Will Homer, COO of Painted Hills Natural Beef - After hours Encore
This podcast delves into the intricacies of barbecue culture, with a particular emphasis on the significance of quality ingredients, specifically celebrating the merits of Painted Hills Natural Beef. Our conversation revolves around recent culinary endeavors, notably the preparations made for Memorial Day, where we share our personal experiences and techniques in barbecuing various meats. Additionally, we explore the implications of importing beef, addressing the inconsistencies in quality that often accompany such practices, and the importance of maintaining high standards in our culinary choices. The discourse extends to the broader context of food economics, particularly in relation to rising costs and consumer behavior, underscoring the essential nature of food as a pivotal aspect of our existence. Ultimately, we reaffirm our commitment to the art of barbecue while advocating for informed and discerning choices in our culinary pursuits.
Links referenced in this episode:
Companies mentioned in this episode:
- Painted Hills Natural Beef
Mentioned in this episode:
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This podcast uses the following third-party services for analysis:
OP3 - https://op3.dev/privacy
Transcript
Welcome to Barbecue Nation with JT's After Hours conversation that took place after the broadcast ended.
Speaker A:Hey, everybody, it's jt.
Speaker A:And this is a special version of Barbecue Nation.
Speaker A:It is brought to you in part by Painted Hills Natural Beef.
Speaker A:Beef you can be proud to serve your family and friends.
Speaker A:That's Painted Hills Natural Beef.
Speaker A:Welcome back to Barbecue Nation.
Speaker A:I'm JT with Ms.
Speaker A:Leanne and Mr.
Speaker A:Homer from the Turn It Don't Burn it studios.
Speaker A:We've got a lot of holidays, a lot of barbecuing coming up.
Speaker A:For most people, we, Dan and I do it all year round.
Speaker A:You do it all year round, but that's coming up.
Speaker A:It's.
Speaker A:It's here.
Speaker A:I mean, it's just here.
Speaker A:We just knocked out Memorial Day weekend.
Speaker A:What'd you.
Speaker A:What'd you cook for Memorial Day?
Speaker B:Well, we hid out.
Speaker B:Memorial Day is a weird thing around here.
Speaker B:We have lots of people come to our country because they like us.
Speaker B:And we have a biker rally comes out here, traffic picks up, it gets crazy.
Speaker B:We typically just kind of hide out.
Speaker B:Of course, a lot of times it's raining here in the Northwest, but we hide out.
Speaker B:I cook some burgers and I cook some pork ribs on Friday with that pig powder that it was China.
Speaker B:Came out just right.
Speaker B:Did I do anything in between?
Speaker B:We did a chuck roast, actually, in the ninja of all crazy things.
Speaker A:Yeah.
Speaker B:Which is real anti Memorial Weekend smoke.
Speaker B:But anyhow, it came out perfect, so that's what we felt up to.
Speaker A:And Ms.
Speaker A:Leanne, what did you knock.
Speaker C:Out on the grill to celebrate National Hamburger Day on Sunday?
Speaker C:So that was a given, aside from, you know, being at the food truck this weekend?
Speaker C:Did a reverse sear skirt steak.
Speaker A:Oh, cool.
Speaker C:Delicious.
Speaker A:Oh, delicious.
Speaker C:I love skirt steak.
Speaker C:That's another one of those meats that really didn't cost a whole lot back in the day and now gone up.
Speaker C:Still reasonable, but, yeah, delicious.
Speaker C:That's what I did.
Speaker C:How about you, Jeff?
Speaker C:What did you cook?
Speaker A:I did.
Speaker A:What the hell did I do?
Speaker B:Well, first.
Speaker A:First I figured out that I ran out of pellets, so I had to get some pellets for the pellet grill.
Speaker A:And then I thought I would be real smarty pants, and I cleaned my gas grill and now it doesn't work.
Speaker C:That happens more than you think.
Speaker A:Oh, yeah.
Speaker A:Oh, yeah.
