
Day 10 Eat Meat Responsibly
I am following THE FOOD BABE WAY, Break free from the Hidden Toxins in Your Food, by Vani Hari, as an effort to eat healthier and be more informed, and to shop and live sustainably.
This one hits close to home. I have raised a family of carnivores. My husband and kids love steak and burgers, and chicken, and fish. I like them too, in moderation, but I hate the thought of factory-farmed meat. I can’t believe how we as a society treat animals (and one another) and can justify it. I feel for anyone working on a factory farm. I can’t imagine their day, the brutality of it day in and day out.
This is a dilemma for me because I want to feed my children and I know they will eat meat, fish, or poultry but I find it difficult to match my moral standard with my pocketbook. This plays all sorts of tricks with my menu/meal planning and shopping.
I buy grass fed pasture raised burger from wholefoods, and sometimes their steak, or bacon. Wholefoods has a numbering system of 1 – 5 for animal welfare. 5 is animal centered, entire life on the same farm. 4 is pasture centered. 3 is enhanced outdoor access. 2 is enriched environment. 1 is no cages, crates, or crowding.
I don’t remember seeing any 5’s. A lot of WF beef is 4. So I will by burger at $7.99 a pound or steak for more. Originally, my husband had found this difficult but he has acquiesced to my needs here. This is not my dream farm animal of how I feel things could be, or once were, but I can feed my family and live with my purchase. The bacon is generally rated 2 and I don’t feel good about it but I buy it occasionally anyway.
Chicken is another story. I would never buy a Fosters Farms chicken where you know the chickens are cramped in cages one on top of the other, unhealthy, beaks sawed off, all sorts of antibiotics, sick. I don’t even want to eat that or feed it to my kids. Chicken at WF is generally rated 3 and there are some organic chickens on the Foodbabe shopping list. 3 is enhanced outdoor access. We know from Omnivore’s dilemma that those chickens are indoors most of their life, and that they are not necessarily getting quality care, and that life is not really like that of a chicken.
I was out in the country the other day and ended up on a lovely piece of property because my daughter was buying a car. I noticed two silos and asked the gentleman what they were for. He said he rented the space to Rosie organic chickens. I didn’t see or hear one chicken. It was silent. All I saw were two very large buildings with the windows boarded up. It is rather strange and eerie not to see or hear one chicken on a chicken farm, organic or not.
So I don’t buy the chicken. I miss out on a lot of good recipes because I can’t get past my dilemma. What is worse is when I don’t have anything in the fridge or prepared for dinner, I will buy the kids buffalo wings or cook up some frozen Tyson bites for Sophia because I am in a crunch and feeling guilty that I haven’t anything and I am strait back to feeding my kids factory farmed chicken.
Yesterday, I bought two organic chickens from Costco. The chicken is labeled organic, organic feed, no added antibiotics, no added hormones, no animal by-products, fresh and natural. It’s USDA organic, and inspected by the US department of Agriculture. According to the Foodbabe certified organic means the animals must be allowed to roam outdoors; although surgical mutilations without any pain relief are permitted. I actually thought if the label didn’t say pasture raised the chickens would be raised indoors much like what I viewed when I was out in the country. I felt somewhat suspect buying this chicken; yet, it felt really good to have something delicious for dinner that the kids appreciated. I would ultimately like to support our local farm Tara Firma farms where the price is $30.00 a chicken. Ouch! I suppose it’s almost that much for a pizza, but for a family of six on a tight budget $30.00 is a lot. Possibly I will work towards making this happen.













