Just what it sounds like. Beef eating grass rather than hay or other foods.
It's supplemental protein for beef cows that are on grass diets.
No beef cattle can also be fed, grass, corn, insilage, silage, grain, oats, barley.
None. Cows eat grass, hay, silage and grain, not any sort of animal meat like "beef nut."
Ranches that are defined as companies, like those found in Montana and Alberta, for instance.
No. There are many cattle feeds that are vegetarian besides grass. The most common are corn and soy.
Yes, grass-fed beef can have a slightly different smell compared to conventionally raised beef. Grass-fed beef may have a more earthy or grassy aroma due to the diet of the cattle.
Deers feed on grass
Not always - Halal is the religious dietary law for Islam, which describes how to confer the blessing of Allah upon the meat. Grass fed is a production method unrelated to Halal slaughter rituals. You can purchase any of four combinations of the two: grass fed Halal beef, grass fed but not Halal beef, Halal but not grass fed beef and neither grass fed nor Halal beef.
Only if it is organic grass fed beef. Most of that stuff you get from the feed lots has higher saturated fats and poor Omega3/Omega6 fatty acid ratios.
No, beef does not grow on a plant. Beef comes from the meat of cattle animals like cows, which are raised on farms for human consumption. The cattle are fed a diet of grass, hay, grains, and other feed to help them grow to the appropriate size before being processed into beef.
No.
Depending on the quality of the grass. It may if the quality is good. A new mother cow should have extra feed for the milk in the form of grain.