Speaker A:I got the pressure washer on that thing.
Speaker A:It looks shiny, but it's not working.
Speaker A:Anyway, did some steaks, did a couple Painted Hills ribeyes, did some chicken wings, made some candied bacon because I had some leftover from the TV show the other day, so we'll use that up.
Speaker A:And, you know, it was just a.
Speaker A:Generally.
Speaker A:And we're kind of like Will and Gab.
Speaker A:We.
Speaker A:We hang pretty close on Memorial Day.
Speaker A:We don't go out and venture out to the.
Speaker A:To the wild side, you know.
Speaker A:Did some work here on the.
Speaker A:On the yards and the house and watched a couple movies, and that's.
Speaker A:That's actually kind of the way we like it.
Speaker C:So I went to the driving range.
Speaker A:You did?
Speaker A:Awesome.
Speaker C:I did.
Speaker A:Are you getting tuned up to do the golf show with me?
Speaker C:I.
Speaker C:I'm trying.
Speaker C:I seem to do really well when that truck drives across and I have something to aim at for some reason.
Speaker C:I can hit the balls really well when he.
Speaker C:So I encourage him to zigzag, but he.
Speaker C:He doesn't listen.
Speaker C:But, yeah, I went to the driving range because it was really too hot to play 18 or even nine.
Speaker C:So, yeah, I'm trying to get my golf game better.
Speaker C:So that's.
Speaker A:Well, when you come up, you will be playing a round at the Kinzu Open.
Speaker C:I can't wait.
Speaker C:I.
Speaker C:And I'm.
Speaker C:And I'm prepping for that.
Speaker A:Yeah.
Speaker A:The Kinzu is quite the golf course, and Will has a lifetime membership there, so we can play.
Speaker A:Yeah.
Speaker B:I should.
Speaker B:I pay for it, and then I don't go.
Speaker B:So.
Speaker B:Yeah, that's it.
Speaker A:You know, I want to.
Speaker A:I want to get back on something here a little bit, just for a minute.
Speaker A:The.
Speaker A:The import.
Speaker C:Are we doing after hours now or.
Speaker A:Yeah.
Speaker A:Yeah.
Speaker A:Okay.
Speaker A:Yeah, yeah, we're still on after.
Speaker C:I just wanted to know if we were open.
Speaker A:Were you asleep when I did the intro?
Speaker B:Kind of intro.
Speaker B:Did a little nonchalant, didn't it?
Speaker A:Yeah.
Speaker C:By the way, it's after hours.
Speaker C:Okay.
Speaker A:Well, it's kind of cash.
Speaker A:This morning, you talk about import beefs, and I.
Speaker A:And I was being sarcastic, but not about the quality.
Speaker A:I.
Speaker A:I had some people send me some samples.
Speaker A:The beef was from Venezuela, and they were.
Speaker A:They were out there, you know, hyping this stuff is the best thing since sliced bread.
Speaker A:The.
Speaker A:The.
Speaker A:It was so different and tougher than hell, if I remember right.
Speaker A:Because we cooked it at Will's house, and.
Speaker B:I.
Speaker A:It.
Speaker A:No, it just wasn't working.
Speaker A:And I think once you get into eating a quality beef like Painted Hills, you set your standards pretty high.
Speaker A:But even thinking that I could do something with this, like on a show or something, you know, it was pretty.
Speaker A:Pretty tough.
Speaker A:Not just the beef, but it was pretty tough to work with.
Speaker A:And Will Made some comments, and Gabrielle made some other comments.
Speaker A:Oh, I remember.
Speaker A:But I just.
Speaker A:What I'm trying to get at is the quality.
Speaker A:And you said consistency.
Speaker A:And consistency is good.
Speaker A:And that's one of the things when you import products, especially agricultural products that are already processed and stuff, you're never sure, 100% sure of that quality you're going to get.
Speaker A:Because I've.
Speaker A:I've done a lot of them.
