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Welcome to Primal Meats

Welcome! We're all about providing the best meats, including 100% grass-fed, Organic and Free-range, for your health needs. We are completely tailored to popular Ancestral Health Diets to help you find the right meats for your health journey.

We're passionate about high animal welfare and being more than sustainable, we're regenerative.

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Monday - Friday: 09:00 - 17:00 Model Farm, Hildersley, Ross on Wye, HR9 7NN 01989 567663 [email protected]

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Grass fed lamb

Grass Fed Lamb

Lamb in Britain is called lamb if it’s marketed in the year of its birth (or in the year following its birth if the lamb is born after 30 September). After this it becomes known as hogget or old-season lamb.

grass fed lamb

Only when the animal has its first permanent incisor tooth (at around 1-1½ years) will the meat from it become known as hogget or mutton. However, the majority of mutton comes from breeding animals that have reached the end of their productive contribution to the flock.

 

Although early-season lamb is very tender, the meat is mild in flavour and delicate and moist in texture. It required little or no dry ageing. Organic Lamb is a versatile and healthy addition to a balanced and nutritious diet.

 

Most lamb in the UK will be reared outside on grass for at least part of its life however it is common for farmers to finish the lambs on cereals after the flush of summer grass has passed its most nutritious.

 

Many of the beneficial nutrients developed in the meat from the grass diet will deteriorate as grain feeding ensues. The longer and more concentrated the feeding of grains, the greater the loss. Most conventional sheep rearing systems will routinely use vaccinations and wormer’s in order to manage the flock’s health.

Have a look at the Nutrient profile of grass fed lamb

Our Organic Grass Fed Lamb is the highest tier of welfare, nutrition, sustainability and taste, by eating organic grass fed lamb reared to ‘pastoral’ or organic standards you will reduce the chance of taking on residues of medicines including anti biotic’s. Organic and ‘pastoral’ management systems have a lower Carbon footprint than many conventional operations. The land will be sequestering carbon from the atmosphere and locking it up safely in the nourished humus that will in turn grow mineral rich grassland without the use of in-organic fertilisers. These deep rooted perennials provide food all year round and grow our healthy, nutritious grass lamb.

BUY Organic 100% Grass fed Lamb

Pasture for life

Grain Free Beef – 100% Grass Fed Beef

Grain Free Beef – 100% Grass Fed Beef

Why only 100% Grass Fed Beef will do!

The omega-3 to omega-6 ratio. Many people are now being sold ‘Grass fed Beef’, it’s the new food jargon. But before you spend your extra pennies on a juicy grass fed steak there is a few questions you need to ask. Here’s the rub.

Firstly there is a lot of misinformation and confusion about fats, much of our health and nutrition advice seems to have been based on questionable studies and have a surprisingly political agenda.

For example, recent comprehensive, large population studies show that saturated fats have little or no adverse effects upon cardiovascular disease.

grass fed beef rib joint

It seems that the more important health factor when watching our fat is the ratio of omega – 3 to omega – 6 fatty acids. Throughout human evolution we have spent millions of years eating a diet rich in fish and wild game, these foods are an abundant source of omega -3 long chain fatty acids (EPA and DHA). Our consumption of omega 6 seed oils was by comparison very small.

Anthropological research suggests that our hunter- gatherer forefathers ate a diet that had a ratio of 1:1 of omega -6 and omega- 3. It also appears that these same forefathers were free from the diseases that plague our modern society. As the industrial revolution unfolded over the last century and a half, cereals and vegetable oils became a more prominent part of people’s diet, also animals began to be fed grains too which reduced the omega -3 content of meat.

Fast forward to modern day and many diets have a ratio of 25:1 omega-6 to omega-3. What does this mean for health? Well omega -3 and omega-6 compete for the same conversion enzymes, this means (in very simplistic terms) that the more omega-6 you eat the less ‘room’ there is for omega-3. Massively elevated omega-6 consumption seems to correlate with an increase in all inflammatory diseases including.

type 2 diabetes
metabolic syndrome
irritable bowel syndrome & inflammatory bowel disease
psychiatric disorders
obesity
macular degeneration
rheumatoid arthritis
asthma
cancer
autoimmune diseases
What is even more alarming is the clear correlation between a rising intake of n-6 and increased mortality from heart disease.

Ok so what the heck has that got to do with my steak?

Our meat is raised in a very different way nowadays and this may be contributing to your high intake of omega-6. We should be getting our omega-3 from fish and meat however due to more industrialised farming methods most animals are now grain fed for some or all of their life. For an animal to produce meat that is healthful for us to eat and rich in omega 3, the animal’s digestion needs to be working properly. Beef animals when eating their natural forage diet of grass have a healthy pH of 7, this creates the perfect environment for the fermentation bacteria that in turn produce high levels of CLA, omega -3, branch chain amino acids vitamins and digestive enzymes. Just 30 days of feeding a bovine grain can throw the pH downwards towards pH4 and undo the chemistry of 200 days of munching grass.

