Mustard and Rosemary Roasted Chicken (21DSD-friendly!)

January 3, 2013 in Meat and Poultry

What do I love most about roasting whole chicken?  It’s easy, takes very little time to prepare, makes several meal’s worth (I always cook two at a time), the cooked meat freezes really well for future meals, it’s a fairly cheap meat (even free-range and pastured chickens can be found relatively inexpensively), you get to save the bones for bone broth, and it’s delicious!   Is it okay to have seven favorite things?

Where do you buy fully pastured chicken?  Both US Wellness Meats sells it and GrassFed Traditions sells it (both for similar prices).  You can also buy free-range chicken at Trader Joe’s (for only $2.50/lb) and many other grocery stores and specialty food stores (like Whole Foods).

This particular seasoning for roast chicken is amazing—especially if you want to make gravy with the pan juices!  I know that making pan gravy can be daunting for many, but it really isn’t that hard and it’s so worth the effort with this chicken!  It takes a little practice to eyeball how much thickener you need, when it’s as thick as you like it, how to handle clumps—but the great part is that gravy is good stuff even if it’s too thin, too thick, or slightly lumpy.

To make pan gravy, place the roasting pan (without the cooked chickens or rack on top) onto a large element on the stove.  Turn to medium-high heat (or slightly hotter) and bring the juices to a simmer (if it’s more of a boil, turn down the heat a little).  Meanwhile, mix about ¼ cup of arrowroot powder or kuzu starch (my favorite two paleo-friendly starches for making gravy) with about ¼ cup cold water (to dissolve it, this helps with the clumps).  Pour the starchy water into the pan while whisking like crazy with a wire whisk.  Keep whisking until the gravy has thickened (takes 3-4 minutes).  If it’s not thick enough for you (this depends in large part on how much juices you have in your pan), repeat with more arrowroot powder or kuzu starch (if it’s close, just try 2 Tbsp).  If you end up with some starch lumps, simply pour your gravy through a strainer before serving.  If your gravy ends up too thick, thin it out with a little hot water.  Just don’t try to make gravy for the first time at the same time as you are minding other pots on the stovetop.

 

Ingredients:

  1. Preheat oven to 350F.
  2. Remove chickens from packaging, pat dry with paper towels, remove any giblets (save these for making bone broth!) and place on your roasting pan, using the rack insert that comes with the pan.
  3. Melt lard or coconut oil and mix with Dijon and rosemary.  Baste the entire surface of both chickens with the mustard sauce (I just use my hands).
  4. Roast chickens for 20 minutes per pound (or until a meat thermometer reads at least 165F—it’s standard to cook until breast meat reads 180F).
  5. Make pan gravy with the juices if desired.  Carve and serve!

Grass-Fed Beef: A Superfood worth the Premium Price

March 20, 2012 in FAQ, Protein, Superfoods

There are many excellent reasons to choose grass-fed meat over conventional, or grain-fed, meat (and don’t get me started on why the word “conventional” is used to describe meat from animals fed diets that are not native to that species).  From an animal welfare standpoint, grass-fed animals are treated better, happier and healthier.  The E. coli contamination of grass-fed meat is extremely low compared to conventional meat (in large part because pastured cows have healthy intestines!) in spite of the fact that, while antibiotic use is routine in CAFOs, antibiotics and hormones are not used at all in grass-fed animals (yay!).  From an environmental impact standpoint, eating grass-fed means supporting smaller (often local, family-owned) farms and thereby reducing fuel costs to get the meat to you.  And by avoiding grains in any part of your personal food chain, you avoid supporting large factory farms which degrade topsoil and leach fertilizers and pesticides into our rivers, lakes and oceans.

But it is the superfood status of grass-fed beef (or lamb or bison or goat… any ruminid) that makes the higher cost worth paying.

Red meat is typically recommended due to its high (complete) protein content, as well as being a good source of iron, zinc and many of the B Vitamins (including being a particularly valuable source of Vitamin B12).  This is, of course, still true for grass-fed meat.  Grass-fed meat tends to have a much lower water content than conventional meat and is much leaner overall than conventional meat (which means higher in protein!).  Plus, the fats that it does contain are much healthier.  Grass-fed meat contains approximately four times more omega-3 fatty acids (in the very useful DHA and EPA forms) than grain-fed meat.  It also contain far fewer omega-6 fatty acids so that the ratio of ometa-3 to omega-6 fatty acids in grass-fed meat is approximately 1:3 (but it’s closer to 1:20 in grain-fed meat).  Meat (and dairy) from grass-fed cows are the richest known source of conjugated linoleic acid (CLA), another very important, anti-inflammatory fatty acid.  Grass-fed beef is an excellent source of Vitamin A (10 times more than grain fed), Vitamin E (3 times more than grain fed) and is also higher in B vitamins, calcium, magnesium and potassium.  In fact, all of the health arguments against eating red meat do not apply to grass-fed meat.

I know grass-fed meat is more expensive.  Ground grass-fed beef typically runs about $6 per pound, which is about 50% more than conventional beef at the grocery store (although if you factor in the lower water content, it might be only about 30% more).  The tips for incorporating grass-fed meat into your diet are the same for any buying anything on a tight budget:  shop around, keep an eye out for coupons and sales, and when possible, buy in bulk.  Many farmers will sell you ¼-½ butchered cow, and while the initial investment (and freezer space requirement) is fairly steep, the price per pound can be as low as $2!  It’s also much more important to buy grass-fed meat for your cheaper, fattier cuts of meat.  So, if you are on a tight budget, buy your 75-85% ground beef from grass-fed sources, but buy leaner cuts from conventional sources.  I buy my grass-fed meat from three different producers: a wonderful local farmer, Grass-Fed Traditions (grassfedtraditions.com) and US Wellness Meats (grasslandbeef.com).  What I buy from which depends on price, promotions, and what I’m looking for.  US Wellness Meats has very good prices, outstanding variety, and is one of the few sources of grass-fed hotdogs, sausages and deli meats (like bologna!), but requires a minimum $75 and 7 pound order (but free shipping with a $7.50 handling fee).  Grass-Fed Traditions (a division of Tropical Traditions, which is my source for all things coconut) has higher prices in general but has amazing sales.  It also has no minimum order and flat-rate shipping (I often wait until meat is on sale at the same time as they have a free shipping promotion).  I keep a close eye on their homepage for sales and then stock up with a bigger order.

One quick word of warning while you are shopping for grass-fed meat:  grass-fed means that the animals only eat grass for their entire lives (you may also see it described as “grass-fed and grass-finished”).  Some producers will “grain-finish” their meat in order to increase the size of the cattle and be somewhat cagey about this fact.  Also note that organic beef or lamb is not the same as grass-fed (although grass-fed is organic, it’s not necessarily true the other way around).  Some producers supplement with grain so the animals are “mostly grass-fed”, which is an improvement over conventional meat but hard to quantify just how much of an improvement. So, whether buying from a local farmer or your butcher, if you aren’t familiar with the producer, ask whether or not the meat is grass-finished.

Because ground meat is the cheapest way to incorporate grass-fed meat in your diet, I have been working on a bunch of new recipes using ground meat.  Look for the new section on the blog just for recipes using ground meat!