The Ultimate Human with Gary Brecka - 102. What You NEED to Know Before Your Next Steak: Grass-Fed vs. Grain-Fed Beef
Episode Date: October 3, 2024Ever wonder why your steak doesn't taste like it used to? In this episode of the Ultimate Human Podcast, host Gary Brecka dissects the truth about grass-fed, grass-finished beef and why it's a game-ch...anger for your health and the environment. This video is a must-watch for anyone interested in making informed choices about their food, supporting sustainable farming practices, and improving their overall health through nutrition. Want to make a real difference? Choose grass-fed, grass-finished beef. Your taste buds, your health, and the planet will thank you. “Ultra-processed Foods, Weight Gain, and Co-morbidity Risk”: https://bit.ly/4eQNDjN “Fatty Acid Composition of Grain-and Grass-Fed Beef and Their Nutritional Value and Health Implication”: https://bit.ly/407HpIf 00:00 Intro of Show 01:28 Difference Between Grass-Fed & Grain-Fed Cattle 03:36 Nutrition from Grass-Fed/Grass-Finished Beef 04:27 Pro-Green Energy 05:57 Supporting Local Farms 07:42 Cost vs. Satiation GET WEEKLY TIPS FROM GARY ON HOW TO OPTIMIZE YOUR HEALTH AND LIFESTYLE ROUTINES: https://bit.ly/4eLDbdU EIGHT SLEEP - USE CODE “GARY” TO GET $350 OFF THE POD 4 ULTRA: https://bit.ly/3WkLd6E ECHO GO PLUS HYDROGEN WATER BOTTLE: https://bit.ly/3xG0Pb8 BODY HEALTH - USE CODE “ULTIMATE20” FOR 20% OFF YOUR ORDER: http://bit.ly/4e5IjsV KETTLE AND FIRE PREMIUM & 100% GRASS-FED BONE BROTH - USE CODE “ULTIMATEHUMAN” FOR 20% OFF YOUR ORDER: https://bit.ly/3BaTzW5 Discover top-rated products and exclusive deals. Shop now and elevate your everyday essentials with just a click!: https://theultimatehuman.com/amazon-recs Watch “The Ultimate Human Podcast with Gary Brecka” every Tuesday and Thursday at 9AM ET on YouTube: https://bit.ly/3RPQYX8 Follow Gary Brecka on Instagram: https://bit.ly/3RPpnFs Follow Gary Brecka on TikTok: https://bit.ly/4coJ8fo Follow Gary Brecka on Facebook: https://bit.ly/464VA1H Follow The Ultimate Human on Instagram: https://bit.ly/3VP9JuR Follow The Ultimate Human on TikTok: https://bit.ly/3XIusTX Follow The Ultimate Human on Facebook: https://bit.ly/3Y5pPDJ SUBSCRIBE TO: https://www.youtube.com/@ultimatehumanpodcast https://www.youtube.com/@garybrecka Download “The Ultimate Human with Gary Brecka” podcast on all your favorite platforms: https://bit.ly/3RQftU0 The Ultimate Human with Gary Brecka Podcast is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute the practice of medicine, nursing or other professional health care services, including the giving of medical advice, and no doctor/patient relationship is formed. The use of information on this podcast or materials linked from this podcast is at the user’s own risk. The Content of this podcast is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Users should not disregard or delay in obtaining medical advice for any medical condition they may have and should seek the assistance of their health care professionals for any such conditions. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Is your beef doing you more harm than good?
You may be surprised to know grass-fed grass-finished beef
is not only higher in omega-3 fatty acids,
it's higher in vitamin C, reduced amounts of saturated fat,
and a much better flavor profile.
Grain-fed cattle take hormones, steroids,
and all kinds of other compounds
that are injected into these animals
to make their life cycle 18 to 24 months
rather than five to seven years.
We're actually growing them at faster
rates than they're meant to be grown. We're not just what we eat. We're what we eat eats.
Hey guys, welcome back to the Ultimate Human Podcast Shorts. This was kind of an impromptu short that I just asked my team to put together.
I said, look, let's go out on the deck.
I want to talk to these guys about a subject that's very near and dear to my heart.
I get lots and lots of questions online about the true difference between grass-fed and green-fed cattle.
So I just thought I'd do a quick short on the nutrient differences and the farming practice differences
because I'm out here in Colorado, one of my favorite places in the world. I'm at 10,500
feet right now. And at the base of this mountain is one of my favorite grass-fed, grass-finished
pastures. And they raise grass-fed, grass-finished beef, chicken, eggs, free-range eggs, and all kinds
of food compounds that actually come from animals that are raised the way that they were meant to be raised,
and they provide whole nutrient-dense foods.
And so I get a lot of questions about, is there really a difference?
And I've even seen some science saying that there's not, and I would actually take very serious issue with that.
A lot of these scientific articles are put forward by the food industry and industrial farming,
and they have an agenda in mind when they set these research studies out. So I can tell you that there is a significant difference between grass-fed, grass-finished beef
and grain-fed cattle. If you've ever driven that 10-mile stretch in Kansas where you see all of
those commercial industrial farms and you see thousands and thousands of cattle literally just
standing out in the mud eating out of grain troughs. You tell me when a cow in its natural
environment would run into corn, high fructose corn syrup, or even soybean as a source of its feed.
You know, we're not just what we eat. We're what we eat eats. And when you see an animal eating a
biodiverse range of natural compounds, that means that they are going to be biodiverse when they
actually end up on our table.
