Does Grass Fed Beef actually taste different?

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  • čas přidán 26. 06. 2024
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    ⏱ TIMESTAMPS:
    0:00 Intro
    2:17 How is Beef produced?
    5:00 What is the Beef Cattle lifecycle?
    10:38 Does grass fed steak taste different than grain fed?
    23:09 Is expensive steak healthier for you?
    27:58 Is expensive beef humane and better for the environment?
    31:18 Conclusion
    🎵 Music by Epidemic Sound (free 30-day trial - Affiliate): share.epidemicsound.com/33cnNZ
    MISC. DETAILS
    Music: Provided by Epidemic Sound
    Filmed on: Sony FX3 & Sony A7C
    Voice recorded on Shure MV7
    Edited in: Premiere Pro
    Affiliate Disclosure:
    Ethan is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn fees by linking to [Amazon.com](amazon.com/) and affiliated sites.

Komentáře • 938

  • @EthanChlebowski
    @EthanChlebowski  Před 6 dny +34

    News, notes, and more:
    - Thanks again to Made In for sponsoring this one, get 10% off off your first order over $100 using my link ➡ madein.cc/0624-ethan
    - Check out my second channel: youtube.com/@cookwelldotcom?si=ZuDpi4Jp9A30R2KS
    - For all the sources and additional reading, check out this notion page: www.notion.so/ethanchlebowski/Sources-Is-Expensive-Steak-worth-it-f54e385c1cad441a91a4f46cc6717be9
    - What type of tests would you want to see me do for a tomato deep dive? I'm thinking a pasta sauce or salsa test with different tomatoes would be fun!
    Hope you all enjoyed this one. It was fun to put together and really think about steak from a variety of different angles!

    • @carolinepeterson7995
      @carolinepeterson7995 Před 5 dny

      Psyched for tomato deep dive! Depending on what attributes of the tomato you are testing, a good old tomato sandwich could be a useful test. That's by far my favorite way to enjoy a raw, fresh, high-quality tomato. Ham El-Waylly also recently did a short on NYT Cooking where he made a pasta sauce out of barely-cooked grated tomato, which could be another good one if you are trying to taste the raw fresh flavors of the tomato rather than heavily cooked.

    • @FLPhotoCatcher
      @FLPhotoCatcher Před 3 dny

      If you want a *really* deep dive, you should test tomato products, such as catsup, for toxins. Compare catsup that come from various countries, including those with lax pollution standards, like China.
      And does catsup stored in small packets have more absorbed chems from the packaging than catsup in large bottles?

    • @erzsebetkovacs2527
      @erzsebetkovacs2527 Před dnem +1

      For the tomato deep dive, I'd appreciate (and thank you for) a section on the uses of green tomato. Or even, is green, unripe tomato healthy? It's a practical problem occurring every fall, when I have to throw out all the tomatoes that haven't had (and won't have) enough time to ripen.

    • @caseyjones3522
      @caseyjones3522 Před 13 hodinami

      are you still in Mexico?

  • @NE-BO
    @NE-BO Před 7 dny +558

    My family raises cattle and growing up something that we learned early on is that "happy cows make the best meat." The more stressed the animal is, the worse it is for everyone from the beginning to the end. Now I know not all large scale beef operations are the same, but it's been the case from what I've seen in my area. And as a heads up, "grass finished" doesn't mean the cattle were in a large open field, they were most likely in the same sized pin as the rest, but just had grass in the trough vs a corn mixture.

    • @fredocuomo5386
      @fredocuomo5386 Před 7 dny +31

      thats why i pay extra for pasture raised grass fed and finished..its a good bit more expensive..but tastes soo much better

    • @fisharmor
      @fisharmor Před 7 dny +14

      That must be why I hear good things about meat from retired dairy cows. They want to keep them happy for the milk too.

    • @ElCyberWizard
      @ElCyberWizard Před 7 dny +14

      I thought grass finished meant they were peacefully slaughtered over green pastures

    • @matta6298
      @matta6298 Před 6 dny

      The animal being raised right is certainly worth the price. Ethan you really seem to be interested in health, you need to check out AGEs or Advanced Glycation End products. Dr. Pradip Jamnadas has a great presentation on these with the exact biological pathways and all the solid evidence to prove what he's saying. No pseudoscience to be found. It's just a very important thing to be aware of, they are a root cause of inflammation, heart disease, cancer, etc.

    • @dakotareid1566
      @dakotareid1566 Před 6 dny +6

      Grass finished just means the last bit of their life they were fed grass, what you really want is grass fed and finished.

  • @06asheville
    @06asheville Před 7 dny +212

    This is an excellent video, but as someone with a lot of experience in the beef industry I must tell you that you’ve missed a critical variable: length and type of aging. Obviously everyone knows the difference between wet aging and dry aging, but there is HUGE variability in the length of aging in wet-aged beef. If you take a conventional prime ribeye that’s been wet-aged for 14-21 days and compare that to one that’s been aged for 40 days, you will be blown away at the difference. Controlling for as much variability as possible, I did a test between grass finished prime ribeyes and conventional prime ribeyes over a few different aging periods and noticed that conventional steaks have what I call “peak” taste and texture from 30-50 days and grass finished peaks at 21-28 days. Conventional steaks older than 50 days really just get looser and more tender, but the flavor doesn’t really change all the way up to 80+ days. Grass fed really started to go downhill in my test after about 45 days.
    Consumers have pretty much zero control over the length of age for wet age steaks, so maybe it’s a moot point.
    Just my two cents. Would love to see you add this variable in another text.

    •  Před 6 dny +11

      I literally had no idea there was dry and wet aging lol😂

    • @EthanChlebowski
      @EthanChlebowski  Před 6 dny +141

      Shhh, you are going to spoil the next steak video!
      But yes you are totally right. I should have at least mentioned that wet and dry aging happens.
      This is a whole other set of food science I wanted to get into and start testing a bunch of different options. Had to lay the foundation first in this video!

