Zappaman
WKR
She sounds like a "wife" to meMine is very supportive of hunting. She just likes to poke at me. She even helps put some meat in the freezer.
She's a keeper-- the best kind nag (a bit).
She sounds like a "wife" to meMine is very supportive of hunting. She just likes to poke at me. She even helps put some meat in the freezer.
We call these "Steak and a plate" houses. When you order steak, you get a steak and a plate, not a meal.I hate "Steakhouses". You pay a premium price for a lump of meat and then you pay for a family sized portion of some shitty vegetable, a baked potatoe and a salad ala carte style.
Youre defintely not wrong about that.It'll be a cold day when I spend $300 for two, let alone $20 for a drink.
I look at it this way... 99% of my steaks are awesome and made at home- I truly live the life of a 19th century king with regards to the food I eat (40% grown produce and 70% harvested meat at home) AND the wine/scotch I drink (thank "dog" for Costco!). Not every night is steak night, but at least a few times a week, I grab some loin, back-strap, or hanger (elk, deer, oryx, or bore) and open a good bottle for my wife and I here in Kansas. It's our family tradition.Youre defintely not wrong about that.
CowboyView attachment 352412Here’s the scenario, you and your spouse are going out to the areas premier steak house. You’ve got 300$ burning a hole in your pocket and you’ve got an appetite for steak. Based on the attached list, whats your order looking like? Assume 20$ per cocktail or glass of wine.
Corn fed and grain fed isn’t natural?! I see very, very, very few good, finished all grass feed beef. You might pasture them on decent grass but most are always supplemented and then fed grain heavily for at least 90 days at the end. If you are relying on good grass in the West then good luck. Unless you have specific pasture grass planted and have flood irrigation. Better spray for intrusive weeds but that isn’t natural either.Of course there is. We grain supplement for one month to finish before locker hanging, our beef hung 21 days this year, Oct 20 until Nov.10th.
And there's a huge difference in corn or exclusively grain-fed beef, and grass fed. The former is garbage in comparison and it isn't natural. Nobody wants that crap here, it's largely an Midwestern and Eastern thing.
To each his own, but my family never knew quality beef until we moved West. When we started growing a bit of beef we got a bit more serious about it.
Moving on, sidetracked enough. We won't change any minds here.
@Broomd is right, it isnt natural. Just because a practice has been adapted for decades does not make it natural. Same could be said for row crop ag as well. We can grow the crap out of some crop if we put enough synthetic fert and supplemental water on it. But it is not natural and is raping the life out of the very soils we depend on to feed the country. You want to see farming and ranching done as natural as possible, study up a bit on Gabe Brown's operation.Corn fed and grain fed isn’t natural?! I see very, very, very few good, finished all grass feed beef. You might pasture them on decent grass but most are always supplemented and then fed grain heavily for at least 90 days at the end. If you are relying on good grass in the West then good luck. Unless you have specific pasture grass planted and have flood irrigation. Better spray for intrusive weeds but that isn’t natural either.
@Broomd is right, it isnt natural. Just because a practice has been adapted for decades does not make it natural. Same could be said for row crop ag as well. We can grow the crap out of some crop if we put enough synthetic fert and supplemental water on it. But it is not natural and is raping the life out of the very soils we depend on to feed the country. You want to see farming and ranching done as natural as possible, study up a bit on Gabe Brown's operation.
I was going to order the filet....Always go with the Ribeye when you have these types of selections. The exception might be a hanger steak or, occasionally, you’ll see a Conflexus muscle, but very rare.
Filet is the least interesting cut of beef on a cow. I worked in a craft butcher shop for awhile and we made this observation: bitchy women with beat-into-submission-husbands order filets. Sexy woman with men with respectable taste order ribeyes.
Bourbon neat.