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COLUMNISTS
TODAY'S STORIES
26.11.2008
Thanksgiving Do-As-I Say Edition

 

I was reading Ezra Klein's blog, and came across an item railing against the concumption of meat in general and turkeys in particular: 

Imagine an America in which consumption of meat required viewing a quick video of the animal's slaughter. That's a world in which PETA is funded like the AARP. It's not that people don't intellectually understand that meat comes from dead animals, but if they had to face the fact, industrial farming operations would probably die off in a day. We have sufficient abundance that a fair number of folks would happily substitute other food sources than be confronted with the reality of a chicken breast. But we don't live in that world. So every year we happily watch the president pardon a turkey. That Palin pardoned a turkey while its cousins were slaughtered in the killing cones behind her is the single most honest thing she's done since arriving on the national stage.

Then I scrolled down and read the very next item. It's a primer on how to cook turkey!

Brining is certainly a player here, as are rubs, smaller turkeys, and aromatics. But we need to be bolder.

As Mark Bittman says, part of the problem with Thanksgiving turkey is that we insist on cooking it whole. This is a big bird. By the time the thickest, most protected meat is cooked through, Much of the rest has the pleasing texture of dirt cake. It's true that a series of labor and time intensive techniques (like brining) can mildly counteract that, but you can only take it so far.

Bittman argues for a different approach. We have a technique for transforming tough, dry cuts of meat into meltingly tender meals. It's called braising. But most of us can't see our way to braising a whole turkey. So don't. Cut the thing up. Then cook it with sausage and vegetables at a low temperature in a steaming broth.

Let me reiterate: these items were right next to each other. What am I missing here?

Update: Ezra Klein, who takes this very seriously, writes:

"I buy humanely raised meat, arguing that brutality is essentially an economic externality that's not priced into food, and advocate frequently and publicly that others do the same (or, at the least, that we cease subsidizing CAFOs). I have not advocated that people become vegetarians, nor argued that killing animals is wrong."

--Jonathan Chait

Posted: Wednesday, November 26, 2008 3:14 PM with 13 comment(s)

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thejauntyboulevardier said:

Pretty boy Klein sounds like a barrel of holiday laughs. I will dedicate a post turkey belch to his hectoring good intentions tomorrow night..

November 26, 2008 3:30 PM

ratnerstar said:

You lost me at "I was reading Ezra Klein's blog."

November 26, 2008 3:41 PM

timteeter said:

Didn't Ezra Klein see No Country for Old Men?  This whole slaughter thing has gotten a lot more, um, quick.  We just need to transfer this advanced technology to the poultry industry.

November 26, 2008 3:55 PM

janus said:

I think I'm against the concumption of meat, too, just because it sounds fairly vulgar.

November 26, 2008 4:05 PM

phatkarp said:

I guess I'm having an "I must be a redneck moment" here.  Actually, this moment began when I viewed the Sarah Palin turkey slaughter video.  I was all excited to be grossed out but was vastly disappointed.  I consider myself a bit of a delicate flower, but I've cleaned fish and pheasants.  I think the reaction of most people to the actual slaughter and preparing of meat is that it is a messy pain in the ass.  Like cleaning the toilet.  But we still clean the bathroom, don't we?  

November 26, 2008 4:09 PM

Lityerses said:

Lisa:     I can't eat this.  I can't eat a poor little lamb.  [Pushes her plate away.]

Homer:      Lisa, get a hold of yourself.  This is lamb, not "a lamb."

Lisa:       What's the difference between this lamb and the one that kissed me?

Bart:      This one spent two hours in the broiler.  [Takes a big chomp.]

November 26, 2008 4:35 PM

asistos said:

I didn't read Klein's blog as railing against the consumption of meat, but rather a comment that most meat eaters are shielded from the moral implications of their dietary choices.  There are plenty of people that hunt, kill, and clean their own meals, after all, and I doubt they would care that much about watching videos.  Other than the nuisance value, of course.

November 26, 2008 5:01 PM

warfang said:

I would absolutely continue to eat meats even if they set me up Clockwork Orange style and made me watch hour after hour of animal killings. Meat is delicious. Also, man didn't spend all these years getting to the top of the food chain just to decide it wasn't worth it and that we should just become slightly more intelligent cows and be content with grazing.

November 26, 2008 5:15 PM

boneill said:

Damn right, warfang- I would eat a steak even if- fuck, especially if- the cow's mother and the College of Cardinals begged me not to.  

November 26, 2008 5:53 PM

ironyroad said:

What's with the weird Catholic sidewipe?  It's much more likely to be your local Buddhist or Hindu priests' convention that comes out preaching the cosmic equality of us and beef than the "College of Cardinals"!

Or Episcopalians.

November 26, 2008 6:16 PM

Making Light said:

I hope that if I'm ever tempted to take Jonathan Chait seriously about anything, someone will remind me of this....

November 26, 2008 6:48 PM

timteeter said:

Speaking as an Episcopalian, ironyroad, I take mine rare--but preferably without hormones.

November 26, 2008 11:14 PM

ironyroad said:

Ah -- I'm chastened, timteeter.  The rare hormoneless Episcopalian Thanksgiving turkey indeed also has its place.  I shouldn't hand on sideswipes.  But bone hasn't come back yet.

November 27, 2008 2:34 AM