    • @06asheville
      @06asheville Před 6 dny +14

      Sweet. Looking forward to it. Appreciate how thorough you are!

    • @compt3ck
      @compt3ck Před 5 dny +2

      @@EthanChlebowski I'm looking forward to that video! I dry age my deer and elk around 15 days and it makes a huge difference compared to 4-7 days like most processors do.

    • @shane864
      @shane864 Před 5 dny

      Every video this dude makes is pretty bad in terms of accuracy. It's good production value and clickbaity titles and he's likable, but he's very clearly repeating wikipedia article stuff and has no experience whatsoever in the industry. He's one of my go to references when I'm talking about how internet popularity and accuracy are completely unrelated. If you read this Ethan, this is why pro TV productions not using an expert as host hire consultants in the relevant field being covered to help get their script dialed in to 95%. Yours are usually about 70% to my ears. You're a good host, but if you start to get real visibility your lack of education/experience are going to become glaring problems and that's the way to work that particular problem.

  • @PrvtChurch
    @PrvtChurch Před 7 dny +272

    I've found Prime/Choice/Select grading very inconsistent at times and I tend to just actually look at the steaks themselves and pick the ones that look good. Some of the best, most well marbled steaks I've had were graded as Select and looked better than any of the Prime steaks in the display case

    • @check4v
      @check4v Před 7 dny +18

      I've definitely seen things that 100% should be Prime be labeled as Choice and make it all the way to my grocery store. Really happy to snatch them up when I catch those errors and I always take a stroll through the meat section now when I grocery shop just to see if I can get more to freeze for another day.

    • @Krunked
      @Krunked Před 7 dny +27

      def use eyes.. at costco, i grab the best prime i can find, and then walk over to the choice and try and find the best choice that resembles the prime. im ususally successful and safe myself like 30 bucks

    • @Artofcarissa
      @Artofcarissa Před 7 dny +4

      Yeah it’s good to know what to look out for. I had no idea marbling on steak was so important but now I do.
      I absolutely hate a chewy steak so knowing that the marbling will factor into the texture makes more sense to me.

    • @Galastin
      @Galastin Před 7 dny +31

      @@check4v Worth noting that the whole carcass gets the Choice/Prime designations, but for individual cuts you can sometimes find Choice that have more marbling than Prime. So definitely it is worth looking at them closely.

    • @check4v
      @check4v Před 7 dny +3

      @@Galastin Very good point.

  • @johnmiller8975
    @johnmiller8975 Před 6 dny +80

    Ethan I'm a (retired) librarian as someone who is trained to evaluate content & having done this for 30 years your stuff is first rate i paste links to discord channels & recommend you so often to not only home cooks but to professional level students & chefs they all agree keep up the good work
    One quibble though It's heifer

  • @Murrrdoch
    @Murrrdoch Před 7 dny +516

    We're so back

    • @Trigger_Nash
      @Trigger_Nash Před 6 dny +3

      But I'm not black, though.

    • @g.4279
      @g.4279 Před 6 dny +1

      @@Trigger_Nash But Juneteenth just happened.

    • @Trigger_Nash
      @Trigger_Nash Před 6 dny +9

      @@g.4279 True, yet did any black people bother to thank me? No. Such disrespect.

    • @UndertheNeedle282
      @UndertheNeedle282 Před 5 dny +3

      ​@@Trigger_Nashit says BACK.
      So why are you bringing race into a cooking video??

    • @Trigger_Nash
      @Trigger_Nash Před 5 dny +2

      @@UndertheNeedle282 regardless of what it says, what I have said remains true.

  • @Phil_OG
    @Phil_OG Před 6 dny +46

    Deep dive on fruits would be great! So many things to know like which fruits continue to ripen after they are picked, which skin is edible, how to store them, organic vs non organic, different varieties etc.

  • @veganmonter
    @veganmonter Před 6 dny +47

    5:00 - I heard "Cow Café" so I was imagining cows drinking coffee and one of them is on a laptop and giving side-eyes to that "cute looking cow with the black and white patches." Then I realized it was Cow-Calf-Phase.

  • @moose7266
    @moose7266 Před 7 dny +160

    What i do. Is use cheaper cuts as "fillers" for veg, rice, tacos, taquitos etc. And use better quaility as the main and use the veg, rice and pasta as fillers.

    • @lasaldude
      @lasaldude Před 7 dny +12

      Since fat is flavor, up to a certain point. I actually stopped buying 80/20 beef for certain dishes like I buy the 93/7 ground beef for tacos. since i'm putting a ton of taco seasoning on the beef. I feel, i dont really need all that wasted fat. Burgers are a different story of course.

    • @JohnPorknite
      @JohnPorknite Před 7 dny +12

      I think that's generally a good approach, not even just for beef: using cheaper or less flavour-dense products whenever it's not the main star of the show, and splurging a bit more when it is.

    • @KaitouKaiju
      @KaitouKaiju Před 6 dny +3

      ​@@lasaldudeDefinitely don't waste the fat! Save it to flavor other things

    • @Ash_Wen-li
      @Ash_Wen-li Před 6 dny

      @@lasaldude 80/20 is best for burgers imo. I don't really know what else i'd use it for aside from maybe a meat loaf or kabobs

    • @richmondvand147
      @richmondvand147 Před 6 dny +1

      naw you can make "cheap" steak the main focus and have it be amazing - you just need some technique, take skirt steak for example

  • @Mutaburasaurus
    @Mutaburasaurus Před 7 dny +43

    Really looking forward to that butter deep dive!

  • @SnakeAteMyDog
    @SnakeAteMyDog Před 6 dny +10

    Ethan just doesn’t miss. One of the few content creators I will gladly lend over my 30 minutes for a video

  • @GreenT_LoR
    @GreenT_LoR Před 6 dny +10

    The statement about 1 steak per week being above the average really got me to think about how much steak I intake, and I can't recall the last time I ate a steak. Shocking realization 😂
    Another amazing video! Thank you for all that you do! 💚

  • @ghost21501
    @ghost21501 Před 7 dny +24

    I'm a huge beef eater and I'm so glad that I live in the part of the country that raises grass-fed beef. I can go to my local butcher and get completely locally raised grass-fed beef for the cheaper price than you would get horrible meat at Walmart.

