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Growing Demand For Bison Meat Strains Ranchers

STEVE KARNOWSKI   12/29/10 09:36 AM ET  AP

MINNEAPOLIS — The deep snow blanketing the Midwest prairie didn't bother the bison on Ed Eichten's ranch one bit. The hardy animals evolved to survive – even thrive – year-round on the open range, and with their big heads, they can plow right through drifts 5-feet tall or more.

The majestic beasts are a hot commodity these days, as consumer demand for healthy meat has sent prices soaring. But although bison are what one rancher calls "a self-care animal," most farmers are struggling to increase their herds and keep up with demand.

Bison grow slower than other livestock, and a heifer can't have her first calf until she's 3, said Dave Carter, executive director of the National Bison Association in Westminster, Colo. Beef cows can have calves at 2. Also, many producers are finding heifers more valuable for breeding than eating, which means fewer bison going to market – at least temporarily, he said.

The tight supply comes after bison farmers spent much of the past decade aggressively courting consumers by touting the health benefits of the low-fat, low-cholesterol meat. Bison caught on, and even in the economic slump, prices haven't discouraged consumers.

"Now our challenge is keeping up with that demand," Carter said.

Eichten's family has about 250 head near Center City, about 40 miles north of Minneapolis. He sells meat at farmers markets, over the Internet and through the family's retail store and restaurant. Eichten's Hidden Acres also supplies local restaurants and co-op grocers.

Aaron Nytroe, meat and seafood manager at The Wedge co-op grocery in Minneapolis, said he can't get enough bison meat. He sells out deliveries from Eichten's most weeks, and with demand "growing exponentially," he said he might even look at finding a second supplier to keep up.

Bison fans say the meat doesn't taste gamy – it has a rich, beefy flavor but is a little sweeter. Since it's so lean, chefs say preparing it properly requires slower cooking over lower heat than beef. They say steaks shouldn't be cooked past medium or medium rare. Those who prefer meat well done might want to try a bison pot roast.

While retail prices vary, ground bison has been selling for about $7 a pound, compared with a little over $5 a year ago, Carter said.

But it's still a niche product. About 92,000 head of bison were processed last year in North America, according to the association. That's less than one day's beef production in the U.S. alone.

"It will take us five-plus years to ramp up and keep a consistent supply," said Gail Griffin, who's been raising bison for 20 years and is the executive director of the Minnesota Buffalo Association and immediate past president of the national group. "But there's every indication, for sure this year and indications over the last three actually, that people are shifting to larger herds or creating new herds."

South Dakota, Montana, North Dakota, Nebraska and Colorado are the top bison states, but the animals are raised in all 50, Carter said, including a herd on the Big Island of Hawaii and one on Long Island in New York.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture counted about 4,500 ranches and farms with nearly 200,000 bison in the U.S. in its 2007 Census of Agriculture. The total North American herd, which includes animals in state and national parks, is estimated at 450,000, compared with fewer than 1,000 a little over a century ago.

CNN founder Ted Turner is the world's largest bison rancher with about 55,000 head. He co-founded the Ted's Montana Grill chain in 2002 to help popularize the meat, and it now sells about 1.5 million pounds of bison a year, about 40 percent of its annual sales of about $100 million, chief executive and co-founder George McKerrow Jr. said.

The chain's bison burgers typically run $12 to $15, or $3 more than the same burgers made from beef. When the Atlanta-based company raised prices by $1 earlier this year, customers kept forking it out.

"Right now the consumer loves the product enough to pay for it," McKerrow said.

But, he added, steak prices have hit a ceiling at $30 for a bison filet.

Eichten, who has been raising bison for 22 years, said he doesn't see demand falling off as it does with many food fads. People "want that fresh, locally grown product and they're willing to pay a premium for it," he said.

He and other producers say bison can be easier to raise than cattle, but there are some unique challenges. It's tough to keep them fenced, Eichten said. And, he never walks through his herd; he always uses a vehicle.

