12 Tips & Recipes for Eating Eco-Friendly Meat

Vegans and vegetarians are not only typically healthier than those who eat meat, they’re also eating food that consumes fewer resources. Eating less meat is a great eco-friendly step you can take in your life to help the planet. Still, everyone from foodies to flexitarians enjoy meat from time to time, and there are plenty of ways to enjoy recipes with meat while still being considerate of the planet. Here are some helpful tips and options complete with recipes.

1. Go grassfed.

(Image via chewingthecud)

Grass is the cow’s natural diet, and it makes for healthier animals and tastier meat. Grassfed standards also require sustainable practices as part of the equation, so always choose grassfed beef to avoid the factory-farmed Meatrix.

Recipe: steak salad.

2. Look for a meat CSA.

(Image via chewingthecud)

Support local community farmers and ranchers, and reduce your carbon impact, by buying from a meat CSA whenever possible.

Recipe: pork chops and easy mashed potatoes.

3. Go for oysters.

(Image via Chincoteague)

Farmed oysters are a great choice. Not only are they healthy, but they’re good for the planet. Oysters will not grow if the water is not clean or if conditions are unsustainable, so unlike many fish farming practices, oyster farming is inherently eco-friendly. They are also filter feeders, meaning they don’t require additional food resources. And they clean the water.

Recipe: creamy winter oyster bisque. (note: for recipes, use local or organic ingredients whenever possible).

4. Pick the best shrimp.

(Image via Spicelines)

You might think wild is best, and you’d be right – American wild shrimp is the most eco-friendly option for this shellfish. Farmed may contain contaminants, and other wild shrimp may be harvested by companies that do not use nets that are environmentally friendly or safe for other animals like sea turtles.

Recipe: easy, spicy grilled shrimp.

5. Enjoy sardines.

(Image via Algarve)

They’re tasty, full of heart-healthy fats, and they’re low on the food chain so they have minimal impact on the environment. They can be an acquired taste for some, but they go well on everything from pasta to toasted wheat bread to omelets. And sardines are sustainable.

Recipe: cucumber, egg and sardine sandwich.

6. Eat smart sushi.

(Image via serious eats)

Know which sushi is likely to be full of mercury (bad for you) or from a threatened fishery (bad for the planet). There are choices that are sustainable, like albacore tuna, but you should skip the toro.

Recipe: tuna maki with brown rice.

7. Reduce portions.

(Image via camperogrilled)

This is a very simple way to trim the fat off your own waistline while helping the planet. In most cultures and throughout most of human history, meat consumption has been a minimal part of the diet. The factory farming method required to produce the amount of meat we like to eat is not sustainable or healthy. Americans in particular eat far more animal protein than they need. Try reducing your portions down to 2-4 ounces per serving. Eat meat as an accent to vegetables and salads rather than as the major part of the meal.

Recipe: spinach salad with grilled chicken, mushrooms and balsamic vinegar.

8. Choose the best fish.

(Image via naturemoms)

The Monterey Bay Aquarium and the Blue Ocean Institute have excellent guides to help you determine which fish is healthiest and most sustainable. Avoid things like farmed salmon, Chilean sea bass and mahi mahi.

Recipe: wild Alaskan salmon with lemon and dill.

9. Know which chicken is best.

(Image via northrup)

Many chickens are raised in deplorable, crowded conditions, subjected to painful debeaking and tiny crates that are filthy. They’re fed a diet high in hormones and antibiotics just to make it to your table, and as a result they tend to be very high in saturated fat – almost as much as beef. And conventional chicken farming is bad for people in more ways than one. Choose only free range, organic chicken.

Recipe: homemade chicken noodle soup with vegetables.

10. Enjoy exotics.

(Image via leafhouse)

Try emu, ostrich, bison, elk, wild boar and other less popular meats that may be caught and slaughtered in more sustainable ways.

Recipe: wild boar Korean meatballs.

11. Avoid the drive-through. And Britney.

(Image via People)

Fast food supports rainforest deforestation, pollution and inhumane animal conditions. Most meat at the drive-through is heavily processed, factory-produced fare. Go for a green restaurant instead – there are many across the United States.

Recipe: how to make fried chicken at home with healthy baked sweet potato fries.

12. Smart meat-eating tips.

(Image via channel4)

Use every part of the animal – eat the organs, make stock from the bones, do what our grandparents did and don’t waste anything. Buy organic or local.

Recipe: how to make your own chicken broth.

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  • Tom
    November 6th, 2008 at 8:57 am

    Nearly 7 billion people in the world.. you really think it’s sustainable to eat wildlife? (fish included)

  • Matt
    January 4th, 2009 at 7:51 am

    Sustainable meat huh? Well, I guess it’s possible as long as you don’t mind the ethical implications of needlessly killing animals. Next we’ll have sustainable slavery and eco-friendly child prostitution. Why not when ethics is left off the table? All that matters is that it is cheap and sustainable, right?

  • Elaine Vigneault
    January 4th, 2009 at 7:29 pm

    I don’t agree that there is such a thing as sustainable meat. The human population is growing too big, too fast. And as long as you promote the concept that there is such a thing as sustainable meat, people who can’t afford that kind of meat will still eat the other kind. It simply won’t work.

    For more on that, check out Humane Myth’s FAQ:
    http://www.humanemyth.org/faq/1127.htm

  • Estelendur
    March 15th, 2009 at 6:09 pm

    Animals (including humans) can only make use of about 10% of the energy inherent in the food they eat, so to feed ten pounds of human requires a hundred pounds of cow requires a thousand pounds of grass…

    However, there are ways of raising animals that are less harmful than others, and as long as there are people who want to continue to be omnivores, in general I think it’s better that they choose animals that have been raised less harmfully.

  • Netferret
    July 3rd, 2009 at 5:58 pm

    The problem is not the amount of meat available, but how the human race is expanding and living longer.

    The outcome is clear is my mind, but many others don’t see the bigger picture.

    Good luck all, next 4 years are going to get a lot worst :\

  • Jake
    July 8th, 2009 at 1:20 pm

    Don’t forget Maine lobster.

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