『(242) The Empire of the Steak』のカバーアート

(242) The Empire of the Steak

(242) The Empire of the Steak

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概要

This episode is titled: The Empire of the Steak: Why America is a Carnivore's Paradise

To understand the United States, one must eventually look at its dinner plate. On that plate, usually front and center, sits a portion of animal protein that would stagger the average global citizen. Americans consume over 220 pounds of red meat and poultry per person annually—one of the highest rates in the world.

But this appetite isn't just about hunger, nor is it merely about nutrition. In America, meat is a narrative. It is a story woven into the country's geography, its economy, and its very concept of freedom. The reason Americans eat so much meat is that, for centuries, the ability to do so was the clearest definition of the American Dream.

The story begins before the United States was even a nation. When European settlers arrived in the New World, they came from a continent where meat was a luxury reserved for the aristocracy. The average English or French peasant survived on bread, gruel, and seasonal vegetables. A roasted bird or a side of beef was a rare, festive treat.

In America, however, the script was flipped. The land was teeming with game, and the vast forests provided ample foraging for livestock. Pigs, specifically, became the colonists' best friend. They could be let loose in the woods to fatten themselves on acorns and roots with almost no human labor, then harvested for a winter's worth of protein.

By the mid-19th century, foreign visitors were often shocked by the American diet. They wrote home describing breakfast tables groaning under the weight of steaks, chops, and ham. In America, even the poor ate meat. It was the first tangible proof that this was indeed the "Land of Plenty."

While pork was the early staple, beef became the soul of the nation. This shift occurred in the mid-to-late 1800s, driven by two forces: the myth of the West and the reality of the railroad.

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