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Saturday, November 28, 2009

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User post: Why I Eat Meat (And Why I Think You Should, Too.)

by Jacky Hayward | Chef's Blade

Chef's Blade is an online community for Chefs and culinary professionals and enthusiasts alike; we feature news, careers tips, and culinary cooking resources!

I started writing about food because I was tired of vegetarians and vegans telling me I should stop eating meat all together as my carnivorous consumption was inhumane and contrary to humanities’ evolution as a species. I eat meat. I will continue to eat meat. And I think you should too.

One of my quickest responses to the vegetarian/vegan anti-meat rhetoric is that if we were all vegetarians, there would be no fertilizer and then eventually no plants. If we only consumed plants, all the farmland now used to raise livestock would have to be used to raise edible plants, which could mean no livestock and in turn, no fertilizer from that livestock. In the long term, this would mean no plants. Or plants only raised on artificially produced fertilizers, which would also mean polluted waters.

Of course, it’s a lot more complicated than this. And there are much better arguments for why to eat meat. Vegetarians and Vegans often focus their anti-meat campaigns on the cattle industry, so I am going to focus mostly on beef production.

Before I continue, there is bad beef and good beef, and I only eat good beef. We have all read the news articles and watched the horrifying videos about cows who are so sick and malnourished that they cannot walk or even stand up, but are then pushed by a forklift to be slaughtered and made into steaks. I don’t eat these and I don’t think you should either. There are such things as happy cows - cows raised on grass-only diets in open green pastures.

Bad beef is raised on corn meal, which cows stomachs have not evolved to digest properly, which often leaves cows with serious stomach problems. On the other hand, cows' ruminant digestive systems are well evolved to digest grass; the cow's digestive system has two stomachs, in which the food is softened first before being fully digested in the second stomach. In this manner, feeding cows food other than grass messes with their natural digestive process; one of the reasons why cows are given so many antibiotics now is because feeding them corn and other food that their stomachs aren't meant to digest causes an upset in their bodies natural chemistry, thus opening them up to infection.

Another important thing to note is that humans, among most other species without rumens, cannot digest grass. Michael Pollan, in his book "The Omnivore's Dilemma", visits Polyface Farm, which raises grass-fed beef along with a whole slew of other livestock raised on their natural food. Without going into a long description of the merits of Polyface Farm, Pollan's discussion of the advantages of feeding cows grass, from the perspective of energy consumption, is one of the strongest arguments for eating meat. At Polyface Farm, the cows are rotationally grazed, which means that the cows are allowed to eat in one area of the pasture before being moved to another area of the farm to eat the following day. In this manner, the cows partially eat the grass stem, but not the whole stalk. As a result, the grass grows back much faster than it would if the cows were allowed to stay on one plot of land for an extended period of time and ate the grass stalks to the ground. Because of this constant trimming and growth cycle, the pastures at Polyface Farm, and at other farms that rotationally graze their livestock, produce more biomass than the same plot of land would if corn were raised in its place.

One of the strong arguments against eating meat is that great amount of food energy wasted every time an animal eats another animal (a 9-to-1 ratio), but in the case of cows that are grass-fed, they are eating biomass from which we cannot glean food calories. In addition, the energy to grow grass comes from the sun, which means cows are, in essence, converting the sun's energy, through the venue of grass, into food energy that we can consume. And, importantly, grass fed beefy is mighty tasty.

And to my final reason for eating meat: It tastes good. I crave it. I am lethargic both physically and mentally without it. I also have canine teeth. Vegetarians and vegans often say that humans have evolved to a point where they don’t need to eat meat to survive. While I would be able to live without meat, my life would not be as good. Just as cows can live on corn meal rather than grass, humans can live only plants, but maybe they shouldn’t. I believe there is a biological reason I crave meat: My body needs it.

I will reiterate, however, that there is good and bad meat. I am only encouraging you to eat good meat. Yes, I realize it’s more expensive, so I urge you to eat good meat less frequently or in smaller portions. Eating a cow that was pushed on a forklift and eventually onto your plate is unhealthy for you and inhumane to the cow. Doesn’t it seem better to eat a smaller, healthier, happier steak than a forklift-ed one?

Further, the energy argument I stated above is only valid for rotationally grass grazed cows. I guess my frustration with the vegetarian/vegan anti-meat rhetoric is that it’s too narrow; there are ways to eat meat responsibly that are arguably better for the environment and for our food system than being a vegetarian or vegan.

And so, I will now say again: I eat meat. I will continue to eat meat. And I think you should too.

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Comments 11-20 of 27
  • Rachel's Avatar
    Posted by Rachel Fri Jul 10, 2009 6:03am PDT

    I do not eat meat but do not guilt-trip those who do; I feel like those vegetarians give us all a bad name! I like that you support eating "good meat" as opposed to "bad meat"; seems like those animals live a much better life.