Speaker A:I've tried a lot of them.
Speaker A:To me, it's kind of the same with everybody's pitching the wagyu stuff.
Speaker A:Wagyu's just very fatty beef to me.
Speaker A:That's if you love it.
Speaker C:Me, I'm not gonna.
Speaker C:If I'm gonna start a huge debate if I start talking about that, but I will say I experienced a piece of wagyu that I ended up not even finishing and throwing out.
Speaker C:And it wasn't my cooking method.
Speaker C:I know a lot of people say I have to cook it right.
Speaker A:Yeah.
Speaker C:You know, and I cooked it hot and fast in an iron skillet, you know, and.
Speaker C:No.
Speaker C:And maybe it was just a piece of meat that I had, but it was inedible.
Speaker A:I'm with you.
Speaker A:I'm with you.
Speaker A:And if people want to take a shot at us, go ahead.
Speaker C:They're gonna.
Speaker A:But, you know, I saw somebody the other day on Twitter, they had these.
Speaker A:The little.
Speaker A:They look like little square stakes.
Speaker B:Yeah.
Speaker A:Kind of like the little ones you send stakes.
Speaker A:No, no, there's.
Speaker A:They're 2 inches by 2 inches by 2 inches type thing.
Speaker C:White Castle.
Speaker A:Good on you.
Speaker A:But they had them.
Speaker A:They had them out there.
Speaker A:This was on social media, and they were saying, aren't these beautiful?
Speaker A:I thought it was Spam.
Speaker A:Not computer spam, but Spam out of a can that they'd wiped off all the gelatinous crap off of it.
Speaker A:And I looked at it, and they were saying, oh, no, aren't these beautiful wagyu steaks?
Speaker A:And I.
Speaker A:I'm sorry, folks.
Speaker A:You can be mad at us if you're mad at me if you want.
Speaker A:Don't be mad at Leanne or Will, but I just can't do that.
Speaker B:I think I saw those.
Speaker B:I.
Speaker B:I didn't look that up, but that has to be either out of the brisket or out.
Speaker B:Or trying to upgrade a top sirloin or something solid like that.
Speaker B:You wouldn't.
Speaker B:You wouldn't.
Speaker A:The.
Speaker B:The things I'm thinking is, I think about a wagyu animal and all the pieces that come out of a steer.
Speaker A:Right.
Speaker B:You wouldn't.
Speaker B:You wouldn't chop up a high value rib steak or a New York or a, or a tenderloin.
Speaker B:All those can sell on their own.
Speaker B:But then you get into other pieces.
Speaker B:You got a clod heart and a brisket and a, and a chuck eye and you got all these other things that you got to market.
Speaker B:Somehow the wagyu guy's gonna have to do something.
Speaker C:I agree with you.
Speaker B:Yeah, I don't.
Speaker B:The only thing that saves the wagyu guy is a, is a wagyu animal doesn't have a butt.
Speaker C:What do you mean?
Speaker B:Well, every animal we've domesticated, we've built a butt on a rear end.
Speaker B:The, the rounds in the back end because there's more weight, there's more weight there than there is in the shoulder or build.
Speaker B:That you look at a, look at a deer, look at a giraffe is an extreme, of course, but every wild animal has no butt.
Speaker B:A buffalo has no butt.
Speaker B:A beef cow has a butt, has a round, has all this meat in the back end because we want meat on an animal.
Speaker B:And so if you look at a wagyu and I should pull some pictures up here actually, because we saw them in Australia, they've got no butt.
Speaker B:They're like a wild egg.
Speaker C:Why would you create the butts?
Speaker A:Breeding.
Speaker C:Just breeding.
Speaker B:Through breeding?
Speaker B:Yeah.
Speaker B:Through selective breeding.
Speaker B:For thousands of years they've bred animals to have like a hog, you know, hogs, they used to breed.
Speaker B:Well, they still breed, you know, hogs, but they've refined them now so perfect that they're all perfect.
