I like it all but definitely consider fish my specialty
Favorite Meat
12/22/2011
Lamb, definitely. Then beef and bison.
12/22/2011
Quote:
ah, my favorite would probably be the Dungeness crab meat from California
Originally posted by
Ash1141
What do you like the best?
12/22/2011
I like quail, crab, razor clam, horse mussels, lamb kabobs with cumin.
12/22/2011
Quote:
I eat meat, but I'm not necessarily a "Fan" of meat. If it was practical, and tasty, to be a vegan I would!
Originally posted by
Ash1141
What do you like the best?
12/22/2011
Chicken!
12/22/2011
Where is the turkey?!
12/22/2011
I like it all, but we eat more chicken then anything else.
12/22/2011
Quote:
Beef
Originally posted by
Ash1141
What do you like the best?
12/22/2011
I like my fish cooked thank you v. much.
12/22/2011
turkey. it makes a great burger, taco and holiday meal.
12/22/2011
bison
12/22/2011
Lamb and prawns for me!
12/22/2011
Fish is the only meat I'll eat.
12/23/2011
Quote:
You can order grass-fed beef from USWellnessMeats.com or GrassfedTraditions.com . Also, check out EatWild.com for local farms-I'm betting there IS at least one within driving distance. By the way, if it's not obvious, I agree with your sentiments 110%. I wish factory farming were illegal, but until commodity grain prices soar high enough, it will always be a cheaper way to produce meat..and most people, sadly, will go along with it. If everyone chose pastured meats, the price would definitely go down somewhat (keep in mind that the cost to produce REAL FOOD IS in fact higher than conventional.) I don't mind paying 25-50% more for my meat because, in the scheme of things, I don't eat much of it. Even if I had a family, I would find a way to budget for it. It's that important to me, for so many reasons.
Originally posted by
Cherrylane
Beef, but pork when done right.
I'm really touchy about meat though. I tend to try and limit consumption, both for dietary, environmental and ethical reasons.
I've actually had the opportunity to talk to a lot of people about ... more
I'm really touchy about meat though. I tend to try and limit consumption, both for dietary, environmental and ethical reasons.
I've actually had the opportunity to talk to a lot of people about ... more
Beef, but pork when done right.
I'm really touchy about meat though. I tend to try and limit consumption, both for dietary, environmental and ethical reasons.
I've actually had the opportunity to talk to a lot of people about my views on the whole beef thing this week because I've eaten a lot more of it than usual due to random dining coincidences, and because my mother and I have embarked on a holiday cooking adventure.
Basically I think beef is fabulous, great, tasty, all of that. But being very familiar with farming and livestock and all, there are many "no nos" for me when it comes to purchasing and cooking beef. In general, I stay away from veal all together. I don't find the conventional american methods of raising veal humane, and many european countries have made the practice illegal. Although there are some places that raise veal humanely, it's very tricky to find them and make sure that something marketed and packaged as pasture-raised was in fact raised in an honest-to-god pasture eating honest-to-god grass.
Which leads to the other beef and other livestock animal problem of being almost entirely corn-fed, and sometimes soy too. After searching fruitlessly for weeks, I finally gave up trying to find true grass fed beef in my old town. You can't do it. It's not there. No grocery store carries it, and the only real butcher caters to hunters and their "exotic" game needs and freezes and cuts their stuff for them and w/e. Not only does real grass-fed pasture raised beef taste better, it's just more humane and safer, annnnd better for the environment. Magin that! It takes much more land to raise grassing cattle, but the land is covered in grass and trees rather than mud, and there isn't a gigantic concentration of cattle in one small area. Additionally, less land is needed to farm soy and corn which are both essentially nutritionally worthless and don't have much environmental benefit either. So sorry, subsidized soy and corn farmers. Not to mention, cattle aren't supposed to eat corn anyway. It makes them sick. Very sick. This is part of why there's such high incidence of cattle being pumped full of hormones and anti-biotics. They wouldn't need it otherwise. Cattle have a very highly developed and wildly efficient digestive system--for processing a forage diet ie dominated by grass. Not corn meal and chicken doo-doo. And really, who wants to eat meat from a sick animal anyway?
