Adelaida Springs Ranch
Paso Robles
★4.6(159)Grass-fed Angus operation in Paso Robles wine country.
2 local suppliers selling bulk beef in the Paso Robles area — including 1 grass-fed, 1 grain-finished options.
Half a cow in Paso Robles, California costs $3,000-4,500 ($12.00-16.00/lb per pound take-home). There are 2 local suppliers to compare. Best time to buy: May-July.
The 'green season' harvest (May-July) produces peak quality grass-fed beef - cattle are at maximum marbling after grazing high-sugar spring grasses. Fall (September-November) faces severe processing bottlenecks from hunting season. Book shares in January-March for summer delivery.
Paso Robles
★4.6(159)Grass-fed Angus operation in Paso Robles wine country.
Paso Robles
Family-run Angus Cross beef ranch on 4,500 acres in California's Central Coast. Offers both grain-finished and grass-finished whole, half, and quarter beef with on-site processing through their own butcher shop, Ranchita Meat Company.
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Don't wait until fall - the processing bottleneck is brutal. Pre-order in early spring for a May-July harvest when grass-fed quality peaks. If you're in LA, join a 'buying club' that aggregates orders for delivery from Central Coast ranches to reduce food miles.
California is expensive - expect $3,000-4,500 for a half cow. Premium grass-fed from Marin/Sonoma runs $8-10/lb hanging weight (360 lbs = $2,880-3,600). Add $225 slaughter and $1.25/lb processing ($450). Your effective take-home cost is $12-16/lb - steep for ground beef but competitive with $35+ ribeyes at specialty markets.
Three factors: (1) Extreme land values near urban centers (Marin competes with vineyards and estates), (2) chronic drought cycles force expensive hay imports ($250+/ton), and (3) severe processor shortages allow facilities to charge premium rates. The 'California premium' is 15-30% above national averages.
The green season (May-July) is optimal. California grasses peak in spring - by summer they dry to golden stalks. Cattle harvested in early summer have maximum marbling from high-sugar forage. Avoid October-December when processors are backed up with hunting season and 4-H animals. Pre-order in January-March.
Custom Exempt means you buy the live animal (or share) before slaughter. The processor then butchers YOUR animal as a service, not a sale. Meat is stamped 'NOT FOR SALE' - only for your household. It's completely safe and standard for bulk beef. This pathway allows use of smaller local butchers instead of overcrowded USDA facilities.