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Where's the Beef, Indeed: A Steak Shortage Hits N.Y.

By CHRISTOPHER FAHERTY, Special to the Sun | August 8, 2007

The country's effort to move away from a dependence on foreign oil and embrace green initiatives appears to be behind a change in one of New York's purest traditions, the menu of the classic steakhouse.

The production of ethanol, which is made from corn, is one major reason classic cuts of prime beef are becoming more and more expensive, an analyst at the cattle market analysis firm Cattle-Fax, Tod Kalous, said.

"It's getting worse," the owner of Ben Benson's Steakhouse, Ben Benson, said. "The problems the ranchers are having are making it more difficult because feed is getting more expensive."

Brooklyn's Peter Luger Steakhouse now serves a rib eye. On some nights at Ben Benson's in Midtown, diners can order buffalo steak. The Old Homestead of the meatpacking district serves one of the city's best Kobe burgers.

The new menu items at some city steakhouses are a result of an increase in the price of top-notch beef and a decrease in its availability.
Corn is the primary feed for cattle that produce USDA-grade prime beef. Corn is also the main ingredient for what many believe is the fuel of the future, ethanol. The production of ethanol has not only increased the demand for corn, it has made harvests more profitable for farmers, who receive the fruits of government subsidies when it is sold to ethanol producers.

Even with the price of prime beef so high, and with Mr. Kalous predicting continued high prices, most steakhouses have yet to pass on the brunt of the drought to the customer.

"The knee-jerk response is to raise prices," Mr. Benson said. "We've tried to vary our meats."

An owner of Peter Luger Steakhouse, Marilyn Spiera, said that along with adding a rib eye to the menu — a move that was first reported on the Web log Grub Street — the restaurant has stopped take-out orders and cut back on late evening reservations.

"We didn't want to change our standards, so what we did was cut down on hours," she said.

Mrs. Spiera said prime steaks have become easier to find in the last two weeks.

Several prime meat purveyors, chefs, and owners of steakhouses interviewed for this article said they believed from their experience with the beef market that the percentage of USDA prime graded meat slaughtered this year dropped to about .5% from about 2% last year.

According to Mr. Kalous that is not the case. The percentage dropped to 2.3% from 2.5% last year, he said.

The reason that the market appears so dry could be an explosion of new steakhouses opened recently, a longtime purveyor of prime meats, John Jobbagy of J.T. Jobbagy Inc., said

Another seller of high-end cuts, Suzanne Strassburger, the fifth-generation owner of Strassburger Meats, said she believes that it is becoming more difficult to find prime beef because the cattle industry is catering to the masses.

"The market is run by the warehouse stores," she said. "Most people outside of New York want lean meat."

For the landmark steakhouses in the city, which have strong relationships with beef purveyors, it won't be difficult to ride out the storm. But smaller restaurant's interested in having prime beef on the menu are having a harder time finding it.

A chef at the Upper East Side Café D'Alsace, Philipe Roussel, said it's extremely difficult to find prime meats, even for a special.

Mr. Roussel will not serve prime beef at his new restaurant, Charolais. Rather, he will dish up steaks from the restaurant's namesake, Charolaise, a breed of cattle from France known for producing great meat.

Other smaller steakhouses are putting lesser cuts of prime beef, such as a hangar steak, on their menus, the director of sales for a prime beef purveyor, Buckhead Beef Northeast, Robert Mark, said.

For some steakhouse owners, the recent spike in prime beef prices is merely a speed bump.

"In the summer time there is always a demand for more meat," an owner of the Old Homestead, Greg Sherry, said.


Reader comments on this article

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There are a number of logic issues with this article not least of which is that it takes one position... [MORE]

Joe G 

Aug 15, 2007 14:50

I know that everyone is talking about the rising prices of corn and there for many other products that rely... [MORE]

Josh 

Aug 11, 2007 10:31

Ethanol has been used for a long time as a fuel for motor vehicles.    When VW discontinued the Bug in... [MORE]

Ken Schmidt 

Aug 10, 2007 00:21

There's an old saying: "Don't (pee) down my back, and tell me it's raining".

Ethanol production creates a high-protein cattle feed... [MORE]

Curt T. 

Aug 9, 2007 08:34

Ethanol producers receive the government subsidies, not the farmers [MORE]

db 

Aug 9, 2007 08:12

Ethanol equals higher corn prices --- Higher corn prices equal lower goverment payments--- USA 's food supply is still the... [MORE]

Ted Koehler 

Aug 9, 2007 07:49

I find this slice, tough to chew considering the US Dept . of Energy lists only 9 E85 stations in... [MORE]

MP 

Aug 9, 2007 07:42

The use of corn in making ethanol should not cause a shortage in cattle feed. Sugar and yeast are added... [MORE]

Earl 

Aug 9, 2007 07:00

There is NOT a shortage of Natural Prime Certified Angus Beef in our feedlot. In fact we have a hard... [MORE]

Bill Boston 

Aug 9, 2007 10:31

Take a quick look at commodity prices and you'll see that the price of corn is down significantly from last... [MORE]

Cornhusker 

Aug 9, 2007 02:02

and the factually starved media feeds the bull to the sheep. . .

[MORE]

hoot1zero 

Oct 20, 2007 19:25

We should not use the food supply for fuel. This concept just puts a bandaid on the problem and then... [MORE]

Jim Doherty 

Aug 9, 2007 00:25

You want energy independence? Start drilling for oil in Alaska and stop using food as fuel. There is tons of... [MORE]

Eric 

Aug 9, 2007 08:43

Why don't this nation drill in the 36,000 square mile National Petroleum Reserve created in 1923 by President Harding? Let... [MORE]

Ben Martin 

Aug 21, 2007 11:09

Anyone with an eight-inch of fore-brain could have predicted that as more corn was being planted for fuel that less... [MORE]

Eric 

Aug 8, 2007 22:19

If only someone could come up with a methane capture device for cattle, then we could mix beans in with... [MORE]

John Bowers 

Aug 8, 2007 22:03

Your article seems to be so strange with its assertion that prime beef is so difficult to find. At the... [MORE]

Gene 

Aug 8, 2007 20:26

You can buy excellent grass fed beef online at www.tallgrassbeef.com. No ethanol concerns because they eat grass, and are grass... [MORE]

jeff 

Aug 8, 2007 20:01

I get tired of reading articles like this where beef marketing folks complain and lay blame upon the growing ethanol... [MORE]

Ken Schmidt 

Aug 8, 2007 19:50

Ethanol can be made from cheaper plant entities than corn. Not as efficiently or as easily perhaps, but it would... [MORE]

Tom 

Aug 8, 2007 19:04

The effect is massisve, yearly dead zones in the Gulf of Mexico for the selfish benefit of American farms that... [MORE]

William Yurt 

Aug 22, 2007 16:17

We have so many other resources to produce so many other clean fuels but they are hardly ever mentioned. Governement... [MORE]

Josh 

Aug 8, 2007 17:41

Nowhere does it say that ethanol will solve emissions or any other fuel issue. In fact, it costs the environment... [MORE]

US Beef 

Aug 8, 2007 16:33

As you fly across this huge country you see how little of this nation is being utilized. Lots of vacant... [MORE]

Cliff Replogle 

Aug 8, 2007 16:16

Why should the public have low cost steak and the government supplment the corn farmers income so they cqn produce... [MORE]

Ted Kuck 

Aug 8, 2007 15:22

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