics, feeding them a diet of natural grains and
grasses.
The way we see it, it's not part of nature's plan to give cattle
growth-stimulating hormones that artificially speed up weight gain and
improve feed efficiency. Neither is the use of antibiotics, when used
to speed growth and compensate for the cramped feedlot conditions in
which many cattle are raised. These are a less than ideal approach
when you're working with nature to produce food for human beings.
And because we believe healthier beef is leaner beef, we raise breeds
of cattle such as Limousin and Charolais, that produce beef that's
naturally lower in fat than beef from other breeds.
Since the beginning, Laura's Lean Beef has been committed to
sustainable agriculture, a practical and philosophical system of
farming and ranching which revolves around the responsible stewardship
of land and animals. The goals of sustainable farming management
practices are to produce food and fiber in a way which is
environmentally sound, economically viable, and humane.
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Ferme Borealis,
Inc.,
Lynda Tétreault,
236, Chemin Lisgar,
Ulverton, QC J0B 2B0
Cantons de l'est.
(819) 826-2056.
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http://www.fermeborealis.com/ |
Available in some parts of Quebec and at
some shops in Quebec. Check out the menus for Duck and Pie! From an
advertisement:
Borealis Farm is a family farm located in the Eastern Township of
Quebec. Our Highland beef and bison are exclusively fed with grass and
are raised outside all year around. They are grazing and pasturing
from spring to autumn. During winter months, the animals are fed with
home-grown hay. No grain is supplied (or any kind of grain silage) to
the animals. Our farm is organic certified by Bio-Ecocert.
Bison meat is available all year long at the farm and at certain
organic food stores in Montreal, Laval, south shore of Montreal,
Sherbrooke, Magog, Victoriaville, and Quebec city. On request,
delivery to the customer residence can be organised. Highland can be
found in a supermarket in St-Bruno or at the farm.
The animals are processed through a certified provincial meat
facility. All sizes from whole carcasses to individual cuts are
available. Also several kinds of sausages, meat pie, cannellonis,
spaghetti meat sauce, dry meat are available at all times.
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Morgan Farm
John Bastian
1 Van Horne,
Montreal, Quebec H2T 2J1
Tel.: 819/687-9021
Fax: 819.687.9926
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http://www.fermemorgan.com/
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From the Web Site:
We at Morgan Farm work hard to provide you with the highest quality and variety of organic foods.
We believe that organic food should be on top of the list of priorities for every person that wants to live a healthy life. Our external environment is already terribly polluted. By choosing to eat organic produce, you can minimize your intake of any additional pollutants or harmful chemicals.
What is organic food?
Organic food is grown in the most natural way. We do not use chemical fertilizers, herbicides, pesticides, growth hormones or antibiotics. We do not push or modify nature’s way of bringing the healthiest food to your table.
Farming organic also means that we do not use genetically modified foods or ingredients.
Our farm is controlled and certified by O.C.P.P.
How can you buy it?
Initially, we suggest that you visit our farm,
which is about an hour and a quarter northwest of Montreal - a real
treat for children - young and old.
Once you have seen and enjoyed the wide variety of organic meat and
bakery products, you have the choice of visiting us again, or you can
join those who simply call in their orders and pick them up from our
Montreal warehouse.
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Other links of interest
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