Thursday, 16 March 2017

Which Beef is Best: Wagyu, Aged, or Grass-Fed?

Which Beef is Best: Wagyu, Aged, or Grass-Fed?





Which Beef is Best: Wagyu, Aged, or Grass-Fed?



Share:Tweet about this on TwitterShare on FacebookPin on PinterestShare on Google+Share on LinkedIn
Have you tried Japanese wagyu beef?

It
is a type of beef designed to melt in your mouth because the muscle is
completely striated with fat. Wagyu beef is so decadently fatty that you
can cut it with a fork. Taste-wise, it almost has more in common with
foie gras than with a steak.

Sounds great initially, but there are some things about wagyu you may not know. In a Bloomberg article discussing the merits and shortcomings of Wagyu beef, Chef Ken Yamada sums up my sentiments about it exactly:

“I
don’t think anyone can eat a slab of it and feel comfortable,” says
Yamada, who was born in Shimoda, south of Tokyo, and moved to the U.K.
in 1988. “I may have been in England far too long, but I prefer a
decent, British, aged steak.”
What
many people overlook is that farmers make Wagyu as fatty as possible by
feeding their cows huge amounts of grain for the last 300-500 days of
their lives. Some farmers even add wine and beer to further increase fat
content. The result is that a wagyu cow’s muscle tissue is thoroughly
marbled with fat. Unfortunately, it’s the kind of fat that is not good
for you. The mold toxins in all that grain are bad for the cow and end
up in its fat [1], and then in you, which would mean wagyu beef has a
disproportionately high toxin load.


To
be fair, it’s also delicious, and it’s such an expensive delicacy that
you probably don’t eat it every day. If you’re going to have it as a
special treat, I recommend some activated charcoal to help bind the toxins.




What about aged beef?

Aging beef allows Thamnidium mold to grow into a crust on the outside. Thamnidium
shoots tendrils into the meat, supporting enzymes that digest it [2].
The process gives aged beef a different flavor and makes it tender.


The
downside is that aging beef creates high levels of histamine and other
biogenic amines, compounds that cause inflammation, allergic responses,
and food cravings for a lot of people [3].
Thamnidium itself doesn’t produce mold toxins, but other molds that are toxic to humans, like Rhizopus and Mucor genera, can grow on aged beef, depending on the environment it is aged in [2].



Why organic, grass-fed beef is best

That
Bloomberg article about wagyu beef also interviewed Mark Schatzker, a
meat expert who just wrote a book about his journey to find the best
beef in the world. He says the best he’s found is organic, grass-fed
beef from Alderspring Ranch, a small ranch in Idaho.


I’d have to agree with him. I’ve been buying my beef from Alderspring since 2005, and the head guy there, Glenn, has been on Bulletproof Radio to talk about the importance of grass-fed meat for our ecosystem.

After
years of searching for the perfect steak that gives the most reliable
food high in the best flavor, I recommend grass-fed ribeye from the
height of the season, butchered and frozen between three and seven days
after slaughter. Listen to the
BP Radio episode with Alderspring and you’ll also learn that details like how quickly the meat is cooled after butchering really affect how tender it is.

Why does grass-fed make such a difference? I break down the reasons, one-by-one, in this article.
The short version is that grass-fed beef is more nutrient-dense, it’s
higher in anti-inflammatory compounds, and it lacks the pesticides
residues and mycotoxins that you’ll find in grain-fed beef. Grass-fed
beef is also more environmentally sound and contributes to better soil
instead of depleting it. Plus, the taste is exceptional. If you haven’t
had a grass-fed steak yet, you owe it to yourself to try one. You’ll
feel the difference after you eat it. 
For a guide to cooking the perfect grass-fed steak, along with plenty of other recipes, check out this free complete Bulletproof meal plan.

Steak
really is an art. Like every other thing we eat, it starts with the
soil, and ends with how it makes you feel. Every little step matters!


What’s your favorite steak on the planet?

Tuesday, 30 June 2015

Braised lamb neck with white wine, tomato and oregano Recipe - Greek | Good Food

Braised lamb neck with white wine, tomato and oregano Recipe - Greek | Good Food






This rustic lamb braise is a dish we've been cooking at Melbourne's Mr
Wolf, on and off, for the past 10 years. And although its origin is
Greek - a slight detour from pizza and the other Italian-influenced fare
- it fits the style of the restaurant so well. I first ate something
like this on Santorini many years ago, and the simplicity of the
succulent braised lamb with plenty of oregano, intense tomato flavour,
potatoes and a delicious slick of olive oil-laced fat was a revelation.
This is one of those dishes that doesn't need embellishments, just some
wilted greens, a leafy salad, or both, and plenty of good bread.


Ingredients

1.5-1.8kg boned lamb neck (about 6 pieces)

50g plain flour, seasoned

extra virgin olive oil

3 white onions, sliced

6 garlic cloves, sliced

stock spices etc

2 fresh bay leaves

salt flakes and freshly ground black pepper

1/2 bunch dried Greek oregano, leaves shaken off stalks

2 tsp ground allspice

30g brown sugar

1 tbsp tomato paste

500ml dry white wine

1 litre quality chicken stock

200ml passata

4 medium Dutch cream potatoes, peeled and cut in half

1 handful fresh breadcrumbs


Method

1. Preheat the oven to 160C fan-forced or 180C conventional.

2. Toss the lamb in the seasoned
flour. Add a good splash of oil to a large ovenproof pot over medium
heat. Shake any excess flour from the lamb and brown all over,
seasoning a little as you go. Remove and set aside.

3. Tip the oil from the pan and wipe out with paper towel.
Add a splash of oil, the onion, garlic and bay
leaves, season, stir, and cook for 15 minutes until sticky and
caramelised.

4. Return the lamb to the pot with the oregano,
 allspice, sugar and tomato paste and stir through.
Add the white wine and bring to the boil. Add the stock and passata, bring
it to a simmer and add the potato. Sprinkle a handful of breadcrumbs
over the top and cover with a lid or baking paper and foil. Place in
the oven for two hours.

5. Uncover and cook for an extra 30
minutes, or until the sauce has reduced a little and the meat is
tender and colouring up at the edges. Serve from the pot with cooked
greens or a leafy salad.

Tips

1. Make sure you get good deep
colour on the lamb when you brown it; this will add a depth of flavour
to the dish that you really can't achieve later.

2. Dried Greek oregano is easy to find at a good delicatessen. The flavour is hard to beat.

3. I prefer fresh bay leaves todried - the flavour is more harmonious in a finished dish.
The pungency of dried leaves can also vary from intense to non-existent,
making the results hard to predict.