Speaker B:But they, they, they breed them for that, all that stuff.
Speaker B:The 4H judge goes to class and tells the kids, look at this animal and it's better confirmation because of this and that and that and this and all the stuff that the race guys bet on at the H down, bet on the horses down at the track, all the confirmation things.
Speaker B:Well, that's the same thing for cattle, but, but a wild animal doesn't have a butt and a wagyu doesn't have a butt.
Speaker B:But they turned it into wagyu burgers and they sell wagyu burgers every damn where.
Speaker B:I just don't know how you, how they don't.
Speaker B:They're not so fatty you can't eat them.
Speaker B:That's the part I don't have.
Speaker A:Figures.
Speaker A:Yeah, yeah, they did that with the, you know, show horses and a couple of the breeds who shall remain nameless.
Speaker A:But all of a sudden they came out with these horses that had, you know, elephant butts type thing.
Speaker A:But and they really looked out of balance.
Speaker A:I wouldn't want to try to ride one of the bastards, but this is after hours, so I can say that.
Speaker A:But, yeah, it's just through the breeding, but the balance, too, you know, and.
Speaker A:And getting more meat on the carcass, on the skeletal structure and all that like that.
Speaker A:But I.
Speaker A:If you saw those same pictures I did, you would have swore it was Spam out of a can.
Speaker B:Yeah.
Speaker A:That it looked just like it.
Speaker C:Yeah.
Speaker A:I believe, and I'm not.
Speaker A:Okay, we're done ripping on the Wagyu people.
Speaker A:Who should we rip on next?
Speaker C:The Spam people.
Speaker A:I actually.
Speaker A:I actually wait.
Speaker B:We need to be.
Speaker B:We need somewhere to go with all that cleanup.
Speaker A:Yeah.
Speaker C:Yeah.
Speaker C:Okay.
Speaker C:I happen to like Spam.
Speaker A:I do, too.
Speaker C:Let's shut it down there.
Speaker A:I do, too, but it's just.
Speaker A:Yeah.
Speaker A:Anyway.
Speaker A:Yeah.
Speaker B:Oh, goodness.
Speaker A:Do you think that as time goes on, put on your crescent hat, as I always ask you to do.
Speaker A:You know, you can go.
Speaker A:You can walk down the canned food aisle, and up on the top you can see these little glass jars of Hormel beef, sliced beef.
Speaker A:I think they processed one pinload of cattle 75 years ago, and they're still.
Speaker B:Selling Turn it Around, the Venetian, Whatever's that.
Speaker B:You know, that not Venetian.
Speaker B:What is that?
Speaker B:You go, same shelf you're talking about.
Speaker B:Turn it around, and you're going to see product of Brazil on the back.
Speaker A:Yeah.
Speaker C:Really?
Speaker B:Because you've been able to buy cooked product from Brazil for a long time.
Speaker B:All that cheap jerky you get in the big five pound bags or one pound bags, that's all Brazilian.
Speaker B:And so we've been able to get cooked product for a long time.
Speaker B:We just couldn't get fresh product because of foot and mouth disease.
Speaker B:But they got that under control for the most part.
Speaker B:And so now we're getting fresh.
Speaker B:But.
Speaker B:But that's what those.
Speaker B:That stuff comes from.
Speaker B:And I'm.
Speaker B:I'm with you.
Speaker B:You're right.
Speaker B:The Production date is 10 years ago.
Speaker B:And the out of, out of, out, best buy dates still to come, you know.
Speaker A:Yeah.
Speaker A:August 42nd.
Speaker A:Although when I was in Brazil, I did have a couple of really fillets.
Speaker A:One thing they were good about is.
Speaker A:And we don't see it much in this country as carpaccio, you know, the thinly sliced raw beef.
Speaker A:And you put a little lime juice on it or whatever.
Speaker A:Yeah, I thought that was pretty good down there.
Speaker A:I'm not sure what animal it was.
Speaker A:They said it was beef, but, you know, you didn't know it was late at night and.