In an acidic environment the healthy bacteria are replaced by a fermentation bacteria that impedes the healthy by-products and increases the levels of omega -6. The cattle become sick as their liver cannot cope. The result – farmers feed anti-biotics to cattle in order to prevent disease.

Most paleo and primal followers are buying grass fed meat because they believe that it will be rich in omega – 3.

An Australian study looked at the effects on healthful fats in the meat of animals that were fed to three groups 1) 100% pasture diet, 2) fed for 80 days on a grain ration, 3) 120 plus days on a grain ration. The result was that only the grass fed group contained the levels of omega-3 (30mg of long chain n-3 FA/100g muscle) required by the food standards agency for the food to be considered a source of omega -3 fatty acids.

So it is clear, unless it is stated that it is 100% Grass fed, or it carries a label such as the ‘Pastoral’ label that guarantee’s such standards, then be VERY suspicious. http://www.pastureforlife.org/

It is simply not good enough to assume that it has been 100% grass fed beef or grain free beef.

In the UK it is very unusual to find animals that are not grain fed towards their slaughter , the vast majority of Farmers ‘finish’ their animals on cereals in order to get them to the desired weight and conformation required by the buyers, butchers and supermarkets.

Don’t be a sucker and fall for the newest marketing trick, support farmers and retailers that are selling GENUINE 100% grass fed beef and grain free beef.

Our 100% grass fed Beef – Is reared to organic standards and higher, it will receive no medicines, be on land managed for conservation without the use of chemical fertilisers and pesticides. The gran free beef animals will eat nothing but grass and fodder crop silage from birth to slaughter. Our beef is 100% Grass Fed Beef and is Grain Free Beef certified ‘Pasture for Life’.

Paleo Asian Slow Cooked Beef Shin

Asian Slow Cooked Beef Shin

Thanks to Molly at Perfectly Paleo.

Paleo Asian Shin Beef

Ingredients:

 

500 g beef shin

200g chestnut mushrooms

2 litres beef stock

3 carrots

2 large onions

3 celery stalks

Grated generous thumb-sized piece of ginger

6 garlic cloves

3 whole star anise

1 tbsp coconut oil

2 tbsp tomato puree

1 tbsp coconut aminos

2 tbsp palm sugar

2 tbsp chinese 5 spice

1 tsp sesame seeds

1 bay leaf

Handful of fresh coriander

Salt & pepper

 

Method:

 

  1. Preheat the oven to 140°C
  2. In a large casserole dish on the hob, melt the oil and add the roughly chopped onion and garlic until sweated. After 5 minutes add the chopped celery and grated ginger.
  1. After a few minutes, add the pieces of beef shin and cook until nicely browned on the outside.
  2. Add the beef stock, thickly sliced pieces of carrot, and sliced mushrooms to the mixture.  Then add the remainder of the ingredients and seasoning.
  3. Transfer to the oven and cook for 3 – 4 hours or until the meat is tender and the sauce has become rich and thick.
  4. To garnish, sprinkle some sesame seeds, roughly chopped coriander and slivers of ginger

 

Serves 4

 

Our organic chicken – Is this the best chicken you can buy? – We think so.

 

 

Buy Organic Chicken

 

I was very hesitant about trying to find a decent chicken producer for the website, it would mean that I had to visit the farm to inspect it which brought about a sense of trepidation. When I was 14 I took my first-weekend job in a nearby battery farm, this shocking experience is what set me on a path of campaigning for better animal welfare.

 
Great news. This Farm was on the other end of the welfare spectrum!

 
We wanted to find a free range and organic chicken producer that would fit in with our ethos. We feel this producers chicken offers the most sustainable, high welfare, nutrient dense chicken possible and will be good enough for ‘primal eaters’. In the case of beef and sheep our meat has to be 100% grass fed NO grains – it’s best for the animal, the planet and us.

 
The problem chicken and pigs is that they are omnivores; they don’t naturally eat just grass, they like a bit of all sorts. Hens thrive on insects, seeds and grains, so if we want to offer – and eat – commercial chicken we have to make some allowances. Purist paleo eaters are perhaps better eating wild game birds (available throughout winter) but for many, chicken is still a staple at the dinner table – we think this organic chicken is hard to beat.

 

 

organic chicken organic chicken organic chicken organic chicken

 

 

These birds are free to roam throughout the day and are shut up in bedded pens with plenty of room at night to protect them from predators (fox, badger, mink and buzzard). They roam on fresh pasture, the arcs are regularly moved , so the grassland does not get sour, leaving plenty of insects for the hens to feast on. Yum.