    • @Shaosprojects
      @Shaosprojects Před 6 dny

      I’ve seen those walmart steaks and they look floppy and sad

    • @IanAmstadter
      @IanAmstadter Před 6 dny +2

      @@Shaosprojects Who is really buying steaks at Walmart?

    • @Shaosprojects
      @Shaosprojects Před 6 dny +3

      @@IanAmstadter Those who don’t know what makes a good steak, or for those who sadly cannot afford anything better

    • @Tasmanaut
      @Tasmanaut Před 5 dny +1

      @@IanAmstadter most people

  • @lukebutler4727
    @lukebutler4727 Před 6 dny +3

    the best thing you can do to make any steak taste like steakhouse prime is dry brine over night on a rack. draws out a lot of moisture to allow more maillard, and the salt diffuses across the entire steak.

  • @eloquentsarcasm
    @eloquentsarcasm Před 5 dny +3

    As a former butcher/fishmonger of 10 years, grass-fed beef will always be what I recommend, and I mostly only eat bison as I prefer the flavor. Free range animals raised well and happy make for the best meat as several others have said. In hunting, an instant, humane drop really does make a difference as the hormones released when an animal is stressed can dramatically change the flavor of their meat. Having made my living selling meat and fish, I truly appreciate hunting my own food, out in the woods and streams as opposed to buying a packaged product that came from who knows where. As an aside, a New York makes a better steak IMO, as it has a nice fat content with great marbling compared to a Ribeye. Cheap cuts can end up making great meals, it just takes a bit more effort, something as simple as cutting perpendicular to the muscle grain reduces the "chewy" texture by a lot.
    South Americans are devout about grass-fed beef, and their steaks are AMAZING, Chile in particular.

  • @victortung747
    @victortung747 Před 4 dny +2

    Would a deep dive on seafood be a good idea?
    Atlantic salmon vs King salmon vs Rainbow trout, farm vs wild caught, and Cod vs other white fish etc.

  • @fyrecrypts2
    @fyrecrypts2 Před 6 dny +5

    Would love a deep dive on peppercorns. Seems like there's a lot there with the different types, and different suggestions for when to apply it.

  • @matthewrogers237
    @matthewrogers237 Před 6 dny +5

    13:00 I relate and respect so much that he's using deli container lids as plates. I do that all the time

    • @mastergwaha
      @mastergwaha Před 4 dny +4

      or to cut something small and i dont want to wash a cutting board haha

    • @matthewrogers237
      @matthewrogers237 Před 2 dny +1

      @@mastergwaha This is the way.
      If I'm making a quick chicken burrito... I'm not gonna waste a whole plate reheating my chicken/beans/rice... just toss on a deli lid that is already used haha

  • @jeancarlosfigueroaramirez4778

    Ethan I was so worried that you hadn’t post anything this past few weeks. I’m so glad you’re back but also I know your vids are a lot of work with all the research, the cooking and the quality. Really hope you are doing great man, thanks for another great peace of content.

  • @gamanima1
    @gamanima1 Před 2 dny +1

    I’ve been watching you for about 3 ,4 yrs now you do an excellent job . Love the channel!

  • @Gremlack13
    @Gremlack13 Před 6 dny +4

    I agree with the thinner steak getting more flavor from the Maillard reaction.
    Sometimes we have some leftover steak as my wife or kids don’t necessarily eat a whole steak.
    Slicing and searing the rest of the steak to reheat it makes it amazing due to the increased Maillard reaction. It becomes unexpectedly amazing.

    • @1marcelo
      @1marcelo Před 6 dny +1

      Also, the amount of Maillard reaction is probably more important than the degree of marbling. Who cares if the fat gives beef a different flavor than chicken if we are comparing beef vs. beef?

  • @mikeneely6190
    @mikeneely6190 Před 6 dny +18

    Also, the type of "grass" is a variable. Grass in the desert southwest is going to different than in the midwest or out east. I had a co-workers who raised cattle as a hobby (4-6 females, and when they had a steer, that became the meat cow). They would grass feed (pasture) the steers for 2 years and then 3-6 months of grain before slaughter (they said grain added to the marbling). I would get half a steer for my freezer (unfortunately they moved away). They would then hang the beef for 40-45 days before cutting it up (dry aged?). They always said never eat "fresh" meat. That was pretty good beef. So aging is also a variable.

    • @TheGriz403
      @TheGriz403 Před 6 dny +1

      Agreed. Beef should be finished on grain. Alberta brags about its beef, it is from the barley cattle are finished on.

  • @cryofsolace4840
    @cryofsolace4840 Před 5 dny +2

    18:01 Hey Ethan, I work in an HEB meat department and regarding the Fresh Ground product, our meat cutters grind these products from larger, 10lb or so clear vacuum packed packages. The consistency before grinding is pretty similar to what you get from the chubs, and if you check actually some of these products are the same price per pound as their chub counterparts! My personal suspicion is that the main difference will be mostly texture based.

  • @Puddleford
    @Puddleford Před dnem +1

    Honestly you are one of the best CZcamsrs ever, thank you.

  • @djpaz75
    @djpaz75 Před 6 dny +3

    One of the elephants in the room is the ratio and quality of corn in the grain finish. Another is grass-fed operations have a higher disparity in quality which is whether the farmer really was raising grass-fed cattle, or growing pasture land and happen to have lots of cows. It's also worth noting that when dry aging meat, a pure grass-fed piece of beef will lose far less weight and less flesh is removed in the final trim. There is also a difference in flavour of grass-fed cattle where nitrogen ferts have been applied in the field due to. And I highly disagree on the fats entirely making the flavor or the meat. The corn does it. Eat chicken raised with zero corn and you will see the strength of the flavor this gives.

