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10-03-2007, 11:54 AM
| | Banned Culinary Experience: Other | | Join Date: Dec 2006 Location: San Francisco Bay Area, California, USA
Posts: 3,416
| | Quote:
Originally Posted by fstfrdy The very good points of animal stress and quaility of meat as a result have been discussed endlessly. This has encouraged me to seek out meat from crdible sources where I know that the prossess is humaine. Wise advice from the Shroom once agin. | For so many of us location and time constraints make getting to the ranch or farm very difficult, not that it can't be done. It's a matter of priorities, I suppose. However, it's not too difficult to research these matters and make your choices informed choices. Shop at a local farmer's market and ask questions (not only for meat, but for all your food items), search the internet, talk to the local butcher or poultry purveyor, or produce people, buy your food outside of the supermarket/costo/walmart models whenever possible.
Even here in the San Francisco area, mecca to such things, one may have to work at getting the best quality and safest foods, which may mean shopping at several markets and not just cruising down the aisle at Whole Foods or the local natural grocery. It took time to find the items and the markets that satisfied me. I believe it was worth the investment.
Shel
Last edited by shel; 10-03-2007 at 12:12 PM.
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10-03-2007, 12:37 PM
|  | Registered User Culinary Experience: Professional Caterer | | Join Date: Jun 2007 Location: Quincy IL
Posts: 33
| | Quote:
Originally Posted by greyeaglem As you can see by my "handle", I'm American Indian. We have a different way of looking at things that I hope I can explain. In our world, everything is the same and has the same value whether it's human, animal, plant or rock. Everything has a soul, one no more important than the other. Animals need to live, we need to live. We recognize the gift of their life as a sacrifice so we can live, and thank their spirit. Accept the gift in the spirit it is given, don't waste anything, and enjoy your steak. Someday the bear may eat you. | One of my good friends father is Native American and also a butcher. He always said "Enjoy the meal why you can, you never know if you will, someday be the meal." I agree fully
__________________ "Can't stand the heat call JJ"S Kitchen"
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10-03-2007, 02:08 PM
| | Registered User Culinary Experience: Cook At Home | | Join Date: Sep 2007 Location: Dublin
Posts: 13
| | slaughtering is unpleasant but if you think it through where do you stop?
if you don't eat meat you can rely heavily on dairy. dairy requires cows to have calves. during a demonstration in the UK one time ( against cows beinhg shipped to France) a farmer pointed out, on Tv, that the vegetarians want the dairy but don't have solution for disposing of the calves.
if you then decide not to eat dairy either, it (vegan) is a very hard diet to stay healthy on and often requires supplements (calcium and Iorn in partic) and its particularily hard to rear children that way as they need so much calcium and iorn.
Then I suppose you should not wear leather or any hide. but would we then be using alot of plastics/ man made fibres ( soles of shoes) I sure it can be argued that you can wear cotton or wool.
what about all the insects that get mashed when you harvest the cotton? or delouse the sheep?
I think you should eat the cow and wear the hide. i think the animals should be treated humanely so i do try to buy organic/free range etc.
i love what greyeaglem says... the bear won't worry about your feelings or how your life was... if you are dinner you are dinner.
don't know if that helps young gun.
no bears round here TG!! | 
10-03-2007, 03:08 PM
|  | Registered User Culinary Experience: Culinary Student | | Join Date: Sep 2006 Location: Sacramento, CA
Posts: 420
| | meat If you look at it physiologically, humans have the digestive enzymes, dietary need, and even the tooth structure to eat plants AND animals. But when it comes to ethics, it is a personal choice.....
I personally eat a lot of game meat, as my husband is a hunter. Now we firmly believe in a 1-shot kill. Unlike those hunters that will shoot and animal and then have to chase it for miles while it slowly bleeds to death, my husband believes that if he can't drop the animal with one shot, he won't take it. There should be a certain respect for the animal. But I feel good about serving this meat to my family, as I know where it came from and how it was handled. I know it was cleaned and chilled right away, and since I do all my own cutting- I know it is clean and sanitary. We do not eat cats and dogs only because we have developed a personal relationship with them... but there is no reason why they could not be eaten... they do in other countries ... (but, no I'm not eating my dogs) but I do eat (or have eaten) venison, wild boar, rabbit, squirrel, frogs legs, ostrich, and alligator. I t comes down to a personal choice.... but mush of our commercially prepared items have animal products in them- stocks, boullions, gelatins, etc.... I eat meat becuase I like it, and it meets my dietary/health needs... but I prefer to eat meat that is organic or personally hunted..... Bambi burger anyone?? LOL
__________________ Bon Vive'  ! | 
10-03-2007, 04:59 PM
| | Registered User Culinary Experience: Cook At Home | | Join Date: May 2007 Location: Houston
Posts: 380
| | Jayme nice post. You pretty much echoed my beliefs. I grew up with a family who hunted and fished for most of our protein. My dad was a Marine and also believed in the one shot kill and anything killed would be eaten. We didn't hunt for sport. The way he explained it to us was that we were the conservators of a series of populations whether that was ducks, geese, fish, deer, boar, rabbit, javalina, etc...and that our responsibility was to manage the herd on our land since the natural large predators were gone. To keep the balance of nature going. So we would look to shoot animals that we would not want breeding (i.e. in deer it would be spikes and small does, old bucks past their prime, etc.). It worked and we saw that by the build up of our herds of different wild life on our property that weren't there when we bought it. We only hunted in blinds and in accordance with the parks and wildlife seasons etc.
