What are you disagreeing with? Cows ***have been ***fed corn post WWII. Another poster is saying no they’re not… It adds more fat to the meat, gets them fatter quicker, to slaughter quicker, and also ads more bacteria to their gut… This thread is not about TASTE… it is about children dying because of hamburgers.
What do you see as a ***solution ***for that? Do you too, believe all the onus/responsibility is on the cook???
What I was disagreeing with is the notion that cattle were not fed corn prior to WWII. I know for fact they were, corn was very cheap then and it made good finishing feed. Corn is still used for finishing primarily to add the weight and correct marbling to the meat and also to improve the taste of it (which is what that marbling fat layer improves).
I realize this is not about TASTE, but there seems to be an issue with feeding corn at all to cattle, that there is something wrong with that, that feeding the corn is causing the problems. I do not agree with that, as I’ve told you I can trace three generations of feeding corn to cattle and there was never issues where corn was the factor of blame up until now. There is no one I know of feeding cattle straight corn. For one, corn is very expensive today because of the demand put on corn by the ethanol business in addition to all the existing food products. Another reason is you’d kill a cow by feeding it straight corn grain. They have to have roughage to digest it properly, so corn is only part of the ration. Calves are raised and weaned, ranged on grass primarily and may be fed other substances for proper roughage like sugarbeet tops, grains, etc. but corn is rarely used except for the last few weeks. Many yearsago, when corn was plentiful and cheap, it WAS used to supplement cow diets. Not so anymore. Too expensive.
In case you aren’t aware, cattle are sold by contract. In other words, a buyer wants 25 head that will result in a certain percentage of that carcass, when hung, to be graded A by the USDA. A finisher accepts that contract then buys cattle at the stage where they are at a certain minimum weight - and at that point they are not corn fed. The finisher, then, will put the cows on a rationed diet high in corn because the sugars in the corn convert readily to fat, giving the meat the proper marbling and the finished weight of the carcass the proper range of weight. IF they don’t get a certain percentage of that hung meat graded A as the contract calls for, they get docked. And they get docked if the carcass is too lean OR too fat. Feeding all corn would not allow that kind of tailored feed ration that produce the carcass grade that makes the feeder money.
When they hit the feedlots they feed a lot of ground hay with a corn and other grain sometimes, like oats and continually add whatever protein supplements and corn increasing the protein of the ration to give the desired carcass marbling so they can sell them as what ever grade they contracted for.
This has been done in some form or other for at least a hundred years or more, of course the portions in the ration of food have become more refined as science allows. Many years ago they didn’t chop up the entire corn plant itself and boil it; they do now because it helps and is cheap.
Do I have a solution? I’m not seeing a problem with feeding corn to cows, so I have no solution to that. Are there occasional problems with feed contamination due to lack of proper sanitation or ignorance? Sure there are, but how do you fix ignorance from ever coming back in the future? More inspections? Yeah, good idea, especially for the people who are the slackers, but that isn’t the whole industry as seems to be indicated in this topic.
Do I believe the onus is on the cook? Not to eliminate the contamination where it exists, no, but it is the cook that is the final line of defense. This isn’t rocket science, it means cooking meat to a minimum temperature and making sure there is no cross contamination of food products as mentioned earlier in the post.
As a consumer, I view having your food cooked properly as no different than taking your car in for service. If you drive away and it shakes, rattles and rolls, you drive it right back and make them fix it. With meat or other food products, you rely on others to do it properly or you do it yourself. IF you do it right, you won’t get sick no matter what any cow feeder does or doesn’t do. So I think the answer is a bit of both. Personal responsibility, not blaming everyone else for a problem you could handle alone. What I do not think is the solution is to run around screaming corn in cows is causing deaths.