  • @dawsonnance4407
    @dawsonnance4407 Před 6 dny +3

    I needed this, amazing video my friend

  • @Hortonscakes
    @Hortonscakes Před 5 dny +2

    I've been cooking steaks for a long time, I never go to a steakhouse. I started watching Guga 7 or 8yrs ago just to see if I was doing it right (I am). I've tasted steaks from different meat markets and grocery stores here in Oklahoma. Yes, the more expensive meat market ($24 for a 2" NY strip) is the best compared to grocery stores (of course). Butcher box impressed me with their grass fed beef, although the cuts are small. I have found that a 30-60 day dry aged steak is just so damn superior to the rest. Also, doing a dry brine (just salt, refrigerate over night) and cooking in a cast iron with butter and herbs yields the best tasting steak.

  • @jibbyjam1
    @jibbyjam1 Před 2 dny +1

    I usually have beef about once a month, and I generally splurge on really nice steaks and cook them sous vide. It's a rare treat, but I make sure I really enjoy it when I do have it.

  • @morganlowder4532
    @morganlowder4532 Před 7 dny +23

    The best bang for your buck cut of steak is definitely the chuck eye

    • @joe13squirrel
      @joe13squirrel Před 6 dny +4

      It's really going to vary depending on where you are, what time of year it is, current food trends and so on.

  • @jeryndaggs6611
    @jeryndaggs6611 Před 7 dny +3

    Another Ethan Banger.

  • @JoyouHoli
    @JoyouHoli Před 5 dny +1

    Yesterday, this series was on my mind. It's great to have it back.

  • @sevware
    @sevware Před 6 dny +2

    33:51 something that could be fun and interesting for summer would be a "gas vs coal" or like generally grilling techniques deep dive

  • @cheekster777
    @cheekster777 Před 7 dny +4

    Great topic to discuss. 👍🏻
    Thank you Ethan. 🙏🏻

  • @Keasbeysknight
    @Keasbeysknight Před 7 dny +6

    we have a business costco warehouse near us that offers super cheap hallal new zealand grass fed beef. we bought a pichana and it was totally different than any beef weve had. it had alot of interesting flavors that werent better or worse, but totally different. a good way to change up flavors without having to hunt deer, moose, elk.

    • @joestarr2136
      @joestarr2136 Před 7 dny +1

      man i have been wanting to try that beef out at the business center.. i might have to give it a go.

    • @Keasbeysknight
      @Keasbeysknight Před 7 dny +1

      @@joestarr2136 its totally different and its not graded, so you will have to try and spy marbling to get a good cut. the pichana were a little smaller than the typical options and not as marbled, but it was still alot of fun. if you like MEAT flavors and variety id totally try it, just dont expect it to be AMERICAN BEEF. its its own thing and to me thats great. plus its a few $$ less per lb. you might not try the pichana 1st as that package left me with 5 more to vacuum seal and deep freeze, so if you dont like you youre gonna have alot of leftovers youre not excited about.

  • @Galileaboy
    @Galileaboy Před 6 dny +2

    These informative videos are my favorite from Ethan

  • @joe13squirrel
    @joe13squirrel Před 6 dny

    I really appreciate your careful and nuanced points. Very refreshing and inspiring in our time of obfuscation and fact hiding. We need more people like you online!

  • @jordanschmidt9772
    @jordanschmidt9772 Před 7 dny +12

    Thank you for making this video. The steak market is kind of confusing to me so I’m sure I’ll take something from this!

    • @EthanChlebowski
      @EthanChlebowski  Před 7 dny +5

      You are welcome!

    • @lasaldude
      @lasaldude Před 7 dny

      I recommend watching the bearded Butchers as they do a great job going over the different cuts of meat. Some videos are pretty long though. fair warning for ya.

  • @JuanPabloDj88
    @JuanPabloDj88 Před 7 dny +7

    So good to see a good non biased explanation that is not beef eaters extremist

    • @msjkramey
      @msjkramey Před 6 dny +1

      What?

    • @JuanPabloDj88
      @JuanPabloDj88 Před 6 dny +4

      @@msjkramey my english is not that good. The thing is the people who are super extremist about red meat consumption or anti veganism or anti vegetarians. They present a lot of info without anything to back their argument. The same can be said about the the extremist vegans and vegetarians.

    • @msjkramey
      @msjkramey Před 6 dny

      @@JuanPabloDj88 most people aren't at either extreme

    • @jacobkummer2067
      @jacobkummer2067 Před 6 dny +1

      @@msjkramey Most people who recommend things are though

    • @msjkramey
      @msjkramey Před 6 dny

      @@jacobkummer2067 most people who recommend things? People who recommend anything are extremists? Lol

  • @salavora
    @salavora Před 7 dny +2

    Nice! I feel vindicated in the choice I am making in regards to steak, now. Thanks!
    Will you Everdon a video on soups? Broth, ceamy, with or without meat, veggies and so on, keeping it all whole or pureeing at the end and so on ^^
    Your videos have taught me a lot already and I am looking forward to learning more, thank you

  • @Feverdream7777
    @Feverdream7777 Před 7 dny

    thank you for sharing this with the world. It answered so many questions I've had over the years.

  • @Unpar_Guki
    @Unpar_Guki Před 7 dny +3

    Much love for the educational content. Not much on the science of food(but I love science) I think these videos have importance for new cooks.

  • @OmegaMaxter
    @OmegaMaxter Před 7 dny +23

    Knowing a Heffer is a female thats never given birth makes Rocko's Modern Life VERY weird

    • @STOK5OH
      @STOK5OH Před 6 dny +1

      That was the joke..

    • @Kuhchuk1
      @Kuhchuk1 Před 6 dny +2

      What, the suck-o-matic didn't make it weird?

