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Grass Fed
Beef Is Finally Available!
Well, it took us four months longer than
we anticipated but it finally is here. We can now offer you
beef that has only been fed grass with health benefits that
are similar to fish. Please visit our ordering
page if you are ready to place your order.
A
Quick Review of the Fats That Make Up Your Body
All food fats are a blend of the different
types, saturated and unsaturated. Unsaturated fats include
poly- and monounsaturated fats. omega-3s and 6s are types
of polyunsaturated fats, called essential because we have
to get them from food, our bodies can't manufacture them
from other fats.
The
Story on the the Good Fats and Bad Fats
Whereas cellular proteins are genetically
determined, the polyunsaturated fatty acids composition
of all cell membranes is to a great extent dependent on
the dietary intake.
There are many kinds of fats in the
body. Some of the most crucial fats are in the list of compounds
that make up the cell walls for all of the body's cells.
After isolating these fats scientific
experiments determined that if the ratio of omega 6 fats
to omega 3 fats exceeds 4:1, people have more health problems.
This is especially meaningful since grain-fed beef can have
ratios that exceed 20:1 whereby grass-fed beef is down around
3:1.
Similar ratios are also found in all
grain-fed versus grass-fed livestock products.
Grassfed products
are rich in all the fats now proven to be health-enhancing,
but low in the fats that have been linked with disease.
If you want to read a comprehensive
review of omega 3 fats along with 78 references to the clinical
literature you can read Omega
3 Oils.
Why
are Omega 3 Fatty Acids Important For Your Health?
Omega 3 fatty acids are essential
for normal growth and may play an important role in the prevention
and treatment of:
- coronary
artery disease
- hypertension
- arthritis
- cancer
- other
inflammatory and autoimmune disorders
Your
Body Can't Make These Fats So You Have to Get Them From Your
Diet
Omega 3 and omega 6 fats are not interconvertible
in your body and are important components
of practically all cell membranes.
Whereas the proteins in your cell are
genetically determined, the unsaturated fats of all your
cell membranes is to a great extent determined on what you
eat.
Therefore you need sufficient amounts
of dietary omega 6 and omega 3 fats and they need to be
balanced for normal development.
Your Diet
Has Evolved From Your Ancient Ancestors
On the basis of estimates from
studies in Paleolithic
nutrition and modern-day hunter-gatherer populations,
humans evolved on a diet that was much lower
in saturated
fatty acids than is today's diet. Furthermore,
the diet contained small but roughly
equal amounts of omega 6 and omega 3 fats.
Plant Fat
Ratios
In the past 100 years there has been
a rapid and unprecedented change
in our diet. The modern vegetable oil industry was developed,
and it is based on oil from seeds rich in omega 6 fats.
Modern agriculture increased production by emphasizing grain
feeds for domestic livestock, and grains are rich in omega
6 fats. Therefore, aggressive,
industrialized agricultural management
techniques have decreased
the omega 3 fat content in many foods: green leafy vegetables,
animal meats, eggs, and even fish.
This imbalance where omega 6 fats levels
exceed omega 3 levels can be seen by comparing wild edible
plants and wild animals and birds with products of modern
agriculture. Products of modern agriculture frequently have
drastically lower omega 3 levels.
It is estimated that man evolved with a omega 6 to omega
3 ratio of one to one from both meat and vegetable sources.
Today the vegetable sources have an
estimated omega 6:3 ratio of
10 to one.
The modern diet of meat, fish, chicken, and vegetable oils
has a ratio estimated to be
20 or 25 to one.
Eggs
and Beef Fat Ratios
Chickens that eat vegetables high in
omega 3 fats, along with insects and lots of fresh green
grass, supplemented with fresh and dried fruit, and small
amounts of corn
Range fed eggs have an omega 6:3 ratio
of 1.5 to one
whereas the "supermarket egg"has
a ratio of 20
to one.
Modern agriculture's emphasis on increased
production has led to the development of chicken feed that
is being reflected in the out-of-balance ratio of fatty
acids in the "supermarket egg."
North Dakota State University conducted
a study on the nutritional differences between grass-fed
and grain-fed bison.
The results of that study closely followed that of the egg
studies. The grass-fed bison had omega 6 to omega 3 ratios
of 4.0 to one,
and the grain-fed bison had ratios
of 21 to one.
Additional studies by others clearly
show that the longer cattle
are fed grain, the greater
the fatty acid imbalance.
For instance, after 200 days in the feedlot grain-fed cattle
have omega 6 to omega 3 ratios that exceed 20 to one. Many
cattle are fed 200 days or more in the United States.
With the scientific data that has been
published concerning omega 6 and omega 3 fatty acids, we
must assume grass-fed beef
is far better
for human nutrition than grain-fed beef. If so, then having
access to grass-fed beef can be very beneficial for one's
health.
And since REAL
Beef
has been raised naturally,
without hormones,
and without having been fed antibiotics
during the final phase of their lives, they have added
benefits.
Why
Not Get Your Omega 3 Fats From Fish?
Fish, while generally a leaner food
choice than beef, is heavily promoted as a good source of
the omega-3 fats.
The problem with fish is that over half
of the US burns coal to generate electricity and 80,000
pounds of mercury is dumped into the oceans every year as
a result.
Nearly all fish are contaminated with
mercury. It has gotten so bad that even the conservative
US government warns pregnant women to avoid eating fish.
Additionally, it is my recommendation that you avoid
all fish, unless you are absolutely certain that it has
been tested in a laboratory and shown not to contain detectable
levels of mercury and other toxins.
REAL
Beef
is Grass Fed Beef and
a Major Source of Omega 3 fats
When we switch from
grainfed to grassfed meat, then, we are simply returning
to the diet of our long-ago ancestors, the diet that is
most in harmony with our physiology. Every cell and every
system of our bodies will function better when we eat products
from animals raised on grass.
Grass-fed
beef is naturally leaner than grain-fed beef.
Omega 3s
in beef that feed on grass is 7% of the total fat content,
compared to 1% in grain-only fed beef.
- Grass-fed
beef has the recommended ratio of omega 6 to omega 3 fats
(3:1.)
- Grass-fed
beef is loaded with other natural minerals and vitamins,
plus it's a great source of CLA (conjugated linoleic acid)
a fat that reduces the risk of cancer, obesity, diabetes,
and a number of immune disorders.
Beef, in
its natural grass-fed state, is a health food of the highest
order.
Order REAL
Beef
at now!
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