Archive for the ‘Nutrition’ Category

Time To Educate

Friday, May 13th, 2011

Alice Park’s article, What’s Lurking in Your Meat and Poultry? Probably Staph, published in Time Magazine reports on a study that shows the presence of a new multi-drug resistant strain of Staphylococcus aureus. This Bacteria is reportedly not even monitored by the US Department of Agriculture as it has not been previously known as a food born pathogen. Researchers conclude that the cause of this now drug resistant bacteria is the overuse of antibiotics particularly to increase production yields. Take a moment to read this article and give yourself a pat on the back for using Broadview Ranch and our naturally raised meats. http://healthland.time.com/2011/04/15/whats-lurking-in-your-meat-and-poultry-probably-staph/

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The Grass-fed Difference:

Tuesday, March 1st, 2011

" Have you ever wondered why grass-fed beef is any different from grain-fed beef? Well besides the popular opinion that it tastes better, eating grass-fed beef can also be beneficial to you, the animals, and the environment..."

As part of a unique type of orientation, I had the privilege to observe Donald’s Meats process and package our grass-fed beef. This opportunity acted not only as a crash course to the different cuts, but also emphasized the difference in the grass-fed product. Our beef being the only grass-fed product present at the butcher at the time, Broadview Beef could be readily identified in the midst of all the grain fed meat. Our grass-fed meat was easily distinguishable by the absence of the white fat cover that is present on the grain fed carcasses. During our conversations, the butchers even expressed how the meat handled differently than the grain fed meat because of the absence of fat. I am a very visual person; therefore, actually seeing and feeling the meat was a wonderful introduction to the grass-fed/grain fed difference. Grass-fed beef is not only lean but also has additional health benefits. For more information go to EatWild.com or check my younger brother’s persuasive essay written for his high school English class on our Facebook page.   I was told his teacher is now planning on switching to grass-fed beef!

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Filet and Spring Greens Salad

Monday, April 26th, 2010

My lovely bride was feeling a bit under the weather this evening so for the first time since our marriage began two weeks ago I got to cook. Jane has been showing off her skills in the kitchen this last week with home made cinnamon rolls and granola topping it off this past weekend.

I had some Broadview filets that I set out in the fridge on Sunday so I coated them in some olive oil, kosher salt and fresh black pepper and fired up the grill. On Saturday at the farmers market I acquired some fantastic fresh spring greens including my favorite pea shoots, so I tossed them in a little olive oil and balsamic along with some farmer’s market goat cheese and some freshly picked arugula – our first harvest from the Brooklyn garden. I grilled the filet – highest heat, just a few minutes per side – and sliced it over our salad. The outcome was fantastic. So good that I was forced to open a bottle of Napa Cabernet to enjoy along with the steak. If you’re looking for a great healthy spring dinner look no further.

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Argentine president: Eat pork, spice your sex life

Friday, January 29th, 2010

President Fernandez tells Argentines they’ll have a better sex life if they eat more pork

http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Argentine-president-Eat-pork-apf-13832280.html?x=0&.v=1

This article gives another great reason to eat Broadview Ranch woodland pork.

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Did You Get Your Spring Fats Today?

Tuesday, September 8th, 2009

Queen of Fats BookI just read a really good article in the September edition of Prevention by science writer Susan Allport, titled The Vanishing Youth Nutrient. In that article she calls omega-3 fats “spring” fats because they come mostly from the leaves of plants and are the fats that animals (including humans) use to get ready of times of high activity usually associated with spring, like mating season and rearing young.   On the other hand she dubs the omega-6 fats which come primarily from the seeds of plant as “fall” fats.  These are the fats that animals use to store energy in preparation for winter, times of food shortage and hibernation.

Ms. Allport explains how the American diet has shifted from a proper balance of these two types of essential fats to a diet skewed in favor of omega-6s due our increasing dependance on corn and soybeans to feed both ourselves and the animals that produce our food.  She writes that we are eating a diet that is supposed to fatten us up for winter when weather is harsh and calories are scarce. But today food is never scarce for the average American.

She discovered in her resarch for her book The Queen of Fats, that leaves are the most metabolically active tissues in plants, and brains and eyes are the most metabolially active tissues in animals.  They are both full of omega-3 fats.  Animals preparing to go  into hibernation shift their diet in the fall to foods high in omega-6 seeds, while animals that migrate long distances and need lots of energy fill up with omega-3s for their long journey.  Her recomendations to boost omega-3s and decrease omega-6s include choosing grass fed pork, chiken and beef whenever you can.  Ms. Allport also recomends real free range eggs an excellent source of omega-3s.  It is worth the time to read the whole article.  I hope to add her book for our library soon.

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