We broke down our own animals and even then we used darn near every part of an animal. And we broke them down immediately, not letting them sit. I still have some deer hides shot by my dad over 50 years ago!! All this was pointing to having respect for your food and raw ingredients, animal, mineral or vegetable! We also raised rabbit for food for quite awhile. So I guess I have differing views than someone who didn't grow up hunting.
I also believe that an animal should not be stressed during life or imminent death because of the hormones released due to that...
A good source for those who are not aware: Eat Wild is a cool resource for grass fed produce in or near your communities. | 
10-03-2007, 11:11 PM
| | Registered User Culinary Experience: Professional Chef | | Join Date: Apr 2006 Location: S.E. Minnesota
Posts: 280
| | I may have left some of you with a wrong perception of me. I'm hypocritical enough to admit that if I had to butcher and process my own meat, I would be a vegetarian. However, I'm not. The thing to remember is all things have a purpose in this world. If, for instance, cattle weren't being raised for food, they wouldn't be raised at all. Everything is born, everything dies. The circle goes on. Sometimes we look too hard at things and make them more complicated than they really are. The farmer feeds the pig, the pig lives his life and then feeds the farmer. The farmer dies and is buried, and his body feeds the apple tree that grows on his grave. The apple feeds the pig and there we are again. So which is more important; the pig, the apple or the farmer?
Last edited by greyeaglem; 10-14-2007 at 06:43 PM.
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10-03-2007, 11:31 PM
| | Registered User Culinary Experience: Professional Chef | | Join Date: Mar 2007 Location: Minnesota
Posts: 42
| | Quote:
Originally Posted by YoungGun Hey there,
I've been recently having troubles cooking, eating, and especially butchering most red meats- lamb, beef, etc, as well as pork due to the fact that my conscience is creeping up on me. I've done a small amount of research which has made me feel even worse about it- pigs are the 5th smartest animal it seems, and many studies have shown a distinct registration of fear/anxiety even before the actual killing process of the animal. It seems that cows, sheep, lambs, pigs, and various other animals we use for meat are relatively high-functioning and thinking. They have memories and exhibit human characteristics and feelings including love, jealousy, and fear. I'm wondering, after a lifetime of eating meat, if I will be able to get over my conscience, or if it's something I even want to get over. I'm questioning why we condemn societies eating dogs, cats, tigers, and horses when we're eating one animal that is technically more intelligent than any of them, and several others of equal intelligence and feeling.
So my question is, how do you view farm and other animals commonly eaten in the Western world? Do you have a theory or information that makes you sleep better after processing and serving/eating it?
(side note: I seem to not put chicken or fish on the level of the aforementiioned animals, but opinions on them are appreciated as well.)
-youngGun |
And you've answered your own question, everything eats everything else. Only cultural taboo decides what is ok to eat and what isn't. Meat is Meat is meat. If your conscience is bothering you, only two things you can do, give up eating , cooking, and using animal byproducts all together,(tougher than you might think) or you can make sure that the animals you are using had a good life when they were alive. | 
10-04-2007, 04:07 PM
| | Registered User Culinary Experience: Retired Chef | | Join Date: Apr 2005
Posts: 107
| | now wouldn't that be great : the pig feeds the farmer, who feeds the apple tree. Oh come on! I just had to delete what I was writing cause I was getting madder and madder.
I think it is oldfashioned to label this a humane vs inhumane issue. I think it should be sustainable vs unsustainable issue. Just because you source your meat from the farmer down the road doesn't mean that said farmer has been any more responsible. Yes, I believe that the sustainable system is humane(really should be "quality of life") but I'm not well spoken enough to tell you why in less than 1000 words although if I had to chose one word it would be BALANCE. My mother told me oh so long ago "everything in moderation"...and it's true. Why do we have to have steak topped with foie gras? Why do we have to have foie gras every week? If we had kept Foie gras something very special then we would'nt be having this problem trying to serve it; we wouldn't have thousands of animals inhumanely neglected in huge confiment systems-we would have a handfull of responsible farmers force feeding their birds!
Be responsible: Eat meat, don't waste it. And always be aware that as chefs, you are the captain of this ship. Chefs Collaborative » Home Welcome to Certified Humane Raised & Handled | 
10-04-2007, 06:41 PM
|  | ChefTalk Moderator Culinary Experience: Professional Caterer | | Join Date: Aug 2000 Location: St. Louis Mo
Posts: 5,641
| | well said Rose.....not quite sure if we're on the same page, but I think so. | 
10-05-2007, 11:18 AM
| | Registered User Culinary Experience: Cook At Home | | Join Date: Sep 2007
Posts: 22
| | Sustainable is all well and good but the realities are that profitable drives sustainable, not the other way around. The best example of this are people who claim they are all for sustainable but shop at sams club for the cryovac stuff. They do that because of cost.
