How Are Plant-Based Trends Shaping the Future of Farming? Pt.3

written by

Jared Frye

posted on

August 20, 2025

Fake Meat, Real Consequences: How Plant-Based Trends Are Shaping the Future of Farming

What plant-based meat means for crops, cattle, and the people who grow your food

Over the last couple of emails, we’ve taken a close look at plant-based meat—what’s in it, where it comes from, and whether it’s really saving the planet like some folks claim.

This week to wrap up, let’s zoom all the way out.

Because beyond the burger, beyond the branding, beyond the sizzle and the soy—this shift toward “alternative proteins” is having a real, measurable impact on farmers.

And it’s not all good.

Some parts of agriculture stand to gain. Others? Not so much.

So today, I want to share what this plant-based push looks like from our side of the fence—as a livestock farm that works directly with the land, the animals, and the folks who eat our food.

Let’s break it down.

🐄 The Livestock Industry: Pressure’s Building, But It’s Not a Landslide (Yet)

Let’s start with the obvious: plant-based meats are trying to take a bite out of the meat industry.

And sure, they’ve made some noise. You’ve seen them in the fast food drive-thru, in the frozen aisle, maybe even on your cousin’s grill at the family cookout.

Big names like Beyond Meat and Impossible Foods got a lot of early attention, and venture capital money has poured into companies making everything from lab-grown chicken to “mycelium bacon.”

But here’s the reality:

  • Meat sales are still strong—especially real meat from small farms.
  • Most Americans still eat meat regularly (more than 85%, according to some studies).
  • And most people who buy plant-based meat aren’t vegetarians—they’re “flexitarians,” looking to cut back but not cut out.

Still, we’re seeing real shifts, especially in:

  • Fast food chains trying to appeal to younger, more environmentally-conscious customers
  • Institutional buyers (like colleges and hospitals) looking to “green” their menus
  • Investor-funded companies pressuring the media and grocery stores to carry more alternatives

This affects conventional producers more than farms like ours—because our customers aren’t just shopping for calories. They’re buying flavor, ethics, and trust. But the pressure’s there. And it’s growing.

🌾 The Crop Side: More Peas, Fewer Cows?

Let’s look at the other side of the food chain—what gets planted in the ground.

To make a plant-based burger, you need crops. Lots of them.

  • Peas (for protein isolate)
  • Soybeans (textured soy protein)
  • Canola (for oil)
  • Mung beans, chickpeas, rice, and wheat gluten, depending on the brand

This shift is starting to reshape what farmers grow, especially in areas like the Northern Plains and Canada, where pulses are becoming big business.

Some would say that’s a good thing. More legumes = more diversity, right?

But let’s not romanticize it:

  • These crops are often grown in the same monoculture, high-input systems as corn and soy.
  • Many still rely on chemical fertilizers, pesticides, and tillage.
  • And the bulk of the processing? It’s happening overseas—particularly in China and India, where cost is lower and environmental oversight is… let’s say, different.

So, while we may be swapping one set of industrial ingredients for another, the underlying system hasn’t changed. It’s just wearing a plant-based label.

🧾 Winners, Losers, and Who’s Left Holding the Hay Bale

Here’s a quick look at who’s benefiting—and who’s being left behind—in the fake meat gold rush:

Winners

Losers

Global food processors & protein isolate manufacturers

Small livestock producers who rely on commodity markets

Investors & start-ups with slick branding

Soil health (if we keep propping up monocultures)

Industrial pulse crop farmers

Rural communities without access to value-added processing

Big food brands adding green options

Consumers thinking they are getting real, whole food

Meanwhile, folks like us—who are working with animals, rotating pastures, stewarding land—we’re out here actually regenerating the environment… and getting squeezed between policy trends and supermarket marketing.

🤔 The Big Picture: Is Fake Meat the Solution, or Just a New Distraction?

Let’s ask the million-dollar question:

Are plant-based meats fixing the food system?

In my view: not really.

They may reduce emissions compared to feedlot beef, but they do nothing to solve the root problems of:

  • Soil degradation
  • Chemical dependency
  • Globalized, fragile supply chains
  • Processed, nutrient-poor food

And they certainly don’t bring back the connection between people and their food.

