Iceman, I curious, are you implying that there are separate grading standards for grass fed and grain fed beef?
Or are you saying that grading standards do not take into account "tenderness" when assigning grades?
Beef tenderness is dependent upon numerous factors, starting with breed, growing cycle, including weaning, supplements (i,e, salts, minerals, molasses etc.), grass, alfalfa, grain, pasture or range (there IS a difference!), locale (1 acre/animal unit in Missouri or 100 acres/AU in Nevada/California?), and fattening (corn, grain, silage, cottonseed cake, or a multitude of other feed products.
For the uninformed, there are many ways to raise beef, including among others:
- Pasture raised (<1 acre/AU), salt and mineral supplements only, no grain finish
- Pasture raised (<1 acre/AU), salt and mineral supplements only, 2-3 month grain finish (what most "organic beef" is)
- Pasture raised (<1 acre/AU), salt and mineral supplements only, 4-6 month grain finish (still can be organic if all the inputs are organic)
- Range raised (>1 acre/AU), salt supplement, no grain finish (very rare, even for "grass-fed")
- Range raised (>1 acre/AU), salt supplement, 1-2 months grain finish
- Range raised (>1 acre/AU), salt supplement, 4-6 months grain finish (probably the most common beef production practice)
Nothing in the above list differentiates "big factory" from "organic".
Organic, by definition, refers to the inputs, feed, etc., and specifies that all inputs meet the definition of organic. Organic beef may be grass-fed, pasture fed, range fed, grain finished, grain fattened, or raised in a pan and fed beer, as long as it meets the organic standards.
"Big Factory", at least to me, refers to a processing, distribution system that takes live animals and converts them into meat products.
Just like a computer, GIGO rules, garbage in, garbage out.
Beef grading is not mandatory, it is strictly voluntary
To the best of my knowledge, anyone may label any beef whatever they desire
unless they wish to use the strictly voluntary U.S.D.A. grading standards, then they must comply with the U.S.D.A. standards.
For me, anyone who dismisses an entire category of food based on a single factor is demonstrating their lack of understanding and, possibly, knowledge.