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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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![]() "Olivers" > wrote in message ... > 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. That definitely is a huge price difference! I realised as I read your answer that I appeared to be challenging your price experiences - sorry about that. We are so used to it being relatively cheap here that I forget it is not so available elsewhere. We can buy almost any cut at the butcher (frozen unfortunately) and the local Save-On Foods grocery store carries the ground meat on a regular basis. > > 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. Lucky, lucky you! How did the tongue turn out? Did you brine it first? I have only ever experience corned tongue which I enjoyed greatly. Buffalo do spend a lot of time roaming up here as well and I imagine a great portion of the carcass goes for stewed or braised product than on a steer. I grew up relatively poor and am used to eating cheaper cuts and lots of braised or boiled beef, perhaps that is why I prefer buffalo now... > TMO Thanks for the clarification on your market prices. Janet |
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