    • @OmegaMaxter
      @OmegaMaxter Před 6 dny

      @@STOK5OH lmao a joke that 90s kids legit wouldnt know. unless you're a farm hand, that isnt really common knowledge

    • @SirEldricIV
      @SirEldricIV Před 5 dny

      Yeah, THAT'S what made Rocko's Modern Life weird. 😂

    • @WayStedYou
      @WayStedYou Před 5 dny

      ​@OmegaMaxter i knew it as a kid

  • @XionEternum
    @XionEternum Před 4 dny +1

    Side note on Made In:
    Project Farm tested this and several other brands of non-stick skillets with Made In ranking par for its price point, but easily lost to less expensive brands in most tests.

  • @andrewlm5677
    @andrewlm5677 Před 6 dny

    Excellent work! Thank you for doing these

  • @leonleek8607
    @leonleek8607 Před 7 dny +8

    short answer yes

  • @thecooletompie
    @thecooletompie Před 7 dny +4

    I would be interested in beer deep dive. Like what are the differences between a lager and pilsner, do certain often called low quality grains actually make a difference (are rice and corn really "bad" for brewing).

  • @markmoyers6724
    @markmoyers6724 Před 4 dny

    Absolutely brilliant well thought out and researched video

  • @Hhammer
    @Hhammer Před 6 dny

    Was thinking of this series yesterday. Great to see it back

  • @jasper5945
    @jasper5945 Před 7 dny +3

    Reupload?

    • @EthanChlebowski
      @EthanChlebowski  Před 7 dny +3

      Completely new video! What makes you think it’s a reupload?

    • @Kuekeue
      @Kuekeue Před 7 dny +4

      @@EthanChlebowskimaybe he got this confused with the video on whether or not the cook (temperature) of a steak matters.

    • @jasper5945
      @jasper5945 Před 7 dny +4

      Exactly as @@Kuekeue said 😅 my bad

    • @EthanChlebowski
      @EthanChlebowski  Před 7 dny +4

      @@jasper5945 No worries! I was curious because I was going to play around with the title thumbnail if a bunch of people were thinking it was a reupload!

  • @outlawfam4787
    @outlawfam4787 Před 4 dny +3

    Brand new beef producer here. We just slaughtered our first steer. He was pasture raised an hour south of SA on native-ish grasses. We finished him with a little grain because we were concerned about marbling; interestingly, he wasn’t interested in the grain because there was a field of fresh oats. He still grazed all day even when supplemented with grain. We did this for the last 2-3 months twice a day. All that to say, the finished product has really nice marbling. However, the taste of the fat is really different. The fat is yellow (not white like traditionally produced beef) and has a faintly fishy aroma that hits at the back of the palate. The texture of the meat is outstanding, but the fat wasn’t what we were expecting. It’s not bad, but we are definitely eating the filets and NY strips more than the ribeyes due to the fat content. Did you notice a taste difference between grass fed beef and the others? Have you tasted this faint fish oil flavor?

    • @maxmotors9497
      @maxmotors9497 Před 4 dny +2

      Most likely the yellow is just carotenoids. The fishy smell/taste seems to be common as well with grass fed cattle. It’s just part of the flavor.

    • @DavidGonzalez-yg2ok
      @DavidGonzalez-yg2ok Před 4 dny +1

      You ate real meat lol,

  • @mytoasterwentflying
    @mytoasterwentflying Před 7 dny +1

    Hey Ethan, as a home cook myself your videos are super interesting and useful as a reference. Gets me to try out some of the stuff myself and see if I can come to the same conclusions. Keep it up dude!

  • @sarat8577
    @sarat8577 Před 2 dny +1

    You are basically the food scientist we didn’t know we needed

  • @bakchormeeman7864
    @bakchormeeman7864 Před 7 dny +4

    It’s crazy how u only have 2mil subs.. your videos are so freaking informative

    • @jzderf
      @jzderf Před 6 dny +2

      I think it’s crazy to say someone “only” has 2 mil subs lol.

    • @Kyle496
      @Kyle496 Před 6 dny

      Most people aren't willing to sit through a video that actually teaches and informs. Most just wanna see the next wild and whacky stupid viral whatever auto plays next.

  • @DingoDIDeatmybaby
    @DingoDIDeatmybaby Před 7 dny +7

    Are expensive steaks worth it? Short answer yes, long answer yes. If you're cooking them straight up, expensive steaks are worth it. If you're cutting them up and using them in mixed dishes like stir fry then no.

    • @FANSpiele
      @FANSpiele Před dnem

      i wouldnt say expensive = worth it automaticly, i would rather say i would look into the farmer and if he really put the quality in the product he sells

  • @snowballeffect7812
    @snowballeffect7812 Před 3 dny +2

    In the US, there's a beef cartel that has been repeatedly fined for price-fixing.

  • @timothyhurley4037
    @timothyhurley4037 Před 13 hodinami

    Super cool deep dive!!! So I was born and raised in Chicago but live in CO. The wife is from a SD ranch family. We raise Certified Black Angus cattle, mainly for the tax write offs. We just slaughtered our first steer last month and kept 1/2, and sold 1/2. The wife spent a lot of time looking at finishing feed blends for protein to fat ratios, carb content etc. Technically, he was grass fed, grain finished but it really wasn't all grain. When we went to have him butchered, the butcher said he was a "big boy" (Certified Black Angus "tend" to be larger than your average black angus.) and if he were to grade him, he would grade him at Prime. My point of this story is that "healthy" also includes, the who, what, where, when and how. We know who raised our beef, we know that all shots were subcutaneous, he was never sick, he had a nice, easy life near a small herd and was dispatched humanely. We know the people who butchered our meat that we are feeding to our friends and family. That matters IMHO. If that matters to you as well, try contacting small beef suppliers that raise beef the way you like it and order some. That's not our primary goal but there are a ton of small farms and ranches that you can build a relationship with. Plus, it's way cheaper than the store.

  • @T0getherAlone
    @T0getherAlone Před 7 dny +4

    I'd love to see more content with Fish! maybe something like Salmon, its different varieties and wild vs. farmed etc.