/rant.
Anyways.... lol. Beef is nice. Pork is wonderful when done right. Especially when you can get some pig skin in there. It's Mr. Bourdain's favorite for a reason. Then I probably favor the wild game type things that my cousin hunts/catches and brings home and eats. Venison, duck, various types of fish. Yum. less
I'm really touchy about meat though. I tend to try and limit consumption, both for dietary, environmental and ethical reasons.
I've actually had the opportunity to talk to a lot of people about my views on the whole beef thing this week because I've eaten a lot more of it than usual due to random dining coincidences, and because my mother and I have embarked on a holiday cooking adventure.
Basically I think beef is fabulous, great, tasty, all of that. But being very familiar with farming and livestock and all, there are many "no nos" for me when it comes to purchasing and cooking beef. In general, I stay away from veal all together. I don't find the conventional american methods of raising veal humane, and many european countries have made the practice illegal. Although there are some places that raise veal humanely, it's very tricky to find them and make sure that something marketed and packaged as pasture-raised was in fact raised in an honest-to-god pasture eating honest-to-god grass.
Which leads to the other beef and other livestock animal problem of being almost entirely corn-fed, and sometimes soy too. After searching fruitlessly for weeks, I finally gave up trying to find true grass fed beef in my old town. You can't do it. It's not there. No grocery store carries it, and the only real butcher caters to hunters and their "exotic" game needs and freezes and cuts their stuff for them and w/e. Not only does real grass-fed pasture raised beef taste better, it's just more humane and safer, annnnd better for the environment. Magin that! It takes much more land to raise grassing cattle, but the land is covered in grass and trees rather than mud, and there isn't a gigantic concentration of cattle in one small area. Additionally, less land is needed to farm soy and corn which are both essentially nutritionally worthless and don't have much environmental benefit either. So sorry, subsidized soy and corn farmers. Not to mention, cattle aren't supposed to eat corn anyway. It makes them sick. Very sick. This is part of why there's such high incidence of cattle being pumped full of hormones and anti-biotics. They wouldn't need it otherwise. Cattle have a very highly developed and wildly efficient digestive system--for processing a forage diet ie dominated by grass. Not corn meal and chicken doo-doo. And really, who wants to eat meat from a sick animal anyway?
/rant.
Anyways.... lol. Beef is nice. Pork is wonderful when done right. Especially when you can get some pig skin in there. It's Mr. Bourdain's favorite for a reason. Then I probably favor the wild game type things that my cousin hunts/catches and brings home and eats. Venison, duck, various types of fish. Yum. less
12/23/2011
Pork is my favorite, followed by beef for a close second. Remember what Emeril said: pork fat rules! As long as it's pastured pork, of course.
12/23/2011
All of the above? 0_o
12/23/2011
I love pork but I try to eat chicken more often because it's healthier
12/23/2011
I love all things chicken, but then steak would come in second. I love me some Ribeye steaks!
12/23/2011
Vegetarian for nearly 14 years.
12/23/2011
My favorite meat is chicken. It's fantastic because of all the things you can use it for. Most of my favorite recipes involve chicken as the meat requirement.
12/23/2011
give me all of the above and then some.
02/17/2012
Chicken for me
02/17/2012
all the above.
02/17/2012
I love it all!!! Chicken, beef, pork, fish, venison, turkey, buffalo, squid, octopus, game hens...
typing this is making me hungry..
typing this is making me hungry..
02/17/2012
Chicken alfredo
02/17/2012
Fish = Salmon. LOVE IT.
02/17/2012
Chicken
02/17/2012
Fish
09/21/2012
Total posts: 59
Unique posters: 56
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