Buying a whole or half a cow in the UK

I’m a beef farmer, ex farm price for a good finished steer is £1500-£1600 by the time you’ve killed and paid all levy’s etc your looking at getting on for £1000 a side. I have about 350-400 head of beef cattle and every other year so kill one for the family. It’s enough beef to keep 8-10 of us going for about 18 months.
I’m not a professional butcher, I can do a roe doe or somthing simple like a lamb in about 20 minutes, but to butcher, pack and mince a side of beef, so half a carcass, takes 2 people a long day. If the animal is a good on spec beast it will weigh 650-700kg and you’ll be looking at a kill out percentage in the high 50%’s you’ll be dealing with around 100kg of mince alone.
All that being said is heartily recommend it, if you have the facility’s to lift the quarters, dry age it and butcher it properly it’s great fun.
It is very important you dispose of all the pluck and waste through the correct channels, but home kill is perfectly legal if all for your own consumption. The chap in the pictures is an ex slaughter man who comes to help me with mine.
The picture of the finished quarters in the chiller show it next to a 25kg lamb carcass for scale.
Had a cow with a broken leg so that ended up in our freezer. For 12 months we lived on a river of mince.
Most abattoirs have a butcher next door. And somewhere in the process will be a place to hang it.
And yes, it's a long day, made easier by willing helpers who will bag and tag, mince, chop and sharpen your knives for you.
 
If you can find it a mature longhorn steer is the best beef ever. At Christmas I always get two full longhorn briskets, cut each one into four joints.
Nectar of the gods, our treat on special occasions throughout the year.👍👍
 
Any beef that is reared on grass, especially if it’s proper rough pasture type grass will be very very tasty.

Corn fed beef from a feedlot grown fast will not.

Beef grown on grassland will have minimal impact on the environment. It is using land that probably has limited other uses and is turning grassland into an edible product. And by grassland I am really meaning a mixed sward of grasses, clovers, vetches and other plants all of which support each other. You may well need to take crops of hay / silage for winter feed, but that is all part of the process. Taken to local abbatoir, or slaughtered in a mobile abbatoir has very few food miles. End product can then easily be transported efficiently to consumers - but hopefully most will be pretty local.

Feedlots where you are using grains and soya - most of which is imported. And then you need to truck live animals to other end of the country for slaughter, then packaged into vacuum packed packages for the supermarket shelf. - this is where all the environmental issues start arising.

Just imagine if there was a food product that was produced on wild lands, in the woods and hedgerows, that had no humane input, save for when it is slaughtered and then feeds the family.
 
Tom where abouts are you? I might be able to help you, I can give you what advice you need however boning sides is not something you can pick up off YouTube as most of them do it wrong



Atb
Hey, thanks, I'm in Devon... I would have some arranging to do (freezers etc) before I could get stuck into this. I will drop you a message when I'm going to pull the trigger :)
 
If you want Dexter beef
I have a source in North Somerset
A friend keeps between 30 and 40 head
 
I used to keep Pedigree South Devons, I believe Ruby reds are North Devons, both of them will blow away Aberdeen Angus for taste, as will Red Poll. My wife once was taken to a top end Japanese Restaurant in London, the waiter recommended the Kobe beef, saying it was the best in the world, fed on beer & massaged daily, eaten by the Japanese Emperor etc etc, so she ok I'll try it. Waiter came back & said what did you think about that, she told him she was disappointed & it was not very good. He looked down his nose & said well what would you know about beef? to which she replied My husband is a beef farmer.
If you want the best beef, eat British Native breeds, they have been bred to finish on grass, they cut & eat differently to Continentals, which are drier & stringier, & you will find bits of it stuck in your teeth, also completely lacking in flavour because they are a leaner beef, & usually need to be finished on concentrates. Beef gets it flavour from the fat, British breeds are fattier & self basting, but grass fed animals tend to have a yellow fat which apparently the supermarkets & the housewives doesn't like. I never heard of tasty lean beef. The best eating is a maiden heifer, hung for 32 days, after it comes off the grass late Autumn. And get it delivered to a butcher who can hang it well, joint it down & box it up. A chest freezer takes an awful long time to freeze those boxes down, a good butcher will already freeze them for you, for a better product. Small butchers killing a few animals a day were a blessing, our animal would arrive safely before being shut up in a calf box for a couple of hours to quieten down, before being led quietly into the killing floor. It was important to reduce adrenalin in the meat. Dark purple meat is not well hung, it is a sign of too much adrenalin. I dont know of any Butchers yards now, it has become an industrial process, & a retrograde step imo, if you have one nearby count your blessings, & pay him well.
Organic North Devons it was for me. Never understood the 'ruby' bit. Best tasting beef bar none
 