  • @MrJmcd3737
    @MrJmcd3737 Před 7 dny +3

    MEAT

  • @borttorbbq2556
    @borttorbbq2556 Před 6 dny +2

    I did want to mention that the different cuts are also gonna have a different flavor. So for the grass bad burger you should have made sure that all of it was chuck just happens to be a chuck grass or a chuck grain

  • @dfcarvalho
    @dfcarvalho Před 5 dny +1

    Have you ever been to a Brazilian churrascaria? The one with the beef on "swords". They cook the meat on an open flame pit, bring it to you and cut a slice or two of it onto you place then take back the steak to the flame to brown it again. So you always get slices with lots of browning but still very tender on the inside. I think you'd like it.

  • @Weatherman4Eva
    @Weatherman4Eva Před 7 dny +6

    Man, $8 a pound is too expensive for me, I'm usually waiting to buy beef that's on sale for $4-5 a pound

    • @Temulgeh
      @Temulgeh Před 7 dny +1

      wow you're pretty lucky to get these sales

    • @Weatherman4Eva
      @Weatherman4Eva Před 7 dny +1

      @@Temulgeh with a $5 in-app coupon on top of an in app sale coupon, I was able to get some beautiful tri tip for 3 something a pound! And this is in California as well where things generally aren't cheap. I mean of course you're going to get the cheapest cuts of meat for that $5 sale price, but it's all about how you prepare it that makes it really good. With the right choice of marinating and method of cooking, you can make anything taste wonderful

    • @treyshaffer
      @treyshaffer Před 6 dny

      I usually pay like $20/lb, but I only eat beef like once every two months, and I get prime cuts of steak whenever I do.

  • @philoctetes_wordsworth
    @philoctetes_wordsworth Před 6 dny +4

    At this very moment, I am housing the prolific remnants of a steak dinner I bought for my elderly mother’s 77th birthday. It cost more than $100 per person, and I still have not eaten a bite. It is arguably one of the worst meals I have ever experienced. I am furious. The “restaurant” was Taste of Texas, in houston. They are amateurs, charging expert prices. They shaved fresh carrot onto a slice of carrot cake-as a decoration. The shreds are brown, and have a terrible texture. What were they thinking, and why do people enjoy this place? It is a meal I hate. There are more issues, but I will not bore you further.

    • @DaltonsFriendswood
      @DaltonsFriendswood Před 6 dny

      I can’t speak to the beef or desserts, but Taste of Texas as an awesome salad bar.

  • @TonyNokeo
    @TonyNokeo Před 7 dny

    This is the most informative video on steaks I've ever seen. You out did yourself on this one. Keep it up!

  • @dermodsmyth7645
    @dermodsmyth7645 Před 6 dny +1

    Amazingly detailed video on a subject I didn't even know I was interested in! In Ireland, all our cattle are raised in lush grass fields so I have no comparison. However, I know beef is one of our largest agricultural exports so it's obvious others like it too! Subscribed.

  • @darkkn1te
    @darkkn1te Před 7 dny +16

    To the discussion of steak being better for the environment, I want to draw from Hannah Ritchie's book Not the End of the World. She argues that land use and yield have the most impact on the environment. If you're using more land to feed fewer people, you're contributing more to climate change. Not saying it's more ethical, but it would be more environmentally friendly for us to eat from brutally efficient and centrally located feedlots than even to eat local. But considering the land use of beef at all, it's actually much better to eat less beef. She shows that a person moving from eating beef to eating chicken has a greater effect on emissions than someone going from pescatarian to vegan.

    • @cumemura
      @cumemura Před 7 dny

      Fascinating! Similar ideas in Michael Schellenbergers work.

  • @Lycan3303
    @Lycan3303 Před 7 dny +32

    its crazy how expensive steak has gotten

    • @Stetch42
      @Stetch42 Před 7 dny +5

      Yah I dont even buy it anymore. Not worth it. Chicken all the way and sometimes pork.

    • @larshowen3319
      @larshowen3319 Před 7 dny

      They haven’t even gotten started yet. By the time the democrats are done, there won’t be anymore beef to eat.

    • @Lycan3303
      @Lycan3303 Před 7 dny +5

      @@Stetch42 same

    • @sappyjohnson
      @sappyjohnson Před 7 dny +2

      Steak hasn't gotten any more expensive. Steak itself has no say in the price it is sold for.

    • @Stetch42
      @Stetch42 Před 7 dny +13

      @@sappyjohnson ...what? Well pricetag for that piece of meat is more expensive nowadays. Some cuts up to 4 times more.

  • @SlipperySalmon94
    @SlipperySalmon94 Před 4 dny

    I done the shallot smash too, and done it like an onion smash mixed with Wisconsin butter burger. So basically just toasted buns in beef fat then followed but butter like a condiments on the buns , and just the shallot smash patty and cheese . Best burger I've had.

  • @Nikkyeshiva83
    @Nikkyeshiva83 Před 7 hodinami

    This is the best CZcams video I have ever seen. Very informative and entertaining.

  • @xani666
    @xani666 Před 6 dny +3

    Beef always felt like something that you need to either get the good stuff or not at all. "Bad" chicken is still decent, bad beef is just bad.

  • @marthasundquist5761
    @marthasundquist5761 Před 7 dny +13

    A beef farmer once told me many grain finished animals end up having abcesses in their livers. That told me, that grass finishing was more healthful for the animal. What is more healthful to the animal is more healthful to me, in my opinion. Maybe not the most healthful to my wallet...lol!

    • @overson15
      @overson15 Před 6 dny +1

      A Farmer that is no doubt marketing grass finished beef. He is full of it. I grew up raising beef and the best is grain finished. And traditionally the best beef is well marbled with fat and they hit market weight at a younger age. The younger they are the more tender they will be

  • @bobfree
    @bobfree Před 5 dny +1

    Love your test/reviews! Also love your audio production - what mic are you using?