That’s where regenerative farming shines. We’re not outsourcing. We’re not isolating protein or flavor in a lab. We’re building food systems from the ground up—literally—starting with the soil and working outward to healthy animals and well-fed communities.

🧠 What Can You Do?

Here’s the good news: you don’t need a PhD in food science to make the right call.

You just need to ask questions like:

  • Who grew this food?
  • How was it raised?
  • Can I pronounce the ingredients?
  • Can I picture the farm it came from?

And maybe most importantly…

Can I shake the hand that raised it?

If you can’t, maybe it’s not the kind of food we should be building our future on.

🙏 Thank You for Standing With Real Farms

At C&F Farms, we’re doing this the old way—with a forward-thinking twist. We’re rotating animals, improving soil, treating animals with care, and growing food that feeds people… not investors.

We’re not trying to reinvent meat—we’re trying to restore trust in it.

So thanks for standing with us. Thanks for choosing real food, real farms, and real flavor.

And if someone at the grocery store ever tells you fake meat is going to save the world?

Tell them your farmer said otherwise.

More from the blog

The Secret to Perfect Pork

How to Cook Pork Without Drying It Out (Simple, Foolproof Guide) If you’ve ever said, “I don’t cook pork because it always turns out dry…” You’re not alone. It’s probably the most common thing we hear. And the truth is—you’re not doing anything crazy wrong. You’ve just been taught the wrong way to cook pork. The Real Reason Pork Turns Out Dry For years, pork was cooked to very high internal temperatures. Why? Because older production systems carried a higher risk of foodborne illness, so the advice was simple: Cook it until it’s well done. The problem is—that advice stuck around long after the industry changed. And what it created was a generation of overcooked, dry, flavorless pork. The First Rule: Stop Overcooking It Here’s the key: 👉 Pork is perfectly safe at 145°F (with a short rest) That means: Slight blush of pink? Totally fine Juices still in the meat? That’s what you want When you cook pork to 160°F+ like many people still do, you’re squeezing all the moisture right out of it. Use a Meat Thermometer (Seriously) If there’s one tool that will instantly improve your cooking, it’s this. No guessing. No cutting into the meat. No “I think it’s done.” Cook to temperature, not time. Pork chops / loin: Pull at 140–145°F, rest to finish Tenderloin: Same range Ground pork: 160°F (this one’s different) This alone will fix most dry pork problems. Don’t Skip the Rest This is where a lot of people lose it at the finish line. When pork comes off the heat, the juices are still moving. If you cut into it right away, all that moisture runs out onto the plate. Let it rest: 5 minutes for chops 10–15 minutes for larger cuts That’s how you keep it juicy. Choose the Right Cooking Method Not all cuts should be cooked the same way. Quick Cook (Hot & Fast) Best for: Pork chops Tenderloin Method: High heat Short cook time Don’t overdo it Low & Slow Best for: Shoulder (Boston butt) Picnic roast Method: Low temperature Long cook time Breaks down connective tissue → tender, pull-apart meat Fat Is Your Friend One of the biggest mistakes people make is trimming too much fat or avoiding it altogether. That fat: Adds flavor Helps retain moisture Protects the meat during cooking Especially with pasture-raised pork, that fat is where a lot of the flavor lives. Simple Cooking Method That Works Every Time (Pork Chops) If you want a go-to method, here it is: Pat chops dry and season generously with salt and pepper Heat a cast iron skillet until hot Sear 2–3 minutes per side Add butter, garlic, and herbs Baste for another minute or two Pull at 140–145°F Rest 5 minutes That’s it. Juicy, flavorful pork—every time. One More Thing: Quality Matters If you’ve only ever had grocery store pork, you might already be at a disadvantage. Pasture-raised pork: Has better fat distribution Holds moisture better Has more flavor to begin with Which means when you cook it properly… it really shines. The Bottom Line Dry pork isn’t a pork problem. It’s a cooking problem—and an easy one to fix. Cook to the right temperature. Let it rest. Use the right method for the cut. Do that, and pork goes from “risky dinner choice” to something you actually look forward to cooking. Ready to Try It the Right Way? If it’s been a while since pork made it into your weekly rotation, now’s a good time to give it another shot. You might be surprised how good it actually is.

