Natural Beef Sales Outpace Other Kind

Posted on Friday, October 14 at 10:48 by Ed Deak
Thanks to concerns about mad cow disease, the success of natural foods stores and Americans' growing desire to know where their food comes from, natural meat is one of the beef industry's fastest-growing sectors. Over the past 10 years, Oregon Country Beef has gone from processing 3,400 head a year to 40,000. Since the mad cow scare in 2003, production has more than doubled, with a 73 percent increase over the past year. Estimated at $500 million to $550 million a year, the market for natural and organic beef accounts for less than 1 percent of overall US beef production, but is growing at about 20 percent annually, while overall beef production of 24.6 billion pounds this year is down from 25.1 billion in 1995, according to the National Cattlemen's Beef Association. Under the US Department of Agriculture definition, almost anyone can slap a "natural" label on minimally processed beef. But through the efforts of ranchers and natural beef marketers, natural beef has come to be defined as raised without antibiotics or growth hormones, and never fed the meat byproducts that can carry mad cow disease. Organic beef must meet strict regulations, including the requirement that cattle eat only organic feed. One of the pioneers and industry leaders is Coleman Purely Natural in Golden, Colo. Chairman Mel Coleman Jr., the company will be pressing the USDA to make the "natural" label for beef more definitive. "The trend has changed," Coleman said. "Consumers today have become much more aware." The growing demand has moved natural beef into mainstream stores. For example, Laura's Lean meats are sold in Albertson's and Fred Meyer stores in Oregon, and shoppers on Fresh Direct, a New York-based Internet grocer, can choose from USDA choice top sirloin steak for $4.99 a pound and Creekstone Farms antibiotic-free choice top sirloin for $5.99. At the Newport Avenue Market in Bend, Ore., where all the beef sold is Oregon Country Beef, most customers are looking for taste and tenderness, meat manager Randy Yochum said. But many are also like swim instructor Ulani Levy, whose father is a toxicologist, and who's concerned about antibiotics in her food and hormones given to cattle to make them grow faster. "I'll be eating this the rest of my life," she said, packages of natural T-bone steaks in her hand. Still, Coleman said he can count on the fingers of both hands the outfits doing more than $1 million a year in sales. Michael Boland, professor of agricultural economics at Kansas State University, figures the higher prices paid for natural beef - around 20 percent - are eaten up by the higher costs of raising them. A sick animal that has to be treated with antibiotics drops out of the program and no growth hormone means cattle gain weight slower. And while it's easy to get as much as a 70 percent premium for steaks, it is tough to get any more for the end meats - briskets, chuck and rounds, Boland said. Oregon Country Beef made a key move last year when it made a deal with Burgerville, a Vancouver, Wash., chain dedicated to locally produced and sustainable foods, to produce all their hamburger. Jack Graves, chief cultural officer for Burgerville, said the chain was looking for a safe source of beef after the mad cow scare in 2003, and held back sales to give Oregon Country Beef time to meet Burgerville's demand of 35,000 pounds a week. Oregon Country Beef's growth has also been tied to getting into dozens of Whole Foods Markets, a chain with 176 stores in the United States, Britain and Canada, and 65 more in development. The main thing keeping natural beef from going mainstream is distribution, said Fedele Bauccio, CEO of Bon Appetit Management Co., in Palo Alto, Calif., which serves only natural beef at cafes on college and corporate campuses in 26 states. "These guys are up against the Monsantos of the world - genetically modified products, big agriculture," said Bauccio. "I think Whole Foods is growing faster than Wal-Mart. I don't know if they will ever catch them. But there is a huge population that cares about what they put in their bodies." http://www.forbes.com/associatedpress/feeds/ap/2005/10/12/ap2274250.html http://www.boston.com/news/education/higher/articles/2005/10/12/natural_beef_sales_outpace_other_kind/ [Proofreader's note: this article was edited for spelling and typos on October 15, 2005]

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Comments

  1. Fri Oct 14, 2005 6:30 pm
    It is about time.

  2. Fri Oct 14, 2005 8:03 pm
    Mmmmm, Free range organic beef! ;)

    I know I've said this before, but when you smell real, naturally raised beef (raw, just butchered) it smells remarkably sweet. Don't let anyone tell you there is no difference!


    ---
    "If you must kill a man, it costs you nothing to be polite about it." Winston Churchill

  3. Sat Oct 15, 2005 3:15 am
    That is disgusting! A happy, living, intelligent being gets slaughtered for you to chew its flesh, and you say: "raw, just butchered, it smells remarkably sweet".

    That is the smell of innocence. The smell of purity. You want to EAT that? You feel no guilt?

    Drink green tea. Eat tofu. This will start to cleanse your karma, you vile worm.

  4. Sat Oct 15, 2005 3:47 am
    Hehehe. The "I eat nothing that casts a shadow" crowd heard from. No, guilt was erased from my psyche long ago. Six months in an abbatoir will do that.

    Suprise! I do eat tofu (and enjoy it!) and drink green tea. I had a gardenburger for dinner tonight. But I'm a omnivore with carnivore tendencies, and don't deny it. I've always encouraged that people who eat meat should kill their own dinner once, just to see the price that's paid.

    Karma can only be portioned out by the Universe. Nothing you or I do can change it. Name calling only subtracts from your portion.

    ---
    "If you must kill a man, it costs you nothing to be polite about it." Winston Churchill

  5. Sat Oct 15, 2005 4:32 am
    So speak the Vive Police.

  6. Sat Oct 15, 2005 6:26 pm
    The word "organic" is getting burned out. The introduction of chemicals in what we eat, has become so dominant we now consider it normal. Society can't stand rotten vegetables in the house or milk that turns sour. We have become so brainwashed that we now think "natural" is unusual or a new kind of chemical. I can remember when my parents became modern and no longer canned their own veggies and instead of hanging cloths on the line they bought "natural" smelling detergent.

    There is a lot of "organic" grown foods. People just don't want to get their hands dirty touching them.

  7. Sat Oct 15, 2005 6:36 pm
    "The word "organic" is getting burned out."

    I disagree. "Organic" or "Certified Organic" has a very strict set of criteria to those definitions. For example, a Certified Organic vegetable is grown in land that has been petrochemical fertilizer and pesticide free for 5 years. The seeds are non-genetically modified.

    I think most people just don't know the difference. But, if you give someone two strawberries, one from the grocery store, one certified organic - the difference is readily apparent in the taste.


    ---
    "If you must kill a man, it costs you nothing to be polite about it." Winston Churchill

  8. Sun Oct 16, 2005 2:33 pm
    It does smell sweet, doesn't it?

    This whole move to "organic beef" kind of makes me laugh...there didn't used to any other kind. I still buy beef the old-fashioned way, I get it from a farmer who has it custom slaughtered for me.

  9. Mon Oct 17, 2005 2:14 pm
    "I think most people just don't know the difference" That's the point I'm trying to make. People have been eating processed food so lomg that "organic" has just become a sales pitch."The few" that tried organic strawberries will see the differance. I live in a rural area and "store bought" is not common by the locals. It should be rare that anyone eats processed foods and would see the differance.



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