by othmar » Fri Jul 15, 2005 1:38 am
I have to agree with sausagemaker. The meat in the super stores is very fresh. Today I slaughterd 15 bulls, by tomorrow morning 10 of them will be on the way to the super store, boned out and pre-packed and on saturday they will be in the meat counter. 4 of the bulls will go to local butchers in five days as medium aged and one I will keep for myself and he will be aged for 20 days and then will be processed into top aged steaks for two local steak houses.
While the costumer in the super store will pay $4.98 per lb. steaks. The local butcher costumer will pay double that amout and the steak house costumer will pay almost four times that for the same steak cut.
While the butchers and steak house costumers are perfectly happy to pay that price the super strore costumer would think of it as "outrageous".
This brings me to the point. You get what you pay for it, and that goes for sausages too, and super store costumers want it cheap and cheap they get it, but do make a price like that the sausage meat has to be "stretched". The meat has to be fresh, storing meat for even the appropriate time is to expensive in terms of electric, labour, and all other costs that have to be calculated.
Somethinhg in this dicusion has flown right over my head. What do you mean with the meat being "spiced"? Super stores do not spice meat unless they make pre-spiced steaks and other ready to cook meat products.
If you want top quality meat that also answes the "ethical" question, what ever that means, then your best choice is to find a farmer that raises pigs the "natural" or "organic" way, buy these pigs and have have them costume slaughterd. You will pay a big price for it but the quality can not be beaten.
You see it all boils down to one single fact which is, "What are you wiling to pay?"
Regards
Othmar