"The animal is pretty wild," he said. "You have to watch your butt around them. . . . I've clocked them at 40 miles an hour. They can rock and roll."

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12:35 AM on 01/18/2011
I love buffalo very much, and am concerned with all this beefalo being called buffalo or bison. I believe it is a fact that none of the "bison" on the market is actually bison. There are only a few herds of pure bison genetics, most in public and Native hands. The Yellowstone herd is the only pure and still wild herd left, and there are only 3,500 left, and they are presently being murdered and harassed by the same agencies who destroyed the great herd of the 1800's. If you have any respect for the real wild Sacred Buffalo, please, lets call the beefalo beefalo. People must be alarmed by the Yellowstone Slaughter that still goes on to this day. Pure Bison genetics are rare and must be respected. No longer should Americans eat beefalo and think they are eating the restoration of the Great American Bison Herd. They are not, the herd is continuing to be persecuted in Yellowstone, and beefalo are not Bison. There ought to be a moral law about this mislabeling. I mean no offense to any beefalo ranchers, I am thankful to your hard work for our peoples tables, but please, for the sake of the Sacred Buffalo, relabel with truth, and invest in pure bison herds, if you can get them, good luck. Long live the Sacred Buffalo, and long live Us, together in harmony, the way our Creator intended us to be.
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VA Jill
I'm not perfect and neither are you
06:31 PM on 01/01/2011
Bison is the most seriously yummy red meat there is. No burger I've ever had beats a fresh bison burger, and bison steaks are equally good, although you absolutely do NOT want them well done! I'm looking to try bison pot roast as soon as I can locate one.
10:22 AM on 01/02/2011
If you haven't ever had moose, I urge you to try it. It's better then bison. About the best meat I ever tried. Elk would be my #2 choice. Then bison 3, and good beef 4.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
CR46
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01:28 PM on 01/03/2011
Gotta agree with you on the moose. But I'd put bison put in front of elk.
11:57 PM on 12/30/2010
Bison is as low fat as turkey breast or lower. There is almost no fat. Dieters who eat meat would do well to eat bison, which can be used in dishes much the same way as beef. It needs gentle handling, slow cooking, maybe a little bit of acid (tomato, vinegar, wine, lemon, etc.) to perk up the flavor. It makes great barbeque, meatloaf, whatever.
As far as hamburgers go: sometimes beef is added to ground bison to add fat--for "juiciness" so read labels when purchasing. It is so lean that it doesn't form a burger easily on its own, and the fat in the beef makes it easier to handle but defeats the healthful properties.
People who eat lots of bison find they lose weight without effort, simply by substituting this meat for whatever they previously would have eaten.
03:17 PM on 12/31/2010
They are lean because they are wild. If they change the way bison are raised/slaughtered to focus on volume versus quality, bison will become a bigger cow.
05:57 PM on 12/31/2010
Yes. Bison are grass grazed, but the animals producing meat for sale are farm-raised, managed, cared for. They are bred with the best of breeding stock available, just like prize cattle are. The bison we buy for the most part is not what I'd call "wild" but the industry itself prides itself in the healthfulness of the way it raises and protects the bison.

Factory farming and bison will not mix and still have the desirable qualities remain.
04:27 PM on 12/30/2010
I wonder if Bison could be crossed with Colby beef cattle of Japanese fame in theory sounds like some awesome bison-beef featuring a lean cut coupled with an out of this world fat marbling. I once heard of Beeffaloe but I'm not sure it wasn't just Buffalo.
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09:12 PM on 12/30/2010
Oh no, beefalo are very real! :)

