Zeroed in on that immediately!Picture of a Holstein cow on product labeled certified Angus beef.
Restaurant owner who paid for that got robbed.
Even if Holstein steers have the highest % grading choice. Image is everything.
My dad impressed upon me; they all look the same in the dark (I just assumed I’d be able to know the condition score).Picture of a Holstein cow on product labeled certified Angus beef.
Restaurant owner who paid for that got robbed.
Even if Holstein steers have the highest % grading choice. Image is everything.
I got more of problem with the rifle's. Those look more like Henry's than WinchestersPicture of a Holstein cow on product labeled certified Angus beef.
Restaurant owner who paid for that got robbed.
Even if Holstein steers have the highest % grading choice. Image is everything.
Maybe not the answer we would expect, but probably fairly truthful. Probably very few folks pay close attention to each detail and just assume it’s all CAB.We went out to one of the fanciest steakhouses in the area (my bone in ribeye was $30) Out of the 8 or so steaks on the menu, they all had the CAB stamp next to them except the ribeye and the porterhouse. I asked the waiter what about those two? He didn’t know and had to go ask the manager. When he returned he said “the menus were old and needed updating the ribeye was CAB. The porterhouse was not, but honestly people can’t tell the difference “ Not the answer I expected.
I was not impressed.
IF I'm buying, you're getting the junior and will have to share with any guest you brought.I can’t imagine ordering a junior or petit steak..
I could…while I was waiting on a ribeye..I can’t imagine ordering a junior or petit steak..
Why? 75% of the consumers don't know 75% of the breeds anyway, and that's being generous. There was a guy on here once saying dairy beef shouldn't even be labeled as beef. For "the consumer" he said.I shared the menu with a few friends and heard that dairy x limousin calves go into CAB and Fleckvieh calves are sold as Hereford beef.
At this point, we can apply stricter appellations for what defines breed of meat sold in the store.
I am in favor of using DNA technology to ensure that the consumer gets what they think they are buying. Either through parentage verification or a predominate 51% genetic trace back to the foundation genetics of the claimed breed.