1. Caesars Palace - Nero’s ribeye steak, 2. Steak me, 3. MMMM Meaty, 4. Another cow, 5. Breaking Diet / Mmm Steak / Day 7, 6. BBQ Orgy.., 7. F*ck You Disgusting Flesh Ads!, 8. YES, I’m Hungry!, 9. Beer and Steak, 10. A friend. Wibaux, Montana., 11. schteak, 12. Project365-097
Steak Mosaic 6/15/07
Originally uploaded by Quacky
Created with fd’s Flickr Toys.
Archive for June 15th, 2007
Guitar Dynamics: What did the pork chop say to the steak?Nice to meat you!
Quiet These Paintings Are: what the f*ck dan
Soldier For The Broken : So today was our Free Steak dinner that we got at Jack’s for hitting $30,000.
Currently watching :
Another Gay Movie
Release date: By 21 November, 2006
For Father’s Day, Get Him What He Wants Most: Steak and Beer!
If your dad’s anything like mine, he tells you that he wants absolutely nothing for Father’s Day. What he really means is that he just doesn’t want to see YOU on Father’s Day.
Seriously. Happy Father’s Day, dads. Eat a steak!
I’m studying a WSJ Online article today about Wagyu beef. It’s quite interesting. I think it was way easier figuring out another very esoteric and expensive proposition: buiding diamonds. Get this:
…finding good Wagyu can be a complicated proposition. Cross-breeding among the cattle is common, and most products on the market are actually half-Wagyu, half-Angus, says American Wagyu Association spokesman Charles Gaskins. Some ranchers and retailers aim for a higher percentage — Morgan Ranch says its cows are mostly 75% to 80% Wagyu, while Lobel’s says it requires a minimum of 87.5%. There are no federal rating systems for Wagyu — unlike most steak sold in supermarkets, labeled by quality from “select” to “prime,” it’s not graded by the U.S. Agriculture Department. Finally, almost every ranch has a proprietary blend of grain and roughage for the cattle’s diet, and cows that are raised longer can yield more marbled steak
Apparently there is even some fair degree of deceptive marketing involved, with online retailers claiming to sell American-raised “Kobe beef” (you can only call it Kobe if it’s been raised, by hand most likely, in Kobe, Japan).
I doubt you’ll see us taste-testing them… until of course the paid sponsorships begin, and we can shell out for five hundred bucks worth of steaks.