http://www.ansi.okstate.edu/breeds/cattle/beefalo/index.htm

The cross between the Bison and beef breeds combined the superior hardiness, foraging ability, calving ease, and meat quality of the Bison with the fertility, milking ability, and ease of handling from the bovine. The cross has also given increased meaning to the term of hybrid vigor. Beefalo animals can be more efficient, which can cut input costs and improve profits.
01:39 AM on 12/31/2010
Thank you I appreciate the info.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
CR46
spay/neuter and adopt
01:30 PM on 01/03/2011
Beefalo were common in the 1970's, unfortunately the market never developed.
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03:45 PM on 12/30/2010
It will be a cold day in Hades before I pay $12 for a burger of any kind. I'm glad to see the bison farmers doing there thing compared to the huge disgusting beef producers but this is way more than I'm willing to pay for meat. The only beef I use now is hamburger and I only buy that when it's on sale. Next year I will be being buying my beef by the half from a local farmer who raises nothing but grass fed animals.
03:37 PM on 12/30/2010
Perhaps it's time for more serious re-introduction efforts in Bisonless states since there's clearly a demand.
03:10 PM on 12/30/2010
Wonderful. Another animal to exploit for their flesh. How sad. These beings should be free...and not confined simply for taste pleasures.

This line gave me chills.

"But it's still a niche product. About 92,000 head of bison were processed last year in North America, according to the association. That's less than one day's beef production in the U.S. alone."

Interesting how they use "processed" like it was taking out the trash when it's really grisly, cruel slaughter. Wow, 92,000 cows killed everyday for our taste buds. 92,000 large feeling animals who do not want to be killed, who are gentle and have done nothing to us.

We truly have a lot of evolving to do.
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03:34 PM on 12/30/2010
What do you eat ?
04:32 PM on 01/04/2011
My diet is based on mostly grains/beans/vegetables in many many different forms. Also fruits, of course. Sometimes meat analogs and nuts but mostly grains/some kind of veg protein/vegetables and fruits.

And my diet is very varied, by the way. I can eat Thai, Mexican, Italian, Chinese, American...etc etc.
04:18 PM on 12/30/2010
It is far from a grisly or cruel slaughter. It's actually quick and humane.

I know you like to think that in a perfect world no animal would eat any other living animal, but please wake up.
09:59 PM on 12/30/2010
If you're in the mood for a real horror story, check this out.

http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/09/19/the-meat-eaters/?hp

Or this.

http://www.abolitionist.com/reprogramming/
04:35 PM on 01/04/2011
Slaughterhouses are not "quick and humane". They are grisly. The animals know what is going to happen to them way before and 5% are not even knocked out before dismembering.

I think you need to wake up. You don't have the facts of what goes on in those places.

As for other animals eating other animals...of course there will be truly carnivorous animals but that does not mean it's OK or the ideal for us to do the same. We are not them. We have choices, intelligence and wisdom. We know how to cook and eat a myriad of foods to satisfy our nutritional needs, the lions and other carnivorous animals cannot do this. They are not good examples for the human who can be so much more.
12:47 AM on 12/30/2010
The freest od free roaming animals once upon a time on the great North American prairie, and now they are just common cattle. Sad legacy humans have and will have left upon this planet.
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02:20 AM on 12/30/2010
well, I guess we could all eat soy beans forever....but...
04:37 PM on 01/04/2011
You don't have much knowledge of plant based cooking and eating do you? It's not about "eating soybeans" forever. IT's a wide range cuisine where you can have a different dish a night for a year if you wanted to.

We can easily live without meat, what's missing is simply the wish to. These animals do not have to be raised for food, can be free and not killed.
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03:47 PM on 12/30/2010
What do you eat ?
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TRex86
Enjoying life in West Ohio
06:26 PM on 12/29/2010
Bison is the only range animal that won't overfeed--a lesson to us all. They evolved (yes evolved) in an environment of unlimited food, the lush grasses that used to cover much of North America before the assault of the plow and the agri-business industry. Early European explorers witnessed plains covered with animals. Many Native Americans lived in peace and harmony with the bison.

