Wednesday, December 23, 2020

Nothing Is What It Seems. Smoke And Mirrors To Fuck Over The Consumer. Irish is Pissed. Here's My Rant.....

 

 Stay with it if you like.  

You really can't trust any motherfuckers out there any more. This just adds to the list from politicians all the way down to the bastards that screw you everyday.

 

 

Reader, commenter and submitter Nemo sent an email checking on us and wishing yours truly, and the boss, a Merry Christmas.  I responded in kind and said I was going to make a Prime Rib for the Christmas meal. I purchased a good name beef that I trusted as far as the information I have gotten in the past.

Many times I have had the Delmonico steaks from a "farm" called Cedar River. I love to cook them on the grill, just under medium rare, with only a little salt and pepper. They are delicious.  Friends have always raved about how good they are.They are advertised thus:


Doesn't that look mouthwatering?? You would pay extra for some really tasty Natural Beef from an idyllic farm named "Cedar River" correct?


One of the local restaurants has the sirloin and lists it as "Cedar" for a wee more than a small pot of gold.




33 comments:

  1. It gets worse: there's no Santa Claus either.

    Merry Christmas anyway! :)

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  2. Make it a very good pinot to go with the aged beef.

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  3. I buy my meat from my neighbor. He grows the feed , cows , and kids to work in the business . They're all rich and fat . Same price as the stores but real meat .

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  4. If you enjoy it... then let it go and just enjoy a good steak. Marketing is what this entire country is based on. I know - it gets old. Let it go friend. (wine helps) Merry Christmas :-)

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  5. I only eat the finest beef.
    That's why I pay top dollar for Omaha Steaks. Also Kansas City Steaks.
    For the finest cheese and sausage I only buy Swiss Colony.

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    Replies
    1. We've had some definitely so-so meat from Omaha Steaks. A bit tough and not much flavor. Wife complained to them, and they sent us another order free-of-charge, which was much better. I still wouldn't call it "Five Star", but it was good steak.

      Irish - I'm sure Well Seasoned Fool knows who these people are.

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  6. I feel your pain Irish. That’s why I find locals who raise cattle and a couple of processing plants within a short drive and buy 1/2 a cow. Eat wild.com is a great resource and they break it down by state/region. Many places offer whole cow all the way down to a single choice cut.

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  7. Here in the DFW area, we buy Nolan Ryan beef at Kroger. Last week got bone-in rib steaks on sale for $5.67/lbs.

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  8. The place looks like a feed lot and packing plant.

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  9. Irish save your money for better booze friend. Just make friends with a good grocery store butcher. Ask his opinion about what you want to cook up. They respond well being treated like a buddy instead of a machine.

    I've learned so much about "Butchers Cuts" at quite nice prices and even some cooking tips. All at the "Cost" of being friendly and inviting them to my BBQ's.

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  10. Nolan Ryan is pretty good. I've got a half a steer in the freezer that was locally grass fed by a friend of mine with some extra grain right at the end to marble him up a little. I'm going to say that Nolan Ryan is probably a better steak but I know where this steer has been and it is a total average cost of about $2.50/LB. We'll probably do the filet's on the Big Green Egg while my sons are home for Christmas.

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  11. JBS is Brazilian beef. Many US stores buy beef from South America, fewer restrictions. The "good" US beef is mostly exported to Asia. Buy from a local farm is best. Shameless plug here, I raise beef, sell local: http://mohicanvalleyfarms.com

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  12. The "butchers" at our Kroger are experienced only at wheeling the carts out of the reefer into the locker, then later out onto the floor as needed to fill the case. But they do wear white coats. At least Safeway still has a few old timers who know meat and will usually jump through a hoop if you ask and if they have time.

    Long, long ago and in a different place our family raised its own butcher beef and filled the old 27 cf chest freezer down in the basement-one well cared for, grass/corn fed steer lasted us a year.

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  13. There's a lot of places local, that will sell you a good product. You just have to shop. Ask around.
    I discovered that there are more than a few folks around that run a few head of cattle more than they need on the property that can handle it, to sell to others. That's where I get most of our bulk meat.
    Of course, local means somewhere, where there are farms and ranches nearby.

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  14. To top off the list of "Things To Make You Smile", just remember that Slow Joe's masters own a very large percentage of the pork production in the U.S. What sane country would allow its biggest threats (China & Russia) to purchase and control not only a vast array of critical food suppliers, but, also strategic reserves of energy/weapons-producing resources? (Uranium One, anyone?) Tell me that the Dims aren't the enemies of "We The People". Go on, I'll wait while you spin your yarn...

