Nutrient claims, only when proven
We care about the nutritional quality of pasture-raised food — and we will make a nutrition claim only when third-party testing backs it.
Nutrient density and honest consumer education are part of why we do this. But the bar for a nutrition claim is high, and the same proof-first rule that governs our soil data governs our food — if we cannot show it, we will not say it.
We do not use words like "superfood," and we do not claim our food prevents, treats, or cures anything. Any comparative nutrition claim — that our beef is richer in this or higher in that — would need ranch-commissioned, third-party lab testing behind it. We have not run that testing yet, so we do not make those claims. When we do, the method and the results will go in the Farmer's Almanac, the same place the rest of our measurements live.
Until that evidence exists, we sell what we can stand behind: how the animals were raised, what they ate, where they grazed, and who processed the meat. Those are facts, and we let them speak for themselves.