The Omnivore's Green Grill
RELATED
by Vincent Standley
by Amy Topel
by Joanna Howard
about DAVID WORTMAN
More By DAVID WORTMAN
|
As the days grow longer and warmer, grillers across the country will be sizzling and flipping their way through millions of burgers, chicken pieces and fish fillets. Americans eat, on average, 67 pounds of beef and 59.2 pounds of chicken per person, per year, most of it from "concentrated animal feeding operations" (CAFOs). This year, the American Public Health Association has asked that state governments impose moratoriums on new CAFOs due to the pollution and health threats posed by factory farms. Our seafood consumption, which hovered at around 15 pounds per capita until 2000, is expected to rise 26 percent by 2020provided that fisheries aren't depleted by overfishing.
Fortunately for the green griller, the market for organic meat, poultry and fish grew by 55.4 percent in 2004-5, and local, humane, wild and grassfed options are expanding too. Whatever you like to eat, here are some more sustainable choices you can make when shopping for your next barbecue.
Better Beef
While the hamburger remains an icon of American grilling, a third U.S. case of bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE), or "mad cow" disease, was discovered this March. Kansas-based Creekstone Farms has proposed to test every slaughtered cow for BSE, as is done in Japan (the U.S. and Canada test only one percent). When the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) refused permission, due to resistance from larger beef producers, Creekstone filed suit. "Why not let us do what customers are demanding?" asks Kevin Pentz, senior vice president of operations at Creekstone, which uses only vegetarian feed and sells an antiobiotic- and hormone-free line.
Green Guide 115 | July/August 2006 | For Cooks
The Green Guide To Go
FREE Weekly E-Newsletter

Special Advertising Sections
![]() |
PHOTO CONTEST |
![]() |
INTERACTIVE MAP |


