Aaron Deacon wrote:I guess part of the question that I didn't articulate very clearly (or maybe is just an inaccurate thesis), is why don't you hear the same kind of complaints with beef as you do with chicken and pork that it "just doesn't taste like beef."
Is it because we have the prime/choice/select USDA designations for which there isn't a comparable pork and poultry system?
It seems like there is a difference in the way people talk about beef, and that good-tasting beef wasn't "lost" to the mainstream in the way that pork and poultry were.
I hear complaints about beef all the time. Much of it has to do with people not noticing or knowing the difference about beef grading. Most big box supermarkets have gone to all select-grade beef, and that just doesn't have the flavor or tenderness of choice or prime.
The complaints I mostly hear tend to take the form, "Why can't I make steaks as good as XYZ Steakhouse?" or "Why doesn't my beef dish taste as good as my mom's did?" At which point, I quiz them about where they bought their meat.
Grain-finished beef has been the standard in the U.S. since World War II, so you're unlikely to find many Americans who "miss" all-grass-fed beef. But all cattle in the U.S. is pastured for most of its life. Grain-fattening is only done for a short period. In my opinion, this step adds flavor rather than subtracting it.
Companies like Tallgrass, who promote grass-finished beef, go to considerable effort to identify strains that will fatten and be flavorful and tender without grain finishing -- it's breeding rather than feeding which affects such brands. But less carefully selected cattle are always going to taste better with grain finishing.
Further, the cut of beef affects flavor as well. Some parts taste beefier than others.