My goal is to add something new to my repertoire each year. Harvey Ussery wrote that it is respectful of our animals to use everything that we can, to not waste any part of their valuable life. OK, that is how I interpreted it for myself, but that is the gist of what he said. The "ick" factor is pretty strong in today's society, and I'm no different.....except I am determined to change. One bite at a time. Shudder.
Last year we made use of heart and livers by making our sausage 20% organ meats. After the first meal, we forgot it was in there. Organ meats from healthy, pastured animals are amazingly good for us. It was time to put on the big girl pants and learn to eat them.
This year I added the chicken feet to my broths. That wasn't as bad as I'd anticipated.
This fall, we bought our very first side of beef. I highly recommend saving up for this. Freezers are cheap to come by, especially if you know an busy real estate agent or realtor. Getting rid of a freezer in the basement is often on the to-do list of their selling clients and can be had for very little cash, or even for free. I also see them listed in local "for sale" ads for bargain prices....or free! They don't cost much to run, and the savings of buying an entire side will more than cover the cost of the freezer and the power to run it. If you live where the winters are cold and it will be full mostly during winter, put it in the garage and it will barely run at all.
The butcher will ask you how you want it cut up and packaged. Do some online research in advance. Many small farm websites have detailed information. Think about what you usually cook as far as beef goes.....actually, you can get pork this way as well.....and order mostly those types of cuts. It is ok if you eat ground beef most of the time! We like roasts and ground beef, and rarely cook steaks. So I got mostly these cuts, and asked for a few steaks so I could expand my cooking skills. I've always enjoyed steaks at restaurants, not at home. If the steak is not cooked right at a restaurant, you can send it back. Not so at home. But that will change....this year.
Buyiing an entire side, or even an entire animal, can be economical in more ways if you are adventurous and aren't afraid to rattle a few pots and pans. Most people don't want the bones, fat, organs, and unusual cuts, and these are actually thrown away! When I got my side of beef, the person taking the other half didn't want anything but standard grocery store style cuts. Know what that meant? Yup. I got to have ALL of the other stuff, at NO additional cost to me. That's right. You pay a set fee, called "hanging weight," which means the weight of the side before it is cut and wrapped. How much of that actually ends up in your freezer is up to you.
We got many, many more pounds of great food for free along with our purchased beef. With the bones from the entire cow, I canned 54 jars of beef broth! You can't buy broth of this quality or nutrient value in any store, no matter how many times you see words like "organic" or "natural" or "free-range" on the label.
I also rendered all the trim fat into tallow, which is the best fat for deep fat frying. I reserved the best for this, and made some into a batch of very, very premium soap. A bit more will go into the very best moisturizing cream, although with my dietary changes over the past few years and using only goat's milk soap to wash with, I have very little need for skin protection.
I'll admit that some of the liver.....a beef liver is HUGE....was given away (it was reported to be heavenly by liver lovers) and some will be fed to our dogs....hey, they also need good food! It was FREE.
The heart is in the freezer...well, half of it is. Half went into our sausage this year. The other half is waiting for the rest of the ingredients needed to make a mincemeat recipe I found in one of my antique cookbooks that looks very promising. I love mincemeat pie, and the spice, fruity recipe will likely hide any ick flavor.
Something terrible happened with my beef, though. There was a mis-communication and the tail and the kidney suet was tossed in the trash. That turned into something wonderful, though. When you talk to the actual farmer who raised the animals, you are no longer just a number in a ledger. It is not the same as buying meat on foam trays in the grocery store. You develop a relationship.
So something fantastic came from this goof. The farmer felt bad about this, and promised to give me these items from the next cow. I got the call this week. I will not only get the tail and the suet, but all the usual things that are tossed in the trash....all the bones and trim fat, all the organs, anything else that will be thrown away.
Meanwhile, I spent some time with the butcher, who works in his own small butcher shop. We are also developing a relationship that will be mutually beneficial. He is setting up a mobile slaughter truck. (Ick, I know, you don't want to think about this. But animals die to feed you and me, and isn't it better that they die with the least amount of stress, fear, and cruelty? Mobile slaughter units are a way for smallholders to deal with this unpleasant task right on the farm....just by writing a check. I think it is a brilliant solution. And far kinder to the animals.)
Best thing ever.....I had a conversation with the butcher about getting the "trash" from other animals once he is up and running. There are legal ins and outs to this, so not all can do it. For example, if I send a pig to slaughter and don't want the bones and fat, the slaughterhouse can't sell them. If the farmer sends an animal and gets it back all cut and wrapped and then sells it piece by piece, he can sell the bones, fat, organs, etc. But he usually doesn't, as nobody wants them, so they can be purchased for a song, in bulk, if he knows in advance. I've set myself up to be able to do this. Ask and you shall receive.
Today's story, though, is really about the beef tongue. Ick. Double ick. It LOOKS like a tongue. Nasty.
So I corned it, like corned beef brisket (recipe here). Once it was peeled (shudder again) and sliced, it was the most tender corned beef I've ever eaten. It was marvelous on sourdough bread with home made fermented mustard, and later, hubby diced it up and scrambled it with his breakfast eggs. A beef tongue is HUGE, by the way. Several pounds of tender, succulent meat.
In the brine for 10 days while I try to forget.....
What will you be creative with this year? Can you find a way to be a bit more brave and honor the animals a little more?
Or let the dogs do so....they have to eat, too! Nothin' wrong with that!
The shameless commerce portion of today's post: My next get healthy/stay healthy class starts soon! January 28, 2013, to be exact. All via telephone, and you can sign up, put the phone on speaker mode, and invite as many to listen with you as you can fit in the room. Twelve weeks of great information and some great give-aways, too. For details, click here.
Oh, and you never have to eat any ick if you don't want to, promise....but there will be bacon!
The shameless commerce portion of today's post: My next get healthy/stay healthy class starts soon! January 28, 2013, to be exact. All via telephone, and you can sign up, put the phone on speaker mode, and invite as many to listen with you as you can fit in the room. Twelve weeks of great information and some great give-aways, too. For details, click here.
Oh, and you never have to eat any ick if you don't want to, promise....but there will be bacon!