
By Alexa Cook of RNZ
As red meat prices soar, people are looking to their local butcher to get more bang for their buck, buying less or heading out hunting.
Cheaper cuts like mince and sausages can now cost more than $20 a kilogram in the supermarket, with the price of beef steak rising nearly 25% in a year.
One Havelock North butchery owner says he鈥檚 seeing a lot more new faces through the door, as people turn back to the local butchers and old-school thrifty recipes to avoid supermarket prices.
Ben Andrews from The Classic Butcher told RNZ the cost of living hadn鈥檛 put people off meat entirely, but it had made people think twice about what they were buying.
鈥淚 think it鈥檚 a case of people buying a bit less, but they鈥檙e buying better quality and getting more bang for their buck, not just going for volume,鈥 he said.
鈥淚f they are getting steak, it鈥檚 maybe once a week as opposed to three times a week.鈥
And he鈥檇 noticed some old-school, thrifty habits making a comeback.
鈥淭hrough the winter we鈥檝e sold a lot of bones for people making their own stocks,鈥 he said.
鈥淐ompared to pre-made stocks at the supermarket, for half the price you can buy the bones and make your own stock 鈥 you get twice as much and it鈥檚 healthier.鈥
He said shanks, gravy beef and shin on the bone were all more affordable, and could be just as tender and tasty if slow-cooked.
If in doubt about what to buy and how to cook it, Andrews urged people to talk to their local butcher.
鈥淲e wear an apron and are covered in blood and stuff, but we want to help people have the best meals they can have,鈥 he said.
鈥楾hey鈥檙e definitely going for cheaper cuts鈥
In the rural town of Waipawa in Central Hawke鈥檚 Bay, butchery owner Annabel Tapley-Smith, too, had seen customers鈥 choices changing over the past six months.
鈥淭hey鈥檙e definitely going for those cheaper cuts, the mince or casserole steaks, and we鈥檙e getting customers that may have not shopped with us before,鈥 she said.
People were noticing butcheries provided higher quality for comparable prices to what they were finding in supermarkets.
鈥淎nd they鈥檙e coming back because of the quality,鈥 she said.
Annabel Tapley-Smith. Photo / Alexa Cook
The biggest difference, though, had been in sales of the butchery鈥檚 ready-made meals.
鈥淪ingle-income households, the elderly, or people on a really tight budget are actually buying those ready meals because you can get a good serving with all the vegetables in it, for $15.鈥
Production out of their kitchen this winter had tripled, she said.
But it wasn鈥檛 all smooth sailing; the small business had to let one staff member go and were tightening up on spending wherever they could.
鈥淎 couple of our butchers finish early or they may start a bit later ... everyone is dropping an hour or picking up an hour here 鈥 we鈥檙e having to be really mindful of how we are operating,鈥 she said.
Tapley-Smith said they were in a unique position as the butchery鈥檚 meat was supplied by her and her husband鈥檚 farm, Patangata Station, so the higher meat prices were actually beneficial for that side of their business.
Waipawa Butchery's ready made meals. Photo / Alexa Cook
Cost of living is 鈥榦ut the gate鈥
Hawke鈥檚 Bay homekill butcher Aaron Pohatu has 20 years鈥 experience in the industry, and six years ago he opened up his own homekill meat processing business from his backyard in Clive.
Demand for his skills had skyrocketed recently.
鈥淚t鈥檚 grown massively, I鈥檓 definitely busier than ever,鈥 he told RNZ.
鈥淐ost of living is out the gate. Meat is the most expensive I鈥檝e ever seen it. The price of meat in supermarket ... everyone now knows this is just horrendous.鈥
He said with people feeling the pinch of the economy, they were more inclined to go hunting, eat the meat they could shoot and bring it to him for processing.
The abundance of deer in the nearby Ruahine, Kaweka Ranges and neighbouring farmland was also keeping him busy.
Aaron Pohatu. Photo / Alexa Cook
He said for those who could get their hands on wild or farmed meat it鈥檚 a much cheaper option.
It costs about $30 to $40 for him to bone out a deer, around $8 a kg to make sausages and $5 a kg for mince.
He was also a keen hunter himself, and said in tough times like this, giving away meat to those who needed it was a good feeling.
鈥淔amily and friends around me, they all get it, but there鈥檚 also people I know who are struggling and I鈥檒l go, 鈥楬ere, have this鈥.
鈥淚t always comes back in some other form, I give it away and then next thing someone is dropping off something they have and I don鈥檛 鈥 like crayfish and fish,鈥 he said.
Aaron Pohatu making sausages. Photo / Alexa Cook
it was all about talking to locals.
鈥淭here are people on farms that are shooting deer, let them know that you鈥檙e really keen to get your hands on a venison and try some of this stuff,鈥 he said.
鈥榃e have to suck it up鈥 - Mad Butcher
While community butchers were seeing an uptick thanks to high meat prices, it was proving a challenge for large retailer, the Mad Butcher.
Owner Michael Morton explained margins were being squeezed as meat prices were constantly increasing, sometimes by 80 cents to $1 a kilogram a week.
鈥淩ed meat prices are at an all-time high and going up every week, so it鈥檚 hard to keep on top of from a retail point of view,鈥 he said.
鈥淵ou can鈥檛 keep changing your prices on a weekly basis so sometimes we have to suck it up.鈥
It was becoming tougher to offer customers specials, 鈥渂ecause the cost prices are so high you wouldn鈥檛 consider it to be special鈥.
Like other butchers, they were also seeing an increase in people through the door - but people were spending less.
Homekill steak. Photo / Alexa Cook
鈥淭hey鈥檙e buying less red meat than previously, and buying more pork and chicken because it鈥檚 based on price,鈥 he said.
Morton said the red meat increases were being influenced by export markets and land-use changes.
鈥淚t鈥檚 all driven by supply and demand 鈥 a lot of our meat goes overseas, and there鈥檚 been a lot of dairy and forestry conversions so there鈥檚 a lot less stock on the ground and a lot less meat to go around,鈥 he said.
He hoped meat prices would start improving through spring and summer, as farmers sold more animals.
鈥淪ummer is always the best time... more barbeques and more meat eating ... and the stock is more plentiful,鈥 he said.
-RNZ
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