Speaker A:But it was pretty good.
Speaker A:I just wonder if we're ever going to see more processed beef canned products coming out of this country, maybe for export.
Speaker A:I don't know.
Speaker A:To me, it kind of a.
Speaker A:Doesn't make much sense.
Speaker C:Threat of war.
Speaker C:There might be.
Speaker A:Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker C:I don't think so.
Speaker C:I think people are still strong on that health kick thing.
Speaker A:Yeah, it could be.
Speaker A:I mean, and you never know what's really going to happen.
Speaker A:But.
Speaker B:That makes me.
Speaker B:Yeah, go ahead.
Speaker B:No, keep your thought.
Speaker B:Well, I just thinking about, you know, how you get beef to stay around because you use preservatives in it.
Speaker B:Right.
Speaker B:You use nitrates in it.
Speaker A:Right.
Speaker B:And so we make a hot dog that has a celery salt and Eskimo.
Speaker B:I call it celery salt and Eskimo powder, but celery salt and something else that fakes the nitrate because you can't get people to eat hot dogs and cook them, you know, and if you don't cook them, you might get botulism.
Speaker B:Okay, so here's my short math, right.
Speaker B:France just came out with a thing that said they want to reduce the use of nitrates in their food like 85% in the next five years.
Speaker A:Yeah.
Speaker B:So they, they obviously don't care whether people live or not because they're going to get rid of, they're going to blow these nitrates out of the system and botulism is going to learn to run wild.
Speaker B:I mean, it's just.
Speaker B:But, but that is the.
Speaker B:See, the consumer movement is to get away from preserved and, and stored and preserved.
Speaker B:And yet they don' headed.
Speaker B:I mean, they want it, they want it out in a record time.
Speaker B:It's a, it was a crazy.
Speaker B:When I heard the article, I'm like, whoa, this is a, this is looking for trouble because it's.
Speaker B:But science.
Speaker B:You know what, you put a, you put the, the, you put an idea out there and you tell them this the way it's going to be.
Speaker B:They'll.
Speaker B:The science will figure it out.
Speaker B:People will figure it out somehow.
Speaker B:They'll.
Speaker B:They'll figure it out.
Speaker A:Well, I did a story yesterday on something I came across that there's a company that's partially based in San Francisco and partially in Germany and they are making disposable terracotta coffee cups because we do £5 billion of disposable coffee cups now.
Speaker A:So you can drink the cup, drink out of the cup and throw it on the ground, step on it as dirt because it's made out of dirt, salt and water.
Speaker C:Interesting.
Speaker A:Yeah, I think.
Speaker A:I don't drink coffee anyway, so I don't care.
Speaker A:But I just thought that that was.
Speaker A:That was.
Speaker A:You know, they've been using.
Speaker B:I don't know how to answer.
Speaker B:I don't know can.
Speaker B:I don't know how to answer this because I don't want.
Speaker B:I don't want people to throw mud at me too much, but, you know, they've been hauling garbage into the county north of us here for long time.
Speaker B:30, 35 years.
Speaker B:Right now they haul 500 car trains a week into this hole.
Speaker A:Okay.
Speaker C:Wow.
Speaker B:This hole is six miles.
Speaker B:It's not a hole physically.
Speaker B:It's just a flat spot that's a basin.
Speaker B:It's six miles off the main highway.
Speaker B:I mean, it's not very far and I still can't see it.
Speaker A:Yeah, that's a lot of garbage.
Speaker B:There's a lot of space in this world.
Speaker B:There's a lot of garbage.
Speaker B:There's a lot of space.
Speaker B:But the fact that they've invented a coffee cup that'll cost you 25 cents more or 50 cents more or 80 cents more, that's really about the money.
Speaker B:They created.
Speaker B:They created a sellable item that they can sell to you or to whoever and they can get their margin going by.
Speaker B:Well.
Speaker A:And it's going to make its debut later this year.