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  • JuliaL's Avatar
    Posted by JuliaL Fri Jul 10, 2009 6:33am PDT

    YAY!!! I am a biologist, we are not MADE to be vegetarians. Our intestines, our teeth and every other part of us are not made to eat only plant product. We're not made to eat only meat products either. We are omnivores, we are made to eat both meat and plant. That is why we have these sharp tearing teeth up front, to rip into and tear that meat. And those dull grinding teeth in the back? Made to eat plant products and chew and chew on them to break them down. The size of our intestines are right in the middle, not long like the herbivores and not short like the carnivores. Omnivores, yay meat with other yummies on the side!! :D

    On a side note, similar rules go for our pets. Cats and dogs are carnivores and should not be fed a grain-based diet like most packaged pet food is made from. Grain-free foods are becoming more readily available and are much healthier for you pet. I'm not sure why we have gone so far away what is good for our bodies and good for our pets. But thanks for writing about this and bringing up great points about healthy eating (omnivore!) and using good meat.

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  • Georgirlz's Avatar
    Posted by Georgirlz Fri Jul 10, 2009 9:06am PDT

    Your not looking at the real picture.

    Even GOOD meat is treated inhumanly. They are all slaughtered cruelly. We slaughter billions of cows a year in the U.S. alone. We throw away 25 million pounds of meat a year.

    It takes around 8lbs of grain to produce 1 lb of meat, do you realize the amount of people 8lb of grain can feed. Eating meat is not only bad for the environment (which animal waste contributes to more then all other sources)but is selfish. There are still lots of people in this world starving and grains are the key.

    Being a vegetarian is the greenest solution to our problems.

    Eat meat if that is your choice but don't think that your decision is not cruel to animals, starving nations as well as the environment.

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  • Trish C's Avatar
    Posted by Trish C Fri Jul 10, 2009 10:37am PDT

    yea, well...i agree with the article, and sorry georgirlzz, but your statistics aren't going to guilt me into not eating meat. you are exactly the type of vegetarian/vegan that i thought of when i was reading this article. there are arguments on both sides. so, don't eat meat if that is your choice, but don't think that your decision will solve everything.

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  • Monica's Avatar
    Posted by Monica Sat Jul 11, 2009 2:28am PDT

    I am pretty confident that our domesticated dogs are omnivores. My dog is anyway. She eats some veggies and I have caught her many times grazing in the yard, like a cow. She gets regular dog food, and is healthy as can be.

    I think I will join the Iams diet with her. Have you seen the ads? Gorgeous shiny coat! Healthy heart! Weight management! Yum!

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  • tnk's Avatar
    Posted by tnk Sat Jul 11, 2009 5:43am PDT

    A recent study showed that vegetarians and vegans have a lower bone density than people who eat meat. Lacto-ovo vegetarians had the same bone density as meat eaters. Bones need meat. And dogs are omnivors; cats are carnivors.

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  • Melissa N's Avatar
    Posted by Melissa N Sat Jul 11, 2009 9:07am PDT

    You'll never convince me not to eat meat but if that is your choice, it's fine. Just don't try to mak eme feel bad about my choice.

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  • chiken_n_pie's Avatar
    Posted by chiken_n_pie Sat Jul 11, 2009 5:26pm PDT

    I don't think the author was trying to make vegetarians feel bad about their choices, but was trying to tell them to shut up.

    I'm personally a vegetarian, and I understand that no one wants to have someone b---- at them for eating whatever. I live in a household where everyone eats meat, and it doesn't bother me, I'll even cook meals with meat.

    I just wish that all of the PETA freaks would stop giving vegetarians a bad name.

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  • Reynold's Avatar
    Posted by Reynold Sat Jul 11, 2009 7:40pm PDT

    Superb!!, succulently superb.

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  • Mo's Avatar
    Posted by Mo Sun Jul 12, 2009 7:46am PDT

    Half of your argument is subjective: "I crave it" and "It tastes good". I crave salt and vinegar chips and sour patch kids, but it doesn't mean I should eat them. They also have no biological foundation in my diet related the craving. (Is there a possibility you crave it because you like the taste and eat it almost every day, or even multiple times a day?)

    Most vegetarian/vegan arguments are based on environmental sustainability. Health pros/cons of vegitarianism are constantly under debate, and I personally believe that it's the overall daily diet that determines a healthy diet, with or without meat.

    I also think you are misinformed about fertilizers. They do not necessarily depend on the cattle industry, rather they have been developed as such due to the presence of cattle industry. You're mixing up causation and effect.

    And yes, we do not eat grass, but we could grow crops we do eat where the cows graze.

    I think you need to do more research before you present your opinion, especially since there has been so much debate on this issue that you shouldn't claim to know the answer after reading The Omnivore's Dilemma.

    I also do not understand why you're saying vegitarians should eat meat. What does it mean to you?

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Comments 11-20 of 27

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