Re: Cooking the perfect steak...
And a good christmas morning to you guys.
I usually buy a whole black Angus beefer once a year.Pure grass fed with some grain towards the end to marble him a bit.I get him from a local dirt farmer who has 10 or 20 on his little 60 acre farm.That land has never seen fertilizer and that calf has never seen antibiotics.About as organic as it gets.
Dressed at the hook it comes at about 600 pounds and it goes at $1.95 a pound.
Usually half of it gets to be ground beef,which I sell at cost or give to my family and friends,but the steak is mine.
Usually the little slaughterhouse vacuum packs the cuts and absolutely no water or chemicals are added.
Straight from the hill side into my freezer!
This beef tastes very different from store bought and there is not that much difference between the different cuts.
The real good part is in the family traditions that are kept alive and the fun we have with it.
My wife's grand mother, 93 years old, bless her,always asks for the tongue.She boils it, spices it and then cuts it into real thin slices, she uses for cold cuts.We have to go through the movements of telling how much we love it...
My BIL's parents,from Brindisi,Italy, are always after the intestines and ground beef.They come back a few days later with great Italian sausage,which they are very proud of.I usually give them cod when I go deep sea fishing.They love it and call it Bakkala.
I did not really realize how much of a family tradition is has become until yesterday afternoon. I talked to my daughter,who is going to school in London.She was always a borderline vegetarian,but she would eat my "cow".She told me about the terrible things that the English do to meat and how they call it "pie" once they are done with it.
What she really said,was that she misses the family gatherings by the lake house where we barbecue and enjoy each other.
May you all have a blessed year and lots of family to enjoy and share your life with.