The Truth About Pork: Why Pasture-Raised Changes Everything

The Truth About Pork: Why Pasture-Raised Changes Everything If we’re being honest… pork doesn’t always get a fair shake. Beef and chicken tend to be the “safe bets.” They’ve built a reputation around strength, health, and clean eating. Meanwhile, pork often gets lumped in with overly processed products and questionable sourcing—and over time, that’s given it a reputation it doesn’t really deserve. Because the truth is, real pork—raised the right way—is one of the most nutrient-dense, flavorful, and versatile meats you can put on your table. The difference comes down to one thing: How it’s raised. Not All Pork Is Created Equal Most of the pork people are familiar with comes from confinement operations. Pigs raised indoors, on concrete, with limited movement and a uniform diet designed for efficiency—not nutrition. That system produces pork that’s: Lower in nutrient density Higher in omega-6 fats Lighter in color and milder in flavor And over time, that’s shaped how people think about pork. But that’s not how pork was meant to be raised. How We Raise Pork (And Why It Matters) On our farm, pigs live outside—on pasture and in woodlots—where they can do what pigs are meant to do. They root. They forage. They move. Their diet includes: Grasses and roots Acorns and natural forage Bugs and insects A balanced, non-GMO grain ration That lifestyle changes everything about the meat. Not just in how it tastes—but in how it nourishes your body. The Nutritional Difference Pasture-raised pork isn’t just different in philosophy—it’s different on a nutritional level. You’ll find: Higher omega-3 fatty acids (the same beneficial fats found in fish) More vitamin D from natural sunlight exposure A better omega-6 to omega-3 balance, supporting heart and brain health Higher levels of key nutrients like B vitamins, zinc, and selenium And when it comes to lean cuts like pork loin or tenderloin, you’re getting protein levels comparable to chicken—just with more flavor and satisfaction. Let’s Clear Up the “Pork Isn’t Healthy” Myth Pork didn’t earn its reputation overnight. It came from years of eating pork that was: Raised in confinement Fed a limited, grain-heavy diet Processed and preserved in ways that stripped away quality But when you step back and look at pork raised on pasture, it’s a completely different food. Clean protein. Balanced fats. Rich in nutrients your body actually needs. The problem was never pork. It was how pork was being raised. A Return to the Way It Used to Be Not that long ago, pork was a staple in nearly every household. Families relied on it for: Flavor Versatility Long-term nourishment Lard was a trusted cooking fat. Bones were used for broth. Nothing went to waste. That wasn’t a trend—it was common sense. And now, more people are starting to come back to that way of eating. Why Pork Deserves a Place on Your Table If you’re looking for a protein that works for everyday meals, pork is hard to beat. It’s: Versatile (chops, roasts, sausage, ground) Flavorful without needing much added Nutrient-dense and satisfying Often a more practical option for feeding a family A few simple ideas: Cast iron pork chops with butter and herbs Slow-cooked pulled pork Breakfast sausage made from real ingredients Cooking with lard instead of highly processed seed oils It’s the kind of food that fits real life. Taking It a Step Further: Nose-to-Tail Eating On our farm, we believe in using the whole animal. Not just because it’s efficient—but because it’s the right thing to do. That includes: Bones for broth Organs like liver and heart Fat rendered into lard These parts are some of the most nutrient-dense foods available: Liver – rich in vitamin A, B12, and iron Heart – contains CoQ10 for energy and heart health Bones & marrow – packed with collagen and minerals This is how people used to eat—not out of necessity alone, but because it made sense. The Bottom Line Pork shouldn’t be the “forgotten meat.” When raised the right way, it’s: Clean Nutritious Flavorful And deeply connected to the land it comes from Our pigs play a role in improving our soil, rotating through pasture, and helping us leave things better than we found them. And the result is pork you can feel good about feeding your family. Ready to Try It for Yourself? If it’s been a while since pork made it into your weekly rotation… this might be the time to bring it back. You might just find it earns a permanent place at your table.