The tenderising affect of hanging can take place before freezing or after thawing, I believe. You need a fridge/chiller big enough to hold a few weeks of your meat consumption.
 
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Our local farm will do half a dexter which is manageable size and their butcher will cut it to your preference. Affordable as well
Dexter beef is very nice, as are most of the old slow grown breeds. Im quite partial to old English Long horn beef.
 
I use the services of a slaughter man for my pigs and lambs. I am aware that some local farmers will home slaughter their own steers. There is masses of red tape associated with home slaughter, needles to say everything I do is in accordance with the law. Local abattoirs are closing at an alarming rate and animal welfare is suffering. My lambs and pigs are slaughtered in a stress free environment, for home consumption only.
With all due respect, and I may be wrong, and you can correct me if I am, but that photo doesn't look like it was taken in an abattoir, yet you said you use the services of a slaughterman? A licenced slaughterman can only operate in a licenced premises. He can't (legally) come out to your farm and do it there.
Just be careful that you're not putting anyone's job on the line by posting on here.
It's OK for you to kill your own pigs (for home consumption only) but it's not OK to get someone professional in to do it for you on your own farm. A really stupid law, if ever there was!

(Incidentally, I kill all my own pigs at home, and agree entirely with your sentiment about killing them in a stress free environment. Home slaughter is no hassle at all, no red tape or inspections, provided it is all for personal consumption only).
 
(Incidentally, I kill all my own pigs at home, and agree entirely with your sentiment about killing them in a stress free environment. Home slaughter is no hassle at all, no red tape or inspections, provided it is all for personal consumption only).

Do you make your own black pudding?
 
With all due respect, and I may be wrong, and you can correct me if I am, but that photo doesn't look like it was taken in an abattoir, yet you said you use the services of a slaughterman? A licenced slaughterman can only operate in a licenced premises. He can't (legally) come out to your farm and do it there.
Just be careful that you're not putting anyone's job on the line by posting on here.
It's OK for you to kill your own pigs (for home consumption only) but it's not OK to get someone professional in to do it for you on your own farm. A really stupid law, if ever there was!

(Incidentally, I kill all my own pigs at home, and agree entirely with your sentiment about killing them in a stress free environment. Home slaughter is no hassle at all, no red tape or inspections, provided it is all for personal consumption only).

That was my understanding too.
 
Hey, thanks, I'm in Devon... I would have some arranging to do (freezers etc) before I could get stuck into this. I will drop you a message when I'm going to pull the trigger :)
We used Stillman's in Taunton. Very good. Go and ask, with cash and say you'll do your own knife work.
 
We used Stillman's in Taunton. Very good. Go and ask, with cash and say you'll do your own knife work.
Cash plays a big part in any transaction in a cattle market, or Abbotoir, it may not be a large amount, but is known as luck money! Those butchers boys & drovers dont get paid much, there is always a good market for black market steaks, even the butchers understand this. Tip them well, you may be surprised by how few fillet steaks you get if you dont. And tell them, "there's a bit of luck money for you" They'll understand.
 
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