 
These birds have access to a mix of grains that is approved ‘organic’ by the soil association. All the grain used is sourced in the UK and is classed as GM free. There are huge issues over the use of GM grains you can read about it here if you’re interested.

 
Both the male and female chicks are used for rearing, and the rate of growth for organic chicken is nearly twice as long as more intensive operations. A slower growth pace allows the birds to adjust to their increased body weight and keep mobile.

 
The birds do not receive any antibiotic or other routine medicines; in fact there has been none used on the farm for approximately 8 years.
The slaughtering is undertaken in the Farm’s own abattoir where several measures are taken ‘above and beyond’ the basic leagal requirements. These costly measures are to ensure the hens remain calm and comfortable up to the point of slaughter and that the slaughter process itself is quick and fully successful. A vet is always present during the slaughter process to oversee the operation.

 
We are excited to offer the full range of organic chicken cuts including offal, this fits in with our principles of ‘nose to tail’ eating – or should that be ‘beak to tail’!

 

 

Organic chicken carcasses, organic chicken feet, gizzards, and necks are all fantastic for making healing organic chicken bone broths. Bone broths are getting a huge amount of attention in the media for their miraculous health benefits.

 

organic chickenorganic chicken breasts

Organic chicken is a higher price than the unbelievable cheap offerings available on the supermarket shelves – how the heck do they produce an animal that cheaply? This is how:

• The birds are confined to reduce movement and burn fewer calories.
• They birds are nothing but grain to fatten incredibly quickly.
• Losses and disease are common, so routine medical intervention is often used. (Help the campaign to stop antibiotic overuse in farm animals)
• The animals fatten so quickly that they can barely support their weight; they stagger around with warped legs and sores.
• They are slaughtered as quickly as possible to minimise costs.

 
Something like 30-40% of all food in this country is wasted; could we perhaps make better use of the food we buy? Could we make stocks and use up leftovers for extra meals?

 
If you ‘vote’ with your pound for animals to be reared in better conditions, happily, you will get far healthier meat too.

 
So why not take a quick look at our chicken range, if you have ANY questions about production methods, the diet of the animals or specifics of the slaughter process just click chat and ask me.

 

 

We would LOVE your help raising awareness of these topics – feel free to social share us on your favourite network.
Thanks Caroline

wild game meat

Get primal – eat wild game meat.

We will be kicking off the game season soon – add your details for updates of when out wild game meats become available

Get primal – eat wild meat.

One of the easiest ways to touch base with a perfectly primal and paleo meat lifestyle is to go wild.  Wild game lives a natural life, grazing exactly what it needs to thrive and survive from the land, which means we get to eat the most natural, additive free meat possible.  There is yet more plus value; carefully managed wild game meat is a sustainable and welfare friendly food source and has positive effects on the ecology of our natural landscape.  It’s the nearest thing to primal you can get and what’s more, these days it’s easy – you don’t even have to do the hunting yourself!

6

Why going wild and primal is good for you

Wild game is a great source of lean protein; its wild diet means that it has a low saturated, and potentially inflammatory omega-6, fat content.  Game also has a higher content of the more beneficial Omega-3 fatty acid compared to grain fed meats. It is rich in iron and other healthful nutrients and of course, and very importantly – it tastes delicious.

Wild game is ideal for those following a paleo approach to eating.

Modern-day paleo hunting

These days, it’s generally impractical to let your primal side take over and to head out hunting game in the local woods.  So, we leave it to the game keepers. All the wild game sold at Primal Meats is hunted and shot in the North Lancashire and Cumbrian regions and is from well managed estates.  So much easier to just have it delivered to the door!

The game section of the website covers game defined by the Game Act 1831: Red and Roe venison plus other animals and fowl that can be legally hunted in the UK. Our game is taken from sustainable stocks of wild animals which is killed in its own environment. This is considered to be a very humane slaughter technique, as it limits the stress of travelling and handling – something which would be even more stressful than for their domestic counterparts – and the animals themselves have little or no idea that death is imminent.

Wild game is often a product of land managed for conservation.  This retaining of natural balance is something our paleo ancestors would have inherently understood; a natural landscape provides an abundance of food.   Today, apart from the obvious positive effect on our landscape and environment, conservation has significant carbon sequestration benefits, sequestration being the process whereby harmful atmospheric carbon is ‘locked up’ in the soil, plants and trees. More about that later.

Heather

Count me in, I want to go primal.  What can I eat?

In the UK game is defined in law by the game Act 1831. It is illegal to shoot game on Sundays or at night. Other (non-game birds) that are hunted for food in the UK are specified under the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981. UK law defines game as including:

Black grouse (No longer hunted due to decline in numbers), Red grouse, Brown hare, Ptarmigan, Grey partridge and red-legged partridge, Common pheasant.

