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Historic (rec.food.historic) Discussing and discovering how food was made and prepared way back when--From ancient times down until (& possibly including or even going slightly beyond) the times when industrial revolution began to change our lives. |
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JE Anderson extrapolated from data available...
> > Actually that is a fallacy, at least in Alberta. I pay about a 10 - > 20% premium for buffalo meat at my butcher. I can get it for less > from a direct supplier. T-bone buffalo is about $23.00/kilo, T-bone > beef is about $19.00/kilo on an average day. Not counting grocery > store sale prices on the beef of course. > "Everyday" TBone (the standard "sto-bought" market grades below prime) rarely exceeds $7 a pound (about the equivalent of your $19 a kilo considering lower Canadian dollar), and can be bought on sale for as low as $3.99 a pound. I've not seen buffalo in local markets but a local premium meat service carries it frozen and like everything lese including the better sins it can be bought in Austiin....TBone in the $12-15 a pound range with tenderloin appreciably higher. I "harvested" a surplus one with a friend from a nearby ranch last year and got a hindquarter, tongue (smoking) and section of the hump, great for slow barbecue. Because buffalo, at least around here, walk more, the hindquater was pretty sinewy compared to your basic year old fattened calf called beef sold at the market. TMO |
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