3-Meat Loaf Layered with Bacon and Served with Homemade Ketchup!

This has to be one of my favorite dishes yet. I only cook from 2 cook books; Sally Fallon’s Nourishing Traditions and Deborah Krasner’s Good Meat. Between these two cookbooks I’ve have access to over 500 delicious recipes and I haven’t made one yet that wasn’t yummy. But this one was over the top.

I can’t emphasize this enough, the tremendous flavors I achieve in these recipes are largely due to the quality and type of meat that is being used. I buy everything from my local farmer where cows are eating a salad bar everyday and pigs are doing what pigs are supposed to and lambs are happy grazing in the pasture. Truly this shouldn’t be something I have to educate people on, it should be the normal farming practice. That being said, industrial farmers spend billions of dollars on clever marketing to portray their model as the farms we grew up with.

I just found out today that Iowa has officially banned feedlots or industrial farms. Nothing could thrill me more. While we are looking for alternative fuel we should turn our focus on one of the biggest contributing factors to our current environmental issues and should be focusing on eliminating food models that facilitate the break down and destruction of our environment and our health. Feedlot/CAFO/industrial farming models should be eliminated. But why are they still here and why are they getting more government support than the small farmer? Because it is cheaper to raise, feed, and produce animals in this model. The farmers or corporations behind these farms get to keep more money in their pocket. Additionally, Americans demand cheap food. We can’t fathom paying $5 for a dozen eggs made by really happy and healthy chickens or milk and dairy from healthy, happy cows as well as happy farmers who are committed to the animals health, but more importantly our health. We are what we eat and feedlot animals are sick and toxic. Becoming a vegetarian isn’t the answer, especially when most ruminants have a special stomach containing as much as four compartments to break down and digest those foods and passing them onto us in a digestible form. What vegetarians and vegans don’t understand is that you while you can wash chemicals and pesticides off of the skin of fruits and vegetables, you can’t wash it out of the cells or membranes of the fruits and vegetables because they get into the soil and ultimately into the cells of the plants. Fruits and vegetables don’t have a liver to eliminate toxins while animals do. The answer is to change the conventional farming model and get back to traditional farming methods. Oh, but I digress…

All ingredients in bowl ready to mix before forming into pate or loaf

This recipe from Good Meat was super simple to make, but requires some planning in advance to make sure you purchase all three ground meats from your farmer. All you need is 1 pound of ground beef, 1 pound of ground lamb, 1 pound of ground pork, a carrot, an onion, fresh flat-leaf parsley, some oats, raw whole milk, eggs, Parmigiano-Reggiano and bacon. There are many cheeses at Whole Foods that aren’t pasteurized and fresh Parmigiano-Reggiano is one of them and worth the price.

After you finely chop up the onion, carrot, and parsley, you throw everything into a bowl and mix it by hand making sure not to over mix it. You have the option of making this into a pate by putting in a loaf pan or a meat loaf by placing it in a cast-iron frying pan and forming into a oval and patting down, then layering uncooked bacon strips on the top of the loaf or pate. Place in oven at 300 to 350 for an hour. I prefer slow cooking over lower heat for longer periods cook. Relish in the aroma as all the juices and flavors meld into a fantastic epicurean delight!

WAIT! After removing the finished meat loaf from the oven, let it stand for ten to fifteen minutes before cutting and serving. Americans are the only people in the world who are hell bent on eating hot food. No other country in the world eats their food without letting it cool down. You can’t taste your food when it is hot, now there is a novel idea. Additionally, you burn your tongue, mouth, and end up swallowing it in chunks because you can’t chew and you mess up your digestive juices.  So chill out, drink some wine and don’t scream at the chef because your food is warm rather than scorching hot.

***Again the bacon is from farm raised, happy pigs so the quality shows up in the flavor of the bacon.

I also made homemade ketchup because I couldn’t find any ketchup that didn’t have sugar, soy, and a other unnecessary additives and fillers. Sally Fallon has a very simple and delicious ketchup recipe in Nourishing Traditions that is fermented in the traditional way and acts as a digestive aid rather than a burden. It is hard to believe that you can make ketchup from simple, real ingredients without manipulating and replacing with synthetic food flavors and additives.

Ketchup
3 cups of organic canned tomato paste
1/4 cup of whey
1 tablespoon sea salt
1/2 cup of maple syrup
1/4 teaspoon cayenne pepper
3 cloves of garlic
1/2 cup of homemade fish sauce or commercial fish sauce

Just mix everything together and transfer into a quart-sized wide mouth mason jar. Leave at room temperature for about 2 days before transferring to refrigerator. It’s easy and it’s healthy. You can make your own mustard,  BBQ sauce,  Teriyaki sauce, dressings, horseradish, pesto, chutney, salsa and so much more without all the crap in it and in a form that is very digestible.

Ketchup provides us with an excellent example of a condiment that was formerly fermented and therefore health promoting, but whose benefits were lost with large scale canning methods and a reliance on sugar rather than lactic acid as a preservative.

The  word “ketchup” derives from the Chinese Amoy dialect ke-tsiap or pickled fish-brine or sauce, the universal condiment of the ancient world. The English added foods like mushrooms, walnuts, cucumbers and oysters to this fermented brew; Americans added tomatoes from Mexico to make tomato ketchup.

Writing in 1730, Dean Swift mentions ketchup as one of several fermented foods favored by the English. ‘And for our home-bred British cheer, Botargo (fish roe relish), catsup and cabiar (caviar).’

Americans consume one-half billion bottles of ketchup per year. The chief ingredient of the modern version, after tomatoes, is high fructose corn syrup. A return to ancient preservation methods would transform America’s favorite condiment from a health liability (produced in huge factories) to a beneficial digestive aid (produced as an artisanal product in farming communities.) Sally Fallon Nourishing Traditions

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2 Responses to “3-Meat Loaf Layered with Bacon and Served with Homemade Ketchup!”
  1. Kelly Quinn says:

    Now that’s a Meatloaf!! Looks amazing!

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