5 Reasons to Add Grass-fed Beef to Your Grocery List
August/September 2007
Alison Rogers
 |
Choose grass-fed beef for a safe and healthy alternative to supermarket options.
ISTOCKPHOTO/SHAUNL
|
It's the middle of August, time to gather your friends for that
barbeque you've been promising to host all summer. But before you
run to the grocery store for a couple pounds of ground beef for the
hamburgers, consider this: There's a healthier, safer,
better-tasting alternative. One that supports small-scale farms, a
healthy eco-system and the animals' welfare. That
alternative is grass-fed beef.
RELATED ARTICLES
Beef from a cow raised on pasture is a safer choice than feedlot beef, offers richer flavor and mor...
As a small producer of grass-fed beef, I would like to thank Nancy Smith (“Better Beef,” October/No...
Talk Back to Your Mother...
Labels that identify a package of beef as “grass-fed” don’t always tell the whole story. To ensure ...
While most of the beef found in supermarkets is an engineered
commodity, far removed from the source of protein and other
essential nutrients it formerly represented, many producers are
revisiting the 'grass roots' of the business and bringing us better
beef. There are lots of reasons to seek out a grass-fed beef
supplier in your area ? here are five of them:
- Grass-fed beef is low in saturated fat, yet high in omega-3
fatty acids, beta carotene, vitamin E, folic acid and antioxidants.
Conjugated linoleic acid, thought to reduce the risk of breast
cancer and diabetes, also is higher in pastured beef.
- Grass-fed cattle don't require regular administration of
antibiotics to combat the spread of infection that is common in
densely packed feedlots. According to the
Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention, approximately 70 percent of the
antibiotics and similar drugs produced in the United States are
used on livestock, creating antibiotic-resistant bacteria that
health facilities are finding hard to treat.
- Grass-fed beef production practices do not typically include
the injection of hormones to spur growth. The U.S. Food and Drug
Administration has approved six different kinds of steroidal
hormones for use in food production, according to a
report from Cornell University, and many are concerned that
these pharmaceuticals increase the risk of breast cancer and
reproductive problems in humans. (Wildlife, too, is affected ? the
hormones are present in cattle waste and end up in creeks, rivers,
lakes and ponds.)
- Grass-fed beef is much less likely to harbor acid-resistant
E.coli. A diet consisting primarily of grain creates an acidic
condition in a cow's digestive system, and the bacteria that
survive this pH level are resistant to a human's stomach acid. The
result is not pretty. However, a natural diet of grass does not
create this acidic environment, and study after study has confirmed
that there is much less E. coli in grass-fed meat products. (Read
News from Mother: Why Grass Fed is Best for more
information.)
- Grass-fed cattle herds have never been affected by Mad Cow
Disease. Large confined feeding operations will add just about
anything to the feed they use in order to produce the most weight
gain in the shortest time possible. Sometimes this includes
processed cattle brains, which is how the disease is spread.