  • @zaquemwhc
    @zaquemwhc Před 6 dny

    Ethan, please, I watch your videos in a way unlike any other CZcams cooking channel. I feel like I learn so much. Please, I love tomatoes and red sauce, I need you to do that deep dive on tomatoes. I feel like I would learn everything I've never even thought to think about asking about tomatoes... if that makes sense. Thank you so much for your videos it's really reshaping my relationship with the food I cook for myself and my family! Much love.

  • @papertowel3472
    @papertowel3472 Před 5 dny +3

    so what is the answer, is expensive steak worth it. Choice vs Prime? you never answered the question.

  • @dougmackenzie5976
    @dougmackenzie5976 Před 7 dny +24

    $28 a pound?! Not on my fixed income. Nope.

    • @fredericdehohenstaufen7874
      @fredericdehohenstaufen7874 Před 7 dny +6

      Or maybe just eat a great (but expensive) beef portion every 2-3 weeks, and enjoy 1 or 2 meals of pork or poultry and fish in the same period. The rest being vegetables and fruits. Your food expenses will stay the same, and the quality and pleasure of eating meat will just be multiplied! I never enjoyed meat more than when I reduced quantities and increased quality.
      It's the same for tomatoes. If you accept the fact that no good tomatoes can be grown outside of the period from 15th june to 15th september, you will never be as happy as tasting the first tomatoes since 10 months, and only really amazing ones which are not full of water.

    • @dougmackenzie5976
      @dougmackenzie5976 Před 7 dny +2

      @@fredericdehohenstaufen7874, due to its cost, I no longer buy or consume steak, thanks.

    • @fredericdehohenstaufen7874
      @fredericdehohenstaufen7874 Před 7 dny +1

      @@dougmackenzie5976 Well, it simplifies the question indeed!

    • @LadyCatFelineTheSeventh
      @LadyCatFelineTheSeventh Před 7 dny +1

      Stop buying candy, cookies and soda. Suddenly it becomes very affordable.

    • @tann_man
      @tann_man Před 7 dny

      @@dougmackenzie5976 Same here. Maybe 1x mo as a special occasion if they're on sale. I've found my grocer provides sirloin/top round wagyu at as low as $9/lb with similar marbling to choice NY strip

  • @persianwhite
    @persianwhite Před 6 dny

    Another fantastic content. Thank you!

  • @ve-viever
    @ve-viever Před 5 dny

    Absolutely terrific! Great job, Ethan, as always!

  • @askmiller
    @askmiller Před 7 dny +8

    It always frustrates me when people are like: I don't like beef and it's bad for the environment, so I eliminated it from my diet to save the planet. I am now going to grandstand about how everyone else needs to make the same sacrifice I made even though I'm giving up something I don't like anyway and you're giving up something you do like.

  • @disgustedalien
    @disgustedalien Před 7 dny +47

    asmongold should watch this video

    • @Xolition
      @Xolition Před 6 dny +6

      He's never used his kitchen. He probably can't even get to it

    • @disgustedalien
      @disgustedalien Před 6 dny

      @@Xolition there is literaly a few videos of asmon cooking.. do research before making a fool out of your self

    • @Xolition
      @Xolition Před 6 dny +2

      @@disgustedalien don't worry I like him. He just has a problem

    • @bochapman1058
      @bochapman1058 Před 6 dny +2

      He’s already a steak god, he doesn’t need it. He could probably actually teach homeboy a thing or two.

    • @bochapman1058
      @bochapman1058 Před 6 dny +1

      @@Xolition he’s just frugal. It’s more than likely that he grew up extremely poor and he doesn’t value objects, so he just doesn’t care. There’s nothing wrong with that.

  • @cullenjames7542
    @cullenjames7542 Před 7 dny +2

    A test that you should try is on leftover beef, grain vs. grass. I've noticed that grass-fed beef develops far more warmed-over flavor than grain fed. This is anecdotal, but I've noticed it every time I've cooked grass-fed beef and had leftovers.

    • @salmon1329
      @salmon1329 Před 5 dny

      This is all off the top of my head so just some ideas for you to look deeper into, but grass fed beef has more omega 3 (I have found grass fed beef to taste more mineral, gamey, or even fishy) and if I recall correctly warmed over flavour is caused by oxidized fats. So maybe the different fat composition is causing this problem.

  • @core2extremist368
    @core2extremist368 Před 6 dny +1

    For climate impacts, typically people use CO2 equivalent for greenhouse gasses like methane (CH4) over a specific time scale. Typically 10-50 years when talking about ways to avoid warming by more than 2 C.
    As pointed out in the video CH4 eventually oxidizes in the atmosphere to CO2 + H2O. The water quickly precipitates out so the "CO2 equivalent" over time changes, from CH4 with 100% probability upon emission to CO2 with nearly 100% probability in dozens of years. In the first year, most of the CH4 is still around so you get equivalences that look like 70x more powerful - because CH4 traps heat much more than CO2 while it's around. Over a 100 year time scale most of the CH4 has long since been converted to CO2, so the equivalence is more like 17x more powerful: total heat trapped by CH4 versus CO2, accounting for the fact that the CH4 is likely converted within a dozen years or so. The detailed math way to derive the CH4-to-CO2 warming ratio is a calculus and statistics problem, an integral of the expected time at which CH4 gets oxidized. Take a semester of calculus, learn about the exponential distribution, and Bob's your uncle.
    As for time scales: as with most things in physics there are natural "time scales" at which key climate impacts happen. If you emitted a gigaton of CO2 into the environment that would warm the surface starting pretty much immediately. Over a few decades that CO2 would equilibrate with the carbonate content of the oceans: this is why the oceans are slowly acidifying, more CO2 in the atmosphere drives ocean chemistry towards having lots of H + HCO3, carbonic acid. Over even longer time scales (order million years) some of that H2CO3 in the oceans turns into seashells and gets deposited on the sea floors. And over even LONGER time scales we get "sillicate weathering" where rain water, slightly more acidic than average in high CO2 conditions, weathers silicate rocks a bit more and forms carbonate sediments that wash into the ocean and sink to the bottom. This last time scale, super long, is interesting for long-term cycles of "hothouse Earths" and "snowball Earths." Periods with many ice ages have much of the land surface covered in snow, not water, so silicate weathering slows down. The typical CO2 fraction of the atmosphere rises. In high CO2 environments there's little snow, lots of water, silicate weathering speeds up, and the atmosphere loses CO2 to rock weathering (slightly) faster.
    So the reason people talk about CH4 and CO2 over different time scales is because sometimes people care about what the weather effects will be in 5 years. Others care more about what the overall impact will be over 100 years.
    This consideration of time scales is also part of the discussion on how to mitigate climate change in various ways. Especially CO2 capture and storage. The storage mechanism usually will leak trapped CO2 back to the atmosphere over time. If your goal is to trap CO2 to mitigate spikes in a few years then it makes sense. But if you're pumping CO2 gas into a cavern that will leak it all out in a 100 years, and your goal is to mitigate long-term climate impacts, then it's a total waste of time.