Deer are not included in the definition, but similar controls provided to those in the game Act apply to deer (from the Deer Act 1991). Deer hunted in the UK are:

Red deer, Roe deer, Fallow deer, Sika deer, Muntjac deer, Chinese water deer, and hybrids of these deer

Other animals which are hunted in the UK include:

duck, including MallardTufted duckTealPintail and Pochard

Goose, including Greylag GooseCanada GoosePink-footed Goose and in England and Wales White-fronted Goose, Woodpigeon, Woodcock, Snipe, Rabbit, Golden Plover.

Capercaillie are not currently hunted in the UK because of a recent decline in numbers and conservation projects towards their recovery. The ban is generally considered voluntary on private lands, and few birds live away from RSPB or Forestry Commission land anyway.

Wild game can only be shot in certain seasons. These seasons dictate when fresh wild game meat will be available. Please see the dates below.

Species England, Scotland, Wales Northern Ireland
Pheasant Oct 1st – Feb 1st Oct 1st – Jan 1st
Partridge Sept 1st – Feb 1st Sept 1st – Jan 31st
Grouse Aug 12th – Dec 10th Aug 12th – Nov 30th
Ptarmigan Aug 12th – Dec 10th —–
Blackgrouse Aug 20th – Dec 10th —–
Snipe Aug 12th – Jan 31st Sept 1st – Jan 31st
Jack Snipe Protected** Sept 1st – Jan 31st
Woodcock Oct 1st – Jan 31st Oct 1st – Jan 31st
Woodcock (Scotland) Sept 1st – Jan 31st —–
duck & Goose (Inland) Sept 1st – Jan 31st Sept 1st – Jan 31st
duck & Goose (Below High Water Mark) Sept 1st – Feb 20th Sept 1st – Jan 31st
Coot/Moorhen Sept 1st – Jan 31st Ptoected**
Gloden Plover Sept 1st Jan 31st Sept 1st – Jan 31st
Curlew Protected** Sept 1st – Jan 31st
Hare Cannot be sold March-July Aug 12th – Jan 31st

 

Species Sex England,N Ireland, Wales Scotland
Red Stags Aug 1st – April 30th July 1st – Oct 20th
Hinds Nov 1st – March 31st Oct 21st – Feb 15th
Fallow Bucks Aug 1st – April 30th Aug 1st – April 30th
Does Nov 1st – March 31st Oct 21st – Feb 15th
Sika Stags Aug 1st – April 30th July 1st – Oct 20th
Hinds Nov 1st – March 31st Oct 21st Feb 15th
Roe Bucks April 1st – Oct 31st April 1st – Oct 20th
Does Nov 1st – March 31st Oct 21st – Mar 31st
Red/Sika Hybrids Stags Aug 1st – April 30th (NI only) July 1st – Oct 20th
Hinds Nov 1st – March 31st( NI only) Oct 21st – Feb 15th
Chinese Water Deer Bucks Nov 1st – March 31st
Does Nov 1st – March 31st
Muntjac No Closed Season**

 

In the primal kitchen

Our paleo hunter-gatherers (aka gamekeepers) have provided you with your wild game – now what to do with it?  Way back when, the only cooking medium was the open fire.  Today, we have all sorts of methods of cooking game but generally the rule ‘slow and steady’ is the one to live by.

Wild game is generally very rich in colour and flavour and may be a little tougher than meat from domestic animals, depending on the age of the animal and how natural its life has been. To counteract the toughness, it’s ‘hung’ after shooting to help tenderise the meat and encourage the development of ‘gamey’ flavours. The longer meat is hung the more pronounced the flavour will become, but in general hanging periods usually range from two to 12 days.

Just as a rather gruesome aside, in earlier times birds would be hung by their heads until the body fell off, at which point they would have been deemed ready for cooking. This method is probably a little too strong for most people today but some form of hanging usually improves tenderness and flavour.

There are lots of ways to cook game and you’ll find plenty of paleo and primal recipes to try. In general, game is naturally very lean and therefore may dry out quickly; if you are cooking a prime cut such as a loin of venison or breast of game bird, you can avoid this dryness by cooking it lightly and enjoying it ‘pink’. Alternatively, these cuts can be wrapped in fatty bacon or add fat to baste the meat during the cooking process.

The parts of the animal that do the most work tend to produce the cuts of meat that need slow cooking. Using rich and fatty sauces and gravies and cooking over a low heat for a long period will really help keep these cuts succulent and delicious.

 

Health and nutrition the paleo way

Wild game meats have significant health benefits when compared to most conventionally farm reared animal meats. It’s suggested that a number of modern diet based illnesses would have been unknown to our primal ancestors because they were eating their food the way it was meant to be – natural.