Then Manifest Destiny brought white people to their domain and led to slaughter for fun, with trains loaded with hunters who shot vast herds from their windows with no intention to eat the meat. Native Americans found this unimaginably stupid. They respected what they killed and used every part of the animal. We could learn a lot about stewardship from our native American progenitors and these lovely animals who barely escaped extinction at the hands of American "sport hunters."
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KarlaElisa
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08:49 PM on 12/29/2010
Indeed we could. And you can apply this to everything in this 'must grow the GDP, GNP, Economy' mindset.

When you take what you NEED, not what you want to sell and ship off somewhere, you're living with nature. Our oceans used to full of fish. No more, with 90% of them gone now. Everything we go after we go after in a bloodlust way for money and profit.

Someday the planet is going to rid itself of us and we deserve it.
12:49 AM on 12/30/2010
If anything the modern day hunter is still as pathetic as those that took pleasure shooting from the Iron Express. My step-father (Osteo D.O) often left rotting ducks in the back woods, rotting blue fish in the trash, and always killed more than one deer per season (illegally).

Yet he remains one of the most beloved physicians in our county.
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TRex86
Enjoying life in West Ohio
09:20 AM on 12/30/2010
My parents' generation were Depression era meat hunters. They followed a code of behavior, which mandated going for low percentage kill shots so that the game didn't run off and die somewhere else. Once my uncles hit a deer on the road and had it dressed out in minutes before they even checked the family truck for damage. Needless to say they were appalled at "sport" hunters that didn't hunt for the table or killed inedible creatures. Tin cans were suitable for target practice. They didn't like to waste ammo so their kill ratio was equivalent to Vietnam War snipers.
06:07 PM on 12/29/2010
The main advantage of bison/buffalo (in America, "buffalo" is colloquial for the American bison) is that they can be kept on pasture over winter in the North American Great Plains climate zone, whereas most breeds of beef cattle do poorly unless sheltered over winter.

There are inherent differences in flavor and texture including fat distribution, but a lot of the difference in nutritional value is due to the fact that bison graze on pasture throughout their lives from weaning to slaughter and generally do not require dried hay in the winter. This results in significantly leaner meat with less saturated fat and dietary cholesterol and more omega-3 (which comes from green grass).

Pasture management can be more physically challenging than with comparatively docile cattle, but that's where buried electric fencing (or now GPS fencing) comes in.

There is also a cattle/bison hybrid called "beefalo", which is 5/8 cattle and 3/8 bison.
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Palafox
Plutocracy (noun): government by the wealthy
05:30 PM on 12/29/2010
Once again, Ted Turner was on the cutting edge.
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02:23 AM on 12/30/2010
GREAT PUN....
04:36 PM on 12/29/2010
Its bison for me my son.
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04:16 PM on 12/29/2010
Bison is the best cattle for North America. They grow faster than cows and dont need insane amounts of antibiotics.
Plus it's low in fat and incredibly tasty :)
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02:24 AM on 12/30/2010
but btucella is a very real disease that they carry and highly contagious...they will get a dose of antibiotics...count on it..
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02:30 AM on 12/30/2010
Only wild Bison in areas like yellowstone carry it. And if you properly cook your meat then there's nothing to fear.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brucellosis#Brucellosis_in_the_Greater_Yellowstone_area
10:10 PM on 12/30/2010
There is a vaccine for brucellosis. Not that I think there's anything wrong with using antibiotics to treat sick animals when it's warranted.
04:10 PM on 12/29/2010
I grew up on a buffalo ranch. We were committed to providing people with grass-fed bison meat. After moving away from the family ranch, I found that you have to be very careful buying bison meat in grocery stores. I have found that there are meat packing plants (one that I know of first hand in Scott City, Kansas), that add beef fat into the bison meat. If it is truly grass-fed bison, the only moisture that will be in your pan while cooking will be water, and it will cook off.
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CHMB
What's long and brown and sticky? A Stick.
04:25 PM on 12/29/2010
Thanks for the tip!
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gypsysailor
Things that might have been never were.
04:04 PM on 12/29/2010
Goats aren't baaaaddddd either.