Speaker A:That terracotta cup I was talking about.
Speaker B:Yeah.
Speaker A:Guess where.
Speaker B:Whole Foods.
Speaker A:No, no.
Speaker A:California.
Speaker A:Oh, yeah, yeah, sure.
Speaker A:Well, yeah, Marin county and some of those, you know.
Speaker B:Yep.
Speaker A:So, yeah, and if you're listening to us down there, sorry, but you earned.
Speaker B:That, so that's fine.
Speaker B:Yeah.
Speaker A:Somebody's gonna make money and they're gonna say, we're doing something great here for the world.
Speaker A:And then it's all just about this.
Speaker B:I know it is.
Speaker A:So anyway, it's.
Speaker A:It's.
Speaker B:We pick up the trash here on the highway.
Speaker B:We are our painted hills likes to have our name out on the highway, you know.
Speaker B:And so we pick up the trash out on the highway and the girls do.
Speaker B:I.
Speaker B:I don't get out there near enough.
Speaker B:And they ought to kick me in the ass.
Speaker B:But anyhow, what pisses me off is I hear all about plastics, right?
Speaker B:Every time I bend down to pick up a piece of plastic, it disintegrates in my hands.
Speaker B:The sun kills, sun breaks down the plastic.
Speaker B:It doesn't last a thousand years.
Speaker B:It might last two months and it's gone.
Speaker B:And it just pisses me off that somebody's talked you into believing that it's Going to be in your landfill for a thousand years.
Speaker B:So you're going to make corn plastic trays.
Speaker B:You can use the corn I was complaining about earlier today.
Speaker A:Well, you guys, you guys also have the Merton Homer biodegradable disposal site there.
Speaker B:That's right.
Speaker B:Yep.
Speaker A:I'll tell Leanne that story when we're off the air.
Speaker A:You go anyway like that.
Speaker A:What do you do when in.
Speaker A:You and I have talked about this before and probably should brought this up in the regular show, but this is the last hard question for you.
Speaker A:Okay.
Speaker A:Or not hard, but when you get product with age on in the warehouse.
Speaker B:Yes.
Speaker A:And you're very particular about that.
Speaker A:You know, they can only stay so long.
Speaker A:I'm sure it's different for different, different cuts and things, but after a while you go, I still got 5, 10 cases of this left.
Speaker A:Which doesn't sound like much, but when you look at the prices there, you, you've lost, you know, $5,000 or whatever it is like that because you can't sell it to the retailers anymore.
Speaker A:What do you do with it?
Speaker A:You can't repurpose it.
Speaker B:Well, everybody's got a price and every retail guy.
Speaker B:See, this is the key that this is the best part of what we do about the fact that we touch so many different types of stores.
Speaker B:We have.
Speaker B:Our store relationships are really small.
Speaker B:I think the biggest one we have has 20 locations and he kind of stays on his own plan.
Speaker B:And the warehouse has a problem with anything over 30 days old.
Speaker B:So that's a limitation.
Speaker B:But we work with a lot of small little butcher shop guys.
Speaker B:Right.
Speaker B:Even your guy cuts forth and can be, you know, he's free reign.
Speaker B:He's got the.
Speaker A:Don't tell him he don't.
Speaker A:He's not my guy.
Speaker B:He's got that.
Speaker B:He's got the reins to do what he wants in his shop.
Speaker A:Right.
Speaker B:And so when it gets to the point where you got four cases or three cases of something that, geez, I need to just give me two bucks out of it.
Speaker B:I just get it just.
Speaker B:It's got to be gone or, or I got four of them that are six weeks old.
Speaker B:What will you take?
Speaker B:What will you give me for them?
Speaker B:That's how that works and that's how, that's how those little guys stay in business.
Speaker B:A lot of times, you know, they can't.
Speaker B:You can't come to my front door and buy my product from the front door all the time and survive.
Speaker B:You got to have an ad or you got to have.
