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Lastest Research on Grass-Fed
Beef Goes Against the Grain |
Sara R. Hayden
From the Silicon Valley/San Jose Business Journal
April 12, 2002
For years, we've been told to cut back on red meat:
"It's not good for you, it causes colon cancer, it clogs your arteries." And
so on.
But evidence suggests that it really depends on what
kind of beef you eat.
"Humans evolved eating wild animals that were eating
wild plants," says Joe Morris, a cattle rancher based in San Juan Bautista
who raises grass-finished beef in Santa Clara, San Benito, Monterey, Merced
and Santa Cruz counties. "Meat from animals fed grasses has a better
nutrient profile, which is what our bodies would like and what the American
diet is deficient in. The last two to three years of research has backed up
our intuition about the nutritional content of the beef."
Mr. Morris quotes research by Dr. Tilak Dhiman of the
Utah State University: that grass-fed beef is higher in the right kinds of
fatty acids for good nutrition, and contains more vitamin E, beta carotene
and conjugated linoliec acid.
"CLA is the hot new thing," says Willa Keizer. "Why buy
it in a bottle when you can get it through your food?"
Ms. Keizer is a certified classical homeopath and the
chapter leader for the Santa Cruz chapter of the Weston A. Price Foundation.
The nonprofit organization is dedicated to the principles of Weston Price, a
1930s dentist who visited cultures free from degenerative diseases to
discover their "secrets." He became concerned that the refined foods
Americans were eating were contributing to disease.
"Julie and Joe [Morris] contacted me through the Weston
Price foundation and I was glad to know that grass-fed beef was available in
our area. Grass-fed is closer to what our ancestors ate and helps keep
people free from allergies, degenerative diseases, cancer."
"When you feed [cows] what's not natural to them, it's
not natural to us," says Ms. Keizer.
Another fan and consumer of grass-fed beef for the past
two years is Jaclynn Bol, an oncologist trials researcher for the VA Palo
Alto and Stanford health care systems.
"In my own research [I've found that] we're not vegetarians by nature," says
Ms. Bol. "We as civilized people have had to manufacture so much food we've
gone genetically overboard. Our grandparents didn't die of all these
diseases. Our meat is processed, force-fed, supplemented, injected -- in
general it's not the meat."
But products from pastured animals are ideal for human
health, says Jo Robinson, author of "The Omega Diet" and "Why Grassfed is
Best" and the principal researcher for Eat Wild (http://www.eatwild.com).
"We are genetically programmed to thrive on these
natural foods," she says. "The research suggests that switching to grass-fed
products could reduce the risk of diabetes, obesity, cardiovascular disease,
and even cancer.
"A sirloin steak from a grass-fed steer has about
one-half to one-third as much fat as a similar cut from a grain-fed steer.
In fact, grass-fed meat has about the same fat content as skinless chicken
or wild deer or elk. When meat is this lean, it actually lowers your LDL
cholesterol levels."
Mr. Morris doesn't transport his cows; he raises each
on one ranch.
"The animals under our management help take care of
that place. Cows are landscape gardeners, pruners. They are integral to the
health of the land and the health of the community."
"If I had the cultural knowledge my grandfather had, I
would have started this a long time ago," says Mr. Morris. "It took me 29
years to come back to this."
SARA R. HAYDEN is research director for the Business
Journal.
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