Wild game lives on a primarily natural diet and forages in a way that suits the animal’s natural behaviour. The food it finds will be right for the animal’s genetic make-up and therefore will be digested well and will give the animal the nutrients it needs to be healthy. Animals that eat green foods in the wild will have meat that is higher in anti-inflammatory omega-3 fatty acids. In addition it is generally found that the meat contains higher levels of many beneficial nutrients including vitamin E, Beta Carotene, Zinc and Iron.

 

For an insight into game Hunting and what it involves have a look at these videos.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DkXw2wQV4b4&feature=youtu.be

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yJvvruDiQMs

 

Sustainability and ecology

Our friendly paleo hunter gatherers have provided wild game for our primal kitchen and we are eating natural meat which is far more beneficial for our heath.  But the news gets better, because the meat produced doesn’t involve intensive farming, is sustainable and our environment benefits enormously.

When game is taken from well managed Estates it is generally the case that they are being hunted from reserves that are either buoyant in numbers or are over populated and require a regular cull to manage the stocks humanely.  When a species becomes overpopulated it has a detrimental effect on both the surrounding eco-system and the health of the animals.

Wild game has a range of habitats, however it usually requires natural cover in woodland and on moorland. When managed well, these types of habitats are home to a wide range of flora and fauna that create biodiversity.  These habitats help the wider environment too as they have a significant beneficial effect on climate change. Plants and trees take harmful CO2 from the atmosphere and lock it down into the soil where it does not contribute to the greenhouse effect.

Peat represents this country’s single largest carbon sink, with more carbon stored in UK peat than in the forests of Britain and France combined. This type of habitat, particularly large moorland estates, can be very expensive to manage and maintain. An essential part of the income for managing this habitat has to come from selling the rights to shoot or in selling the game meat itself. I feel that this environmental benefit outweighs the moral dilemma about hunting, for fun or for management. Unlike some elements of the meat industry, harvesting wild meat involves no chemicals, hormones, abattoirs, animal housing, or land to grow roots or cereals for feeds.

Carbon sequestration

Carbon sequestration is the process of removing carbon from the atmosphere.  Ways of enhancing natural sequestration are needed to reduce the effects of global warming, by decreasing the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. Vegetation is one of the main sources of a carbon sink (or reservoir) and the organic peaty soils of upland heath areas are a significant component of the national carbon stock. As well as forming an important sink – keeping it ‘locked up’ – the uplands must also be carefully managed to avoid damage and adding to carbon emissions.  Evidence is growing to suggest that the historic drainage of the moorlands has resulted in the significant loss of carbon from these systems, contributing to global warming. It has been calculated that UK catchments are losing 11 grams of carbon per square metre a year, a figure predicted to increase over this decade. However, if the loss is stopped or reversed this improvement would satisfy the country’s annual carbon emission undertakings from the Kyoto protocol.

 

Please help us spread the word about the benefits of eating these wonderful meats and ‘social’ share this article below.

grass fed beef bone broth

Bone Broth

I would like to introduce a product that I am so excited about that I have been struggling to contain myself!

Os ius – Latin for Bone Broth

Add a pinch of poetic licence and we have…

OSIUS BONE BROTH

A few months ago, whilst working with one of the ‘Pasture for life’ farmers, I was introduced to a lovely lady called Louisa Stout who was researching the idea of developing a ‘bone broth’ using the bones from the very same 100% grass fed beef animals we sell through Primal Meats.

Well, I had heard about the remarkable health benefits of bone broth – also known as good old fashioned ‘stock’- so was immediately interested. I thought it was probably a bit of an old wives tale, ‘chicken soup can cure a cold’ and all that, but I was curious enough to learn more.

Off I went to research it, cook it, and eat lots of it. The more I read the science, the more excited I got; and the more broth I ate, the healthier I got – better skin, less allergies and a huge reduction in my intolerance to yeast.

Hell, this stuff does work.

If you ‘google up’ bone broth you can see for yourself some of the incredible results people are having from including this in their diet on a daily basis. But this is not a new phenomenon, Florence Nightingale is claimed to have said, “Remember that sick cookery should do half the work for your patients’ weak digestion. No food improves digestion better than bone broth, whether you are poorly or otherwise.”

It is claimed by many people to be a dense collagen and nutrient packed food which is easy to digest and has many health benefits.  Below I have outlined some of the benefits claimed in papers that I read.

 

*Reasons to include bone broth as part of your diet

 

Promotes good digestion

Helps to heal your gut

Great for your skin

Good for hair

The gelatine strengthens nails and bones

Oils your joints

Reduces inflammation

The glycine helps to clean out your liver

Supports your immune system

(*Disclaimer – The health information in this blog is purely informational and is not intended as medical advice. If you have a medical condition please go and see your doctor.)