I grew up around farms and farming, my mother can tell stories about when they got electricity on the farm. The biggest lesson I learned from that was where food comes from and how it gets to the kitchen. That lesson has been lost or turned into something else for too many people. I think because of the easy replacement of the food, the store has lots more, waste is so much easier.
Whether you do your own butchering or buy it from a store, I believe that we as consumers of that product need to use it wisely. We can drive the profitable sustainable agriculture with the choices we make. If you don't know your farmers get to know a butcher who does!
George | 
10-05-2007, 11:29 AM
| | Registered User Culinary Experience: Cook At Home | | Join Date: May 2007 Location: Houston
Posts: 380
| | Rose I also think well said but I think part of the issue the market faces is an increasingly growing market and keeping up with demand without taking shortcuts. Not only is the population growing but education and world media bring information to people who might have been previously uneducated or unaware of a product. So the bigger question is how the sustainable farms movement can keep up with demand. | 
10-09-2007, 08:26 AM
|  | Registered User Culinary Experience: Culinary Instructor | | Join Date: May 2006 Location: PALM BEACH FLORIDA
Posts: 643
| | Meat and the USD Having been a chef for over 35 years, I sometimes stop and wonder, how come years ago we did not have all the problems from contaminated meat? I did research and found the the government has all but stopped inspecting meat plants and slaughter houses. They have put them on self inspection. This is a joke, as you and I have never met a poor butcher. In fact there are no butchers today. The carcases travel down a line and 10 or 15 people stand there, each trained to make 1 cut of the carcass. They have no health dept. permits and in fact are mostly illegal aliens. If an animal falls into the troughs, it is simply picked up, sometimes hosed down and put back on the line after falling into its own blood and waste. These packing houses get away with murder. Freezing and refrigeration another problem with them.
Having the products sit on the floor before putting in retail freezers in your local market till someone gets around to it increases bacterial growth. I am sure you have all seen this. Where does it end,? who knows but I implore you make sure you cook ground beef to at least 160 if not higher and wait for internal temp to keep a constant 160.
__________________ CHEFED | 
10-09-2007, 09:16 AM
|  | Registered User Culinary Experience: Line Cook | | Join Date: Mar 2005 Location: Lake Louise, Alberta
Posts: 496
| | I'm all for humane treatment of feed animals for increased quality of product and sustainable practices so we don't ruin it for future generations... but I think one goes too far to anthropomorphize everything in life. I mean, we don't condone the practice of high density feed lots for animals but we approve of high density agricultural practices that basically tries to squeeze as many plants in as small an area as possible. Are plants (and presumably insects and fish we breed for eating) not worthy of our utmost attention because they're not smart enough? Complex enough forms of life? Fact of the matter is, Humans need to ingest organic components to survive and unless you're going to be making inert pieces of organic matter in a lab to consume we're all being somewhat hypocritical. | 
10-11-2007, 12:10 AM
| | Registered User Culinary Experience: Professional Chef | | Join Date: Sep 2007
Posts: 63
| | Shroom is right Quote:
Originally Posted by shroomgirl know your farmers.....visit farms.....seriously. | That's what I was about to say. I have close friends who are organic farmers, they run a fromagerie and raise pigs, chickens and ducks for slaugter. To see how they care for the animals and raise them, and to realize THIS is thier livelyhood, it is how they pay the rent, makes me feel alot better about all the organic meats I butcher and serve.
-ciao | 
10-11-2007, 03:28 PM
| | Registered User Culinary Experience: Retired Chef | | Join Date: Apr 2005
Posts: 107
| | Who is anthropomorphizing here?
"Sustainable is all well and good but the realities are that profitable drives sustainable, not the other way around. " Huh?
There is A LOT of discussion about the cost/profitablity of organic foods. What the basic consumer doesn't realize is the cost of conventionally grown food. In my mind the biggest costs are :1)cleaning up the environment, 2)healthcare (diabetics, overweight, ADD...). These are not outright costs but come, bascally, from taxes. First let me say I am generalizing way too much to defend my next statement but ...these are issues not created by "organic/sustainable", yet this system is still be taxed to help support the conventional mess. Pay now or pay later?
You can't change the world, but you could:
serve a split seafood entree with a least one environmentally friendly item Oceans Alive - Best & Worst Seafood Choices
switch to heritage pork and cut the serving size if your cost is up American Livestock Breeds Conservancy - Conservation Priority List
switch to cane sugar (beets will be GMO's in 2008)
ask your vendor where your produce is from and don't buy it from another continent!
If your fronthouse is good, or if you have good marketing, sustainable is such a hot topic you can take a few baby steps now and you might be suprised how fast the news will travel. |  | |
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