A young cow is called a heifer, and a young bull is called a young bull or a yearling bull if it is between the ages of 10 to 18 months of age.
A bullock or young bull. It can also be called a bull calf if it's a pre-weaned calf.
A sheep in its first year is called a lamb. The meat of a juvenile sheep older than one year is called a hogget.
A feeder bull, I guess.
A young "male cow" (which is non-existent, by the way) is called a bullock or a young bull or, if not of weaning age, a bull calf. That is, if the so-called "male cow" is intact. If not, it is called a steer calf if castrated and is still relying on its mother's milk, or simply a steer after weaning or after it reaches around a year of age.
No, Pork is the meat of a pig, veal is the meat of a young cow or bull (beef)
A young cow is called a heifer, and a young bull is called a young bull or a yearling bull if it is between the ages of 10 to 18 months of age.
A bullock or young bull. It can also be called a bull calf if it's a pre-weaned calf.
a young bull is called a bullock
A sheep in its first year is called a lamb. The meat of a juvenile sheep older than one year is called a hogget.
No. First of all, young cows refer to heifers, not bull calves, and heifers do not have "nuts" or testicles. Only bull calves have testicles that are removed if necessary. These testicles collected and eaten are called calf fries, Rocky Mountain Oysters or Prairie Oysters, not veal cutlets. Thus, veal cutlets are cuts of meat from calves, particularly dairy bull calves, that are slaughtered for their meat which is called veal.
A feeder bull, I guess.
A young male bison is called a bull.
A steer is a castrated male that is raised for its meat
Young lamb meat is called "lamb." Older lamb or sheep meat is called "mutton."
because there is a pic of a bull on it
A young male bison is called a bull.