I learned several important points from my new found knowledge on how to make bone broth, these critical points make the difference between creating a nice flavour to add to soups or stews, and creating a truly healing medicine that also tastes amazing.

  • The ingredients have to come from the healthiest animals (organic and or 100% pastured), meat from these animals is higher in nutrients and will not contain residues from medicines, hormones, pesticides etc.
  • The stock has to be cooked long and slow for a minimum of 24 hours – wow that’s long, It is only by cooking it slowly and for an absolute minimum of 24 hours that you are able to optimise extraction of all the nutrients, collagen, gelatine and vitamins from the bones.
  • There should be no nasty artificial additions that could ruin a pure and genuine – almost medicinal grade – product.

I am delighted to say that even though it is less profitable for her to do so, Louisa has stuck to these three principles when making her delicious, nutritious broth and has frankly created the mother of all bone broths.

We can now offer two of her fine bone broth varieties – chicken and beef.  They only use British organic vegetables and herbs, 100% pasture fed, organic beef bones and organic pastured chicken bones. The broth does not contain any salt or pepper, obviously no additives or preservatives but it does contain a little British seaweed to the beef bone broth for flavour and added nutrients.

Both of the bone broths are Soil Association accredited and the beef broth has been accredited by the Pasture Fed Livestock Association.

What surprised me most was how delicious the broths taste, I warmed my first mug up fully expecting to have to gulp it down like medicine and was totally delighted to find that is was a warming, gorgeous rich taste and silky texture.

I am hooked.

Take a look at the products now proudly for sale on Primal Meats.

Thanks Caroline x

Some handy links

http://nourishedkitchen.com/bone-broths-adrenals-bones-teeth http://www.westonaprice.org/health-topics/broth-is-beautiful//

Grass fed beef bone brothgrass fed beef bone brothgrass fed beef bone broth

(AIP) Paleo Slow Roasted Pork Belly Slices with Sea Salt and Rosemary

Slow Roasted Pork Belly Slices with Sea Salt and Rosemary

Sometimes, when the rain’s pattering on the windows outside, or when the frosty air threatens to creep in, only a slow-cooked dish will do. And it takes very little of your own time to make this one – most of the work is done in the oven while you watch a film or run a hot bath. Perfect comfort food. Serve with your favourite vegetables – I love it with cauliflower or garlic and parsnip mash, along with a tangle of soft greens to help mop up all the juices.

Serves 3-4

Ingredients:
900g pork belly slices, preferably with the rib bone left in
half teaspoon sea salt flakes
1 tsp freshly chopped (fresh) rosemary leaves

Method:
Lay the pork slices out, in one layer, on a foil-lined tray. Pat with kitchen paper to dry them and sprinkle with the salt and rosemary.

Preheat the oven to gas mark 3/160ºC/325ºF. Slide the pork into the oven and slowly roast for an hour and a half to two hours. The pork should be tender, soft and golden – and thoroughly cooked through. Carefully lift the slices out of the tray using tongs and serve hot.

From Simple Autoimmune Paleo Comfort Food, Jo Romero, on the Kindle Store

AIP paleo meatballs

(AIP) Paleo Meatballs with Gravy and Cranberry Sauce

AIP (Auto Immune Protocol) Meatballs with Gravy and Cranberry Sauce

Makes 16-20 meatballs

Ingredients:
For the meatballs:

1 tsp duck fat
1 medium onion, peeled and chopped
400g minced beef
500g minced pork
half teaspoon dried thyme
good pinch of salt

For the gravy:
200ml beef stock/broth
2-3 tbsp coconut cream
pinch of salt
3 tsp arrowroot powder

For the AIP cranberry sauce:
juice of half an orange
100g cranberries, fresh or frozen
1 tbsp maple syrup
small pinch of salt

Method:
First, melt the duck fat in a non-stick frying or griddle pan. Fry the onion until softened, and tip into a mixing bowl. Allow to cool.

Preheat the oven to 200ºC/gas mark 6 and get out a roasting dish.

When the onion has cooled, add in the pork and beef mince, the thyme and a good pinch of salt. Mix until just combined – don’t over-mix – and then roll into meatballs. Fry them in the pan (you should already have some fat in there leftover from the onions) until golden, turning regularly.

Turn off the heat on the hob and transfer the meatballs to the roasting dish and bake in the oven for 10-15 minutes, until fully cooked through.

While the meatballs are baking, make the cranberry sauce and the gravy.

To make the cranberry sauce, add all the sauce ingredients to a small pan and simmer for 5-7 minutes, until the cranberries are softened and the sauce has thickened slightly. Allow to cool, cover and refrigerate. It’ll last in the fridge for about 5 days. You could even make this one in advance.

