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Post Info TOPIC: Antibiotic-Free Meat Business Is Booming


Founder of The Meat Cutter's Club

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Antibiotic-Free Meat Business Is Booming


 

Antibiotic-Free Meat Business Is Booming, Thanks To Chipotle

 
The antibiotic-free pigs roam freely on Niman Ranch in Iowa.
Sarah Willis/courtesy Niman Ranch

The antibiotic-free pigs roam freely on Niman Ranch in Iowa.

It's no longer just foodies at farm markets or Whole Foods buying antibiotic-free, pasture-raised meats.

Increased demand is coming from lots of big players, including Hyatt Hotels; institutional food providers such as Bon Appetit Management Co., which caters to schools and companies; and the fast-food chain Chipotle Mexican Grill. And it's changing the game.

In fact, this year, Chipotle, which is growing so quickly that it's opening about three new locations each week, will slowly braise and sell about 120 million pounds of naturally raised pork, chicken and beef that meets its antibiotic-free standards.

 

The company's transition to antibiotic-free meat began more than a decade ago when Chipotle realized its pork wasn't selling very well. And Steve Ells, the founder, wanted to make some changes.

He stumbled upon an article called "The Lost Taste of Pork" in The Art of Eating, a boutiquey, food-lover's journal, which detailed the practices of Paul Willis, a family farmer in Iowa. Willis raises pigs on pasture, the old-fashioned way. At the time, Willis' methods were a radical departure from the large, industrial operations that confine pigs indoors and feed them regular doses of antibiotics.

In the article, published back in 1999, writer Edward Behr described a thick pork chop he'd eaten at Chez Panisse in Berkeley that came from a pig raised on the Iowa farm. "It was the best pork I'd ever eaten — tender and somewhat fatty," he wrote. Ells was intrigued.

Ells ordered some pork from Willis, who had teamed up with Niman Ranch in Iowa, and Chipotle's customers responded: Despite a jump in price from $4.50 to $5.50 for a carnitas burrito, sales improved.

"We started selling twice as many carnitas as we had been before," Chipotle's Chris Arnold told me. He acknowledged that it's hard to know whether people truly detected a big difference, or if the in-store marketing about the switch to all-natural, antibiotic-free pigs caught people's attention. Either way, it set Chipotle on a new course.

I reached out to Willis, the farmer in Iowa who gave Chipotle its first taste of free-range pigs a decade ago, to ask how the natural-pork business is changing.

To be sure, antibiotic-free meat still makes up a tiny share of the market. Economists estimate it's around 2 percent. But demand is growing.

"The marketplace for what we do has increased dramatically," he says. When he began working with Niman Ranch, which operates a bit like a co-op, he was the only pork farmer. Now there are hundreds.

"I'm proud that we've created a market for people who want to raise livestock this way," Willis told me.

And increasingly, consumers seem to be making the connections about what they eat. Concerns about antibiotic resistance in humans have led the Food and Drug Administration to issue voluntary guidelines that recommend limiting the use of antibiotics in livestock animals.

As consumer awareness has grown, Chef Greg Lopez of Hyatt Hotels says people are showing that they're willing to pay more for food that they perceive to be more healthful.

"I think we're at that groundswell moment, at that tipping point right now," he says.

Lopez says this month Hyatt announced it will offer antibiotic-free, naturally raised meat, poulty and dairy options at all of its hotels. The chain decided to expand these options, in part, after it saw the success of a natural burger on the menu. Meyer Natural Angus supplies those burgers.

"When they [consumers] were given a choice between just burger, and burger that was naturally raised and hormone-free, 30 percent paid a premium, a couple of bucks" to get the antibiotic-free option, Lopez says.

The list of retailers making changes is expanding. Wal-Mart sells a number of antibiotic-free beef and poultry products.

And as demand grows some farmers and suppliers are scrambling to adjust.

One sign of growing pains — temporary hiccups in the supply chain. Hyatt's Lopez says just this week his favorite all-natural chicken supplier — Palouse Pastured Poultry — told him it is temporarily sold out. "I'm in a dry spell," Lopez says. "Their next slaughter is scheduled for the last week of June or the first week of July."

Lopez says the good news is that there are more farmers ramping up this kind of production, so he'll be able to buy antibiotic-free chickens from another farm this month.



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Leon Wildberger

Executive Director 



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RE: Antibiotic-Free Meat Business Is Booming


Like this article, thanks for posting Leon

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Steve JK West


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RE: Antibiotic-Free Meat Business Is Booming


hello everyone. I have been in the natural and organic meat buisness for about 5 years now and it sure is a trip. For a while i was wondering if all this was legit. after visiting a few ranches in iowa were niman buys there hogs, i can say they meet all the laws and standards.

I'v alson been to nebraska for a tour of the smart chicken plants.

to me raising meat organically without hormones is the way to go.i would not feed my family anything else



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RE: Antibiotic-Free Meat Business Is Booming


I agree on free range pork, and my customer approve.
Let's face it guys the flavour is amazing.

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RE: Antibiotic-Free Meat Business Is Booming


big daddy, I like the natural and organic meat buisness, but i'm really into the local movement. I think that is going to bring back our trade a lot. they need meat cutters that can cut carcass beef. chains trying to work some of it in is trying hard to find cutters that can cut it.



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RE: Antibiotic-Free Meat Business Is Booming


I too like the local movement and hopes it really catchs on, of course one of my reason also is the beef packers want be shrewing us with the  immigrant workers and wages would go back up for us that can handle the job.



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RE: Antibiotic-Free Meat Business Is Booming


I have the first 10 feet of my case freeform and organic meats can't keep it full I though it was to expensive and didn't think people would but it I was wrong it flys

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