| And Piedmontese beef is also rich in conjugated linolenic acid (CLA), a heart-healthy fatty acid that preliminary studies suggest may burn belly fat and reduce your risk of cancers of the colon, lung, and prostate.
But how does the steak taste? Grilled medium-rare, our Piedmontese porterhouse was excellent, not dry as one might expect from a leaner cut. You won't give up much for this heart-healthy miracle meat, except for some green: Piedmontese cattle graze twice as long as traditional steers do before reaching slaughter weight, and they are hormone- and antibiotic-free, so the meat costs double what you'd pay for regular beef at the supermarket. A Piedmontese porterhouse will set you back $27 a pound. But that's a lot cheaper than, say, angioplasty. To order, visit fairwaypacking.com.

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