If you are sourcing whole beef animals, the most nutrient dense and most healing part of the animal is in the organs & glands, long known to indigenous peoples as the "medicine".
Please investigate this possibility of providing the valuable, divinely created "nose to tail" nutrition - with deep respect to each animal.
I was forced into retirement last year because I refused to get the shots. Just bought a big stash of silver rounds for an alternative economy that sadly appears to be on the near horizon when the reserve economy craters and freedom lovers refuse CBDC. I’ll soon be purchasing freeze dried beef from your company. Thanks for doing what you’re doing. I can only eat so much Dinty Moore lol.
Hope you expand into high protein breakfast options and avoid hydrogenated vegetable oils.
Well done. You should also have liver, as that is the most nutrient dense, furthermore it is an established market that could use more quality brands.
If you are sourcing whole beef animals, the most nutrient dense and most healing part of the animal is in the organs & glands, long known to indigenous peoples as the "medicine".
Please investigate this possibility of providing the valuable, divinely created "nose to tail" nutrition - with deep respect to each animal.
Thank you my husband will be happy we can get some “real beef”.
Timely and Terrific...Were we not already farmers; would definitely check you out.
Good Luck and God Bless!!!
Great work JD! Best of luck with the new venture.
I sure wish that someone with common sense is a cow farmer whowould do this in the UK!
They would make big money here.
I was forced into retirement last year because I refused to get the shots. Just bought a big stash of silver rounds for an alternative economy that sadly appears to be on the near horizon when the reserve economy craters and freedom lovers refuse CBDC. I’ll soon be purchasing freeze dried beef from your company. Thanks for doing what you’re doing. I can only eat so much Dinty Moore lol.
Sorry. Might be great food, but I just can't afford to pay an average of 50 bucks a pound.
Sounds great. Thank You.