Both pigs were raised under identical free range conditions. The right was supplemented with some grain/corn/soy based feed the left was left to forage naturally Pretty much shows the benefits of grass fed and finished (no grain fed) meat. It should also give you some indication of what grain/soy/corn does to our bodies” image

Replies (33)

Nate's avatar
Nate / 1 year ago
When you grind venison, do you mix some fat in with it?
Malos10's avatar
Malos10 1 year ago
Just wow!! What a difference!
While valid I still want to eat the one on the right! What is the solution? Finish them under oaks and time it so it coincides with mast drop. Also plant LOTs of American/Chinese Hybrid Chestnuts because white oak takes a LONG time and has heavy mast biannually. Persimmon is good for this too. Also I have no issue eating pork fed some corn, soy on the other hand, F-off with your estrogen bombs. View quoted note →
Yeah. I think part of this is less exercise and the other part is what those chemicals be doin', the carbs the oils
Fabian's avatar
Fabian 1 year ago
It’s all absolut nutrition
These animals are the same species. They can breed and produce fertile offspring . One eats root vegetables,fruit,eggs and meat. The other eats soy,grains and the used oil from fast food restaurants. image
I mean, you said it yourself, Mr Fatter Piglet was supplemented with more stuff (more calories), so it stored fat as energy reserves.. same would've happened with pretty much any other food, excess calories = more fat.
Yes I think that also is the message. I am all for animal fat but the one on the right is mostly fat, maybe that is the point
₿eth's avatar
₿eth 1 year ago
Word in the street is that pork is one of the dirtiest meats to eat.
Colezybear's avatar
Colezybear 1 year ago
I usually do I usually do 7-10% pork fat and roughly 20% fatty cut of pork (belly or shoulder) and roughly 70% venison. Some I leave plain some I spice for Italian sausage or like and unsweetened breakfast suasage