And so, you know, just as an overview of the difference between grass-fed, grass-finished beef and grain-fed cattle, take hormones, antibiotics, vaccinations, steroids, and all
kinds of other compounds that are injected into these animals to make their life cycle 18 to 24
months rather than five to seven years, which is what it takes for a fully grass-fed,
grass-finished cattle to mature. And you understand that we're actually growing them at faster rates
than they're meant to be grown. So grass-fed cattle have a tendency to actually have lower
saturated fat. They have a higher amount of omega-3 fatty acids, the fatty acids that most
Americans are deficient in. Remember, we're supposed to have a balanced ratio of omega-3 to
omega-6 fatty acids. Most of us are supposed to have a one-to-one ratio, and the average American
has a 45-to-one ratio. These high omega-6 fatty acids are very, very pro-inflammatory, and they
create all kinds of downstream consequences. One of the reasons why meat is, in my opinion,
blamed for crimes that it doesn't commit is because we are looking at commercially raised cattle and the beef that comes from commercially raised cattle that are fed grains and non-biodiverse compounds, and therefore they have non-biodiverse meats. For you science nerds, I'm going to put links to all of the scientific references that I'm going to make in this podcast short.
But grass-fed, grass-finished beef is not only higher in omega-3 fatty acids, it's higher in ascorbate, ascorbic acid, which is the vitamin C.
It's higher in the B-complex of vitamins, including natural form of B12.
B12 is a natural metal in the body.
Yes, it's not just a vitamin.
It's a metal like zinc or magnesium,
and it's a very, very necessary metal to all kinds of functions, especially nerve functions
in the human body. So you have higher amounts of B12. You have higher amounts of the complex
of B vitamins that you get naturally, higher amounts of omega-3 fatty acids, higher amounts
of vitamin C, reduced amounts of saturated fat, and better, in my opinion, a much better flavor
profile. You know, I was just at this farm yesterday, and it was astounding to me. This
might just sound like I'm going off on a complete tangent, but it was astounding to me how happy
these animals seemed. There were herds and herds of cattle just wandering around this beautiful
open pasture. And when I looked down at the grass, you could see cloves and different types of grass
and all kinds of biodiversity in the environment that they're eating. There are bugs crawling
around in there that the cattle are eating. And one of the things they do is they rotate these
cattle from field to field so that they don't actually glean the field and eat all the way
down to the root of the grass. One of the things I learned from this regenerative farmer was that
when you're grass feeding cattle, they eat the grass and then the grass respawns. And if they feed on it too
often, if they actually eat it too soon, then what they'll do is they'll actually deplete the
nutrients in the grass. You want to give the grass time to actually absorb all of the nutrients from
the soil, which is another issue I'd like to do a whole podcast short on, which is the depletion of
our soil. But for those of you that are interested in greenhouse emissions or you're
interested in climate change, grass-fed, grass-finished cattle are actually pro-environment.
They are actually pro-green energy. They actually return nutrients back to the soil and they rotate
from field to field and they end up back in the same field where they started. So we use the
same fields over and over again. They're using rainwater. They're getting all kinds of minerals
from the soil. They're not gleaning the fields and they're not industrial raised. So this is
actually really, really healthy for our environment. Not only that, but most grass-fed, grass-finished
pastures are owned by small farming families. And it's a really good thing for us to support
these families rather than support these commercial farms. But I think one of the biggest problems facing America today
is that we are just not eating a whole food diet. Now, this podcast is about grass-fed,
grass-finished beef, but just as a general rule of thumb, we should be eating foods in their whole
form. You know, very often it's not the food itself. It's the distance from the food to the
table. It's the chemicals, the additives, the preservatives, the pesticides, the herbicides, the insecticides, all of these
things that we add to foods that take them from their whole food state and turn them into a
processed state. So one of the ways that you can avoid this is eating wild caught fish, is eating
plants that are raised in organic environments, and eating grass-fed, grass-finished beef. If
you're eating chickens, you want to eat free-range chickens, chickens that are out there in the field that
are eating worms and bugs and grasses, the things that nature meant them to eat. And very often what
happens is we just go to the supermarket and we're grabbing things off the shelf and we're not
thinking about what did this animal eat that I'm about to eat. We just think about the food
compound itself and not really how that food compound was raised. One of the reasons why you keep hearing me say grass-fed, grass-finished, and not just grass-fed
is because, yes, you actually do need to check that these cattle have been grass-fed and grass-finished.
One of the reasons for that is that we can now get away, thanks to our food labeling laws,
we can now get away by feeding cattle grass some of their lifetime and then feeding them grains and junk sources
of non-nutritious foods
for the other portion of their lifetime.
We want our cattle grazing
on wholly biodiverse nutritious grasses
for their entire lifetime.
When that happens,
you have a grass-fed, grass-finished cattle
and not just a grass-fed cattle.
One of the common complaints I hear
about grass-fed, grass-finished beef is that it's more expensive. And yes, it is slightly more expensive, but it's
also more nutrient-dense. And we know from processed food research that when we are not
eating nutrient-dense foods, our satiation response is interrupted, meaning that we have a tendency
to overeat foods that don't have high nutrient density. One of the reasons for that is that part
of our satiation response,
telling our brain that we are full
and we've been adequately fed,
is when we get an adequate amount of nutrients.
So if you're eating nutrient-dense foods,
you will eat less of those foods.
And if you're eating highly processed foods,
you'll eat more of those foods.
And I will put the clinical research in the notes below
so that you can verify this on your own.
You know, the truth is that more of us would actually gravitate towards
grass-fed, grass-finished beef and away from commercial beef, you'd find that supply and
demand would drive the cost of grass-fed, grass-finished beef down because it would be
more economical for farmers to produce this form of food. I'm a big, big believer that we should
be following a whole food diet and not being dogmatic about a diet.
I'm not against or for any specific diet. I don't think that you need to be vegan, vegetarian,
pescatarian, keto, paleo, carnivore. I think that you need to be on a whole food diet. One of the best ways to do that is to make one of your choices grass-fed, grass-finished beef. And that's just science.