About five minutes before you serve, make the gravy. Pour the beef broth into the pan you fried the meatballs in, and stir, scraping up any residue from the bottom of the pan as you go. This will make the sauce darker and richer in flavour. Add the coconut cream, along with a pinch of salt and simmer for 5 minutes. Finally, at the end of cooking, stir in the arrowroot powder to thicken.

To serve, check the meatballs are fully cooked through and serve them, with the gravy and the cranberry sauce.

From Simple Autoimmune Paleo Comfort Food, Jo Romero, in the Kindle Store.

Why would I want to eat like a cave man – they died young!

It is completely true that a statistical average of peoples during the Palaeolithic era may have been approximately 30, but this does not mean it was normal to die at that age. ‘Cave men’ who survived past puberty had a great chance of being fit and healthy until they were 60-70 years old.

Based on evidence from existing hunter-gatherer populations and anthropological findings, child mortality is estimated to have been as high as 40%. As a hunter there was a high chance of injury and with little shelter from the elements, exposure and starvation is likely to have been common. See the example of a possible 10 person scenario to illustrate the point.
Evidence suggests that our hunter – gatherer ancestors were in fact much healthier than we are now. It seems that pre – agriculture 10, 000 years ago there was little evidence of the diseases such as
obesity, cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, cancer, autoimmune diseases, osteoporosis, acne, myopia, macular degeneration, glaucoma, varicose veins, haemorrhoids, diverticulosis, gastric reflux and gout.

Our current high average lifespan is greatly influenced by the benefits of modern medicine. The current passing generation are reaching a record high average age, these robust individuals are from an era of ‘meat and two veg’. During the life of this generation, ‘whole’ foods where generally eaten, these foods came from nutrient rich soils and were grown locally, meat and milk was from grazed animals, food was rarely processed and sugar was an occasional treat. These people on the whole had far more active lifestyles than we do today which kept their bodies lean and muscular.

I think it is wrong to assume that modern medicine can fix all the wrongs that a poor diet and lifestyle can create. With our modern diets full of refined ‘junk’, sugar and cheap meat is it likely that the next generation will live to such an old age?

Just imagine what could be possible if we listened to the lessons of our ancestors’ good diet and life habits and reaped the benefits of modern medicine as well!

Caroline x

is eating meat bad for you?

Is eating meat bad for you?

Firstly I think it is important to remember that contrary to common opinion, the paleo and primal diet are not just ‘high protein diets’. The main emphasis of paleo and primal diets is to increase fruit and vegetables and reduce refined foods including grains. The meat eaten should come from high quality grass fed or organic animal protein (including offal and bonebroth etc).

This is VERY different from just eating loads of cheap burgers and sausages!

To address the first part of the argument we need to look at the China Study by T. Colin Campbell, for those who do not know, the ‘China Study is a book popularised by passionate vegans and vegetarians that examines the relationship between the consumption of animal products (including dairy) and chronic illnesses such as coronary heart disease, diabetes, and cancers of the breast, prostate and bowel.

There are many convincing counter arguments to this study. An example is an incredibly well researched campaign against the China study and its VERY questionable interpretation of results (http://rawfoodsos.com/the-china-study/) which (in my opinion) effectively debunks the connection they make between protein consumption and various diseases.

Other studies showing correlation between high protein diets and disease are mainly observational studies and overlook that many people that eat high protein diets also have other VERY bad dietary habits and it could in fact be those habits that relate to their poor health. (for example people who eat high quantities of meat often also eat high quantities of refined carbohydrates i.e surrounding grain fed burgers with a sugary refined bread bun and washing it down with a gallon of coke, or beer!)

Spinning scientific research one way and another is frankly of limited use, and who said we have to have empirical evidence to make sound judgements anyway? In these situations I personally try and bring it back to good common sense. My qualifying questions is this – does it make sense that the very food that we are designed to eat readily, and lived healthily on, for 100, 000 years would suddenly cause a wide range of diseases? I think not!

Now onto heart attacks and fat. We have been told for so long that food like meat and eggs raise our cholesterol levels that we now consider it a fact. But this ‘fact’ is based on a study conducted 50 years ago called the ‘diet-heart hypothesis’. More recent (and higher quality) studies have found no such connection in most people, unfortunately many health professionals have not updated their knowledge. Read more

Does high cholesterol even matter? The second ‘fact’ is that high cholesterol levels in the blood leads to an increased risk of heart disease. Modern studies show that this is simply not the case and in fact there has been studies which suggest that low cholesterol can increase the risk of death especially in the elderly and women. A more important marker is the number of LDL (low-density lipoprotein) particles in your blood NOT the concentration of cholesterol in your lipoproteins. Read More

There was a breakthrough a few years ago with the discovery that inflammation in the artery wall is the real cause of heart disease. It is now apparent that the overuse of simple, highly processed carbohydrates (sugar, flour and all the products made from them) and the excess consumption of omega-6 vegetable oils like soybean, corn and sunflower that are found in many processed foods is a huge contributory factor in inflammation. These are the very foods many medical professionals have been recommending for years!