  • @jeffreykennedy5956
    @jeffreykennedy5956 Před 6 dny

    Great video, thanks for the reaserch.

  • @ph1shstyx
    @ph1shstyx Před 6 dny +1

    Honestly, it very much comes down to the cow breed and how it was raised. Happy cows are tasty cows as my grandparents say, who run a small cattle operation and sell the animals after the calving stage. Wagyu will almost always have more intermuscular fat than a black angus, it's just how the breeds are, and honestly, I'm a huge fan of the butcher cuts (hanger, skirt, flank), than the typical strip or tenderloin.

  • @MowingVids
    @MowingVids Před 6 dny

    Loved this video great information

  • @whitesonar
    @whitesonar Před dnem

    love these deep dives

  • @milesfann33
    @milesfann33 Před 5 dny +1

    I'd love to see a video like this comparing organic vs conventional fruits and vegetables. I think sometimes people are misled by the labels. I recently bought some conventional apples which are considered "bad" by people who buy organic but the apples are absolutely delicious. I would like to know if pesticides being sprayed on produce is bad for us and is organic really any better? I mean organic farms do use pesticides so it's confusing.

  • @joseph-ow1hf
    @joseph-ow1hf Před 2 dny

    I remember as a kid, the packaged beef at the grocery had stickers that proudly proclaimed 'Grain Fed'. I grew up on a small farm and we raised our own, and they were indeed, grain finished w/ corn sometimes mixed w/ molasses. (they go nuts for the the stuff w/ the sugar....kinda like human kids and cereal).

  • @Basilgarad
    @Basilgarad Před 6 dny +1

    For these sorts of comparison tests in the future, please make sure to standardize the cuts of meats as much as possible!
    Though these are all ribeyes, the 2 prime cuts appear to be cut from the end, with 3 distinct muscles in the steaks, as opposed to the 2 choice steaks, which only consist of the rib eye and cap

  • @jaklg7905
    @jaklg7905 Před dnem

    I love that you showed a Polish store. Would love to go back to Poland some day.

  • @gregvandell
    @gregvandell Před 6 dny

    Great video! For a suggestion, I'd like to see a video on cooking with (using?) raw cuts of meat, whether it's a steak or fish tartare, a civeche, homemade sushi, etc.. I learned from a biologist that she would not use the frozen tilapia I previously was using for civiche, and I think an overall video on consuming raw meats would be great.

  • @jake2011rt
    @jake2011rt Před 2 dny

    I live around a lot of beef farmers. Every single one of them says they prefer the taste of corn-fed beef, and they are often talking about their own cows. Namely, they’ve tried both with their own heards, and found that when beef is fresh the corn-fed meat tastes much better.

  • @philoctetes_wordsworth
    @philoctetes_wordsworth Před 6 dny +2

    My retired admiral uncle is in La Grange, texas. He raised Limousin cattle, exclusively. I have never seen it highlighted on a menu, so I have wondered, my entire adulthood: where did his special cattle end up? Were they ground into patties, with lesser cows? He hated his cattle-he said so, freely. He has given me a very ugly image of ranchers. They are evil.

  • @chasingcloudsandflavorrevi9817

    These videos are the soundtrack of my life 😅 thanks dude 👊😎

  • @jaredreid2661
    @jaredreid2661 Před 6 dny

    love your channel and all the deep dives in info.
    One thing i think that a lot of people could benefit from is proper meal planning/prep to eliminate waste. I'm personally bad at it and end up throwing away so much produce because i just don't get back around to it.

  • @OversampleReality
    @OversampleReality Před 6 dny

    Thank you for the frank and well researched conversation about the topic. Many adjustments to my mindset to buying beef... From environmental to my own health. Thanks!

  • @gregoryallen5839
    @gregoryallen5839 Před 3 dny

    I love Ethan and his videos. This video was interrupted 4 times by 1 minute of ads. I stopped before it was finished.

  • @9194jc
    @9194jc Před 2 dny +1

    I applaud your approach to presenting the facts. Do many pick on one very narrow tact point and get religious about it. Reality is no simple answer and we are fortunate to have choices that allow us to focus on what is important to us. Key is everyone needs to respect the different perspectives and lifestyles.

  • @jaysantiago-BX-NY
    @jaysantiago-BX-NY Před 6 dny

    Dude, this is an amazing video!!👏👏 As an almost daily steak/ beef eater, I really appreciate your research!! You've given me a lot to think about and research🤔
    Keep the great content coming!!❤❤

  • @AkumatiDeft
    @AkumatiDeft Před 4 dny +1

    Please do a video on tomatoes! There are so many different kinds out there, especially if you are growing them yourself. I'm sure most of us think we know a lot about tomatoes, but after your videos we generally realize we didn't know squat. Lol

  • @snowpea809
    @snowpea809 Před 4 dny

    Another great well video!

  • @BanksZero
    @BanksZero Před 3 dny

    I like your nuanced take in this video. I especially like your question of "how much beef do you eat?"