    Merry Christmas!

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  15. We operate a small organic teaching farm near the outskirts of Eugene Oregon.
    We work a lot of farmers markets around the area.

    For organic pastured beef, we like Knee Deep Cattle Company.
    They sell to Long's Butcher Shop in Eugene Oregon.
    Knee Deep hangs sides for a couple-three weeks.
    Long's hang their Knee Deep sides an additional week or so.

    Cuts with a fork.
    No 'bloody' bitterness.
    Yum!

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  16. Thanks to all the comments. I'll be doing some research in the not too distant future for sure!

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    Replies
    1. If I can ask, where is your location, We raise corn fed Nebraska beef...

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    2. Hi NJ. I am in New Hampshire.

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  17. I raise my own. Nothing but organic home butchered Dexter beef for us. Not cheap, a lot of work and time but I know how the meat was handled from birth to plate.
    Now on cold and nasty days I have to remind myself why the heck I'm out here i single digit wind storm feeding cattle. Yet hanging out with a small herd of cattle is calming...

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    1. I do a steer or bull every year to year and a half.
      On my own land.
      They're always too big for me to handle, but I've found a menonite shop that does the deed for me.
      The rest, the sheep, rabbits, chickens, venison, hog, etc...
      Well, those I do myself.

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  18. The things that come from an innocent email message.

    Merry Christmas everyone and especially to our host and his missus.

    Nemo

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  19. Several years back I worked in the oilfield patch there in CO doing flowback/well testing.
    I used to drive past that feed lot all the time. I was absolutely nasty. Of course I can only imagine it's no worse than any feed lot anywhere.
    Have you seen what they do to the beef when they package it?
    Pumped full of all sorts of shit with giant banks of needles to make it tender. Pretty sure I caught that sort of delicious manipulation of "How it's made".

    -rightwingterrorist

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  20. Man, a long long time ago I used to drive up to Greeley from Denver to visit a girlfriend that was going to college there. And you could smell those feed lots from about 12 miles away!

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    1. Yeah, pretty bad.

      -rightwingterrorist

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    2. Our kids live 35 miles from the Greeley feedlot/packing house. When the wind is just right and it's a little damp the feedlot stench hangs in the air for the rest of the day until the late afternoon wind change. They are always in the news-if is isn't an ICE raid it's another lawsuit about time off for prayer. Factory beef for the masses.

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  21. "Organic" is another buzz word that is completely useless, but makes for great marketing. The Farm's milk truck driver has told my brother that more loads of milk get rejected, for antibiotic contamination, from "organic" dairies.

    There is a place a few miles from me that grows beefers. It used to be a dairy farm, now it is a small scale "commercial" operation. Some place in Jersey owns a few farms like this. It is a decent operation. Lots of pastures, mostly hay and not a lot of processed feed. The feed lots don't look like overcrowded stock yards either. Unfortunately, they don't do retail, but do sell to high end markets and restaurants.
    https://simplygrazin.com/

    Leigh
    Whitehall, NY

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  22. Nice butcher on William street in Fredericksburg va. Knowledgeable staff and great food.

    Barnifferus

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  23. Over here in England, we used to drive over to a country based butcher and stock up, lovely lovely meat.
    He had a nasty divorce and that ended it.

    Then we heard about another farm shop in a village, so we visited.
    Almost clinical was the shop, meat beautifully presented and shrunk wrapped, two well spoken ladies in spotlessly white smocks serving, animals supposedly kept almost as pets fed on the very best, hand reared you name it, all priced accordingly.
    The meat you ask? you may well ask. utterly tasteless, might as well have cooked up the shrink wrap.

    Farmers markets became a thing here too, in the early days they were very good, but as they became more popular the quality plummeted and it was obvious they were just reselling meat and veg from the usual wholesalers but at a much higher price.

    Almost everything is a con now.

    Lew

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  24. I have 2 friends-brothers that have about 60 acres, about 5 of us will go in together to buy 3 calves, raise them, slaughter them and hang em' then 10 days later take a weekend and do a big ol' meat cut and wrap. Lots of whiskey, great friends and laughing goes on. It is something I look forward to every winter. Your getting your meat at about 2 bucks a pound, some local fat butcher isn't fattening his fat kids with your ribeyes and plus all the fun of hanging with the guys. If you have dogs you need a extra freezer for bones. We do cuts, sausages and a ton of burger. It is a total winter blast. Way fun.

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  25. My cousin out in San Antonio did a similar web site 20 years ago. He was doing good but sold out for a couple of million. He was one of the dot com millionaires.

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