Heart surgeon Dr. Dwight Lundell says –

‘The long-established dietary recommendations have created epidemics of obesity and diabetes, the consequences of which dwarf any historical plague in terms of mortality, human suffering and dire economic consequences’

A diet made up of organic vegetables, 100% grass fed meats, organic fruits, nuts and seeds laced with healthy fats, will go a very long way to reducing your likelihood of heart disease and many other health issues. Read more

In conclusion, the paleo and primal diets are based on 100,000 years of trials into how to produce a healthy body, perhaps we should use our common sense a little more and TV adverts a little less when making our food choices!

Caroline x

beef and methane

Is it just a lot of hot air? – The beef and methane debate

I hope to simplify a complex debate; the biggest environmental ‘beef’ with beef, is usually about methane. Methane is potent greenhouse gas and is harmful to the environment; In very oversimplified terms, the beef and methane argument goes something like this:

Ruminants eat grass and other plant species which are very hard to digest, cattle have adapted and can thrive off this diet however unfortunately they ‘burp’ methane as a by-product of their clever but inefficient digestive system.

The general assumption then made, is that, in order to make beef more environmentally friendly, we need to ‘finish’ the animals for slaughter as quickly as possible. This argument suits some farming companies very well, it apparently provides ‘green’ justification for grain feeding, the quicker the time to slaughter = less methane.

Grain feeding is a BIG BADDY in my books for environmental sustainability, health of the animal, human nutrition and for many other ethical reasons. We also need to dispel the illusion that UK ‘grass fed or free range’ meat is grain or GM free –not always so. But I shall refrain from that particular rant here!

I think the ‘efficient methane’ standard of measuring sustainable meat is wrong, and is only actually relevant if you accept the assumption that we all NEED to eat large volumes of cheap meat. Some points I hope illustrate this are:

• It is generally accepted that we eat twice as much meat as we did in 1950, and much more of the ‘prime cuts’ and less of the offal, broths etc.

• We shouldn’t be feeding good ‘human food’ to animals. It takes 6- 8kg of grain to produce 1kg beef, if we need more food globally this does not make sense!

• The methane output is only part of the overall environmental impact picture – grain production has a large, long term negative impact on the planet.

• An area almost the size of Wales would be needed to grow all of the food we throw away from our homes each year. Of that waste 7% is meat – we are clearly not placing a high enough value on meat.

• Of the total UK land mass 70.1% is agricultural land, 24.3% is arable and therefore capable of growing crops and 11.9% is forest. Therefore 33.9% of the UK is potential or actual grazing land.

• Some experts have calculated if we ate half the meat we could produce most of it from grazing land and food waste.

So what am I suggesting?

Eat half as much meat and ensure it is 100% grass/pasture fed

Why?

Because the land is here anyway; the land grows pasture better than anything else; we can’t eat grass but cows can; it is a drought and flood hardy, it is an all year round food source that locks carbon out of the atmosphere and improves the nutritional quality of the meat and milk the cows produce.

But shouldn’t we manage it for nature conservation?

Absolutely, but it is important to have a range of habitats that support a broad diversity of species, it’s no good allowing all land to revert to scrub and woodland – great if you’re a woodland bird or animal, not so good if your bog asphodel and need a moist acidic moorland! Habitats need managing.

Some of the UK’s most fragile and important upland habitats have been damaged by overgrazing in the post war period. Sheep quota subsidies encouraged many farmers to increase sheep numbers. Unfortunately the way that sheep graze on higher ground is selective towards many of the more sensitive species, they find the rough and coarse grasses unpalatable. Many conservationists advised the total removal of livestock from many fell, heath and moorland areas.

What they failed to realise was, that a mixed farming system – particularly cattle grazing – is what actually created these important habitats in the first place!

In the absence of any grazing, many upland habitats become smothered by coarse and rank grass through which nothing else can grow. Eventually the penny dropped and after many studies and trials, most conservationists now accept you need some controlled grazing by cattle or other less selective grazers in order to restore and maintain a great upland habitat.

We are working with an amazing couple who work with conservationists to manage their internationally important limestone grassland in the Dales using their herd of Belted Galloway cattle. You can clearly see the progress that Neil and Leigh’s farming methods have made to restore this remarkable habitat. See Neil on Country file talking about his animals with Adam.

I really hope this gives you an insight into the issue and it would be a huge help if you could help us raise awareness by passing this on to anyone you know who also cares about the impact of the food they chose.

Caroline x