| Some Ideas to Chew Over.

"The Farmer and the Grill:
A Guide to Grilling, Barbecuing
and Spit-Roasting Grassfed Meat and for saving the planet one bite at a time"
by Shannon Hayes
on WSKG Radio's OFF THE PAGE
L I V E Tuesday, June 10 at 1pm
(Rebroadcast at 7pm)
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For some people,
there is no greater pleasure than sinking their teeth into
a thick, juicy steak or a sizzling hamburger. In our prevailingly
urban society in which less than three percent of the population
works in agriculture and effectively feeds the other ninety-seven
percent, people seldom reflect on the sources of their food,
and might get it wrong if they did think about it. But chances
are that the succulent leg of lamb or roast chicken was the
product of a modern industrial-like procedure rather than an
ancient process of nature. Dr. Shannon Hayes points out in
her book "The Farmer and the Grill" that livestock
should be free to graze, and if you aren't eating grassfed
meat then, to paraphrase an old saying, you ain't tasted nothin'
yet."
Shannon
Hayes and her family live and work on Sap
Bush Hollow Farm in Warnerville, Schoharie
County, NY. She holds a master's degree in creative writing from Binghamton
University and a Ph.D. in sustainable agriculture and community development from
Cornell. Her first book was "The
Grassfed Gourmet". The full title
of her new book is "The
Farmer and the Grill: A Guide to Grilling, Barbecuing and Spit-Roasting Grassfed
Meat and for saving the planet one bite at a time." It
is both a cookbook and an extended essay on the virtues of pasture-based farming.
Beef
nourishes us deeply. It is rich in easily-digestible macro and trace
minerals, an excellent source of B-12, and contains fat-soluble
vitamins and essential
fatty acids. And when the meat comes from grassfed animals, the taste
is incomparable. The flavors of the minerals come through
in
a grassfed steak, the palate feels
clean, and the textures are more pronounced. Not flaccid and mushy,
as with factory-farmed steaks.
-- from The Farmer and the Grill
Meat
from cattle, lambs, pigs and poultry who were allowed to graze
freely and humanely
slaughtered is becoming increasingly
popular, albeit sometimes difficult to find. Websites such
as
eatwild.com list sources and suggestions, and there is locally-raised
meat available now at most farmers' markets. The best choice
may be to simply visit the farm if it processes its own meat
- Hayes points out that it's a good way to also check on whether
the farm is consistent in its grazing policy - although such
a visit can be inconvenient for much of the population.
Finding
the tenderest tenderloin or the proper porkchop is just the
beginning. "The
Farmer and the Grill" is filled with recipes and cooking hints, offered
with a sense that most backyard chefs are probably doing something wrong. The
key to successful (and safe) cooking of any meat by any means is the proper
temperature. "Get a thermometer...and then another one, and then another
one", Hayes says repeatedly, recognizing the fragility of most meat thermometers.
She expresses no preference for gas, wood or charcoal as a heat source (although
she does abjure the use of lighter fluid to ignite charcoal) but many of her
recipes call for exposure to varying temperatures and slow cooking.
"The Farmer
and the Grill" also contains many recipes for marinades,
sauces and spice rubs. There is a section on preparing an asado, the result of
her researching this form of beef short-ribs in their Argentinean homeland.
Shannon
Hayes joins Bill Jaker on OFF THE PAGE to share her adventures raising grassfed
animals and her favorite recipes. To join in with your questions and
comments, call during the live 1:00 PM broadcast to 888/359-9754 or post a
comment to WSKG.Radio@Gmail.com. |
|
NEXT TIME: Robert H. Jackson was surely one
of the most distinguished lawyers of the 20th century - Attorney
General in FDR's administration,
Justice of the Supreme Court and chief American prosecutor
at the Nuremberg war crimes trial. On Tuesday, June 24th, author
Gail Jarrow of Ithaca visits OFF THE PAGE to tell about the
first full biography of Jackson in fifty years, a book written
for young people about a small-town boy from the Southern Tier
who never finished law school.
OFF THE PAGE archives
Authors, titles, and streaming audio
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page updated
Tuesday, June 10, 2008 3:16 PM
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