Speaker B:You got to be Able to know how to clean up at the back door sometimes too.
Speaker B:And so you have all those.
Speaker B:I don't think a food truck works that way.
Speaker B:But, but you might, you know, at the end of the day you got extra food laying around.
Speaker B:Do you sell it for half price to the, out the back door or.
Speaker B:It seems to me like that's what you do because your refrigerator at home is only so big.
Speaker A:I don't know how I was going to say.
Speaker A:Do you, do you, you make accommodations for food trucks?
Speaker B:Well, we work with, we typically work with a distributor, a food service distributor, and he figures out how to work with the food truck because the food truck honestly won't move enough tonnage to warrant our distributions.
Speaker B:See, we work mostly with grocery distribution.
Speaker B: Who has a: Speaker B: ruck doesn't have storage for: Speaker B:But I could be wrong.
Speaker B:Could be a big one.
Speaker B:But, but it, that's, that's, that's typically what we work with.
Speaker B:So then you work with a food service distributor who takes boxes apart, sells, delivers ribeye, single ribeyes around town.
Speaker B:This distributes three chubs out of a box that usually, that holds six.
Speaker B:He's the guy who makes that happen.
Speaker B:And he's also the guy who actually defends Leanne in this case, where me, I'm taking care of the big guy and I'm trying to manage apportioning, you know, not having enough of everything and having too much of some.
Speaker B:And he's the guy who has her interest in mind and makes sure that, by golly, I know she's going to call me every twice a week and I'm going to need this box of this twice a week and by golly, I got to have it.
Speaker B:And that's the, it's a, they're expensive.
Speaker B:Nobody likes a food service distributor in the middle.
Speaker B:But we kind of got to have them because they're, they're in there to protect your interest against the, the packer who doesn't always have your interest.
Speaker A:There you go.
Speaker A:Give our listeners one piece of advice when they're dealing with rising food costs from your position now there's a head scratcher.
Speaker B:Yeah, it is.
Speaker B:I don't know what their budget is, but I'm still gonna go, I'm gonna go to the grave thinking that your budget is, that your food budget is still awful small in the grand scheme of things.
Speaker B:If it's, if it, you know, last I heard, a year and a Half ago, it was 9%.
Speaker B:If it's double, it's 18.
Speaker B:18 of your budget is your food.
Speaker B:You're gonna spend 18% of.
Speaker B:Of your budget on the third most important thing in your life.
Speaker B:Oxygen, water and food.
Speaker A:And Barbecue Nation.
Speaker B:Buy what you want.
Speaker B:Eat what you want.
Speaker B:Turn Netflix off.
Speaker B:I don't know, you know, I mean, I.
Speaker B:But I don't know.
Speaker B:I.
Speaker B:I asked a friend this the other day.
Speaker B:Go down any street, any town you want to go down the main drag and drive along down the main drag and look left and look right.
Speaker B:There's McDonald's and there's taco Bell, and then there's a Ross Dress for Less, and there's a Fred Meyer, and there's this.
Speaker B:Tell me, which one of those stores is feeling a recession and gonna close the doors?
Speaker A:Not one of them.
Speaker B:Yeah, they all have people crawling in and out of them.
Speaker B:So I don't know what's going on, but I know that there's plenty of money to be spent.
Speaker B:So that's all I do know.
Speaker B:There's plenty of money to be spent.
Speaker A:There you go.
Speaker A:Will Homer coo.
Speaker A:Painted Hills Natural beef.
Speaker A:Friend of the show, friend of mine, friend of Leanne's, and a very, very.
Speaker A:I was just going to pay you a compliment, say a very wise man, but we thank you for that.
Speaker A:And Ms.
Speaker A:Leanne, it's always a pleasure, even if you can't plug in your headphones.
Speaker C:Yeah, okay.
Speaker B:All right, moving on, my fossil, and see me.
Speaker B:Come see me.
Speaker B:If you come through Fossils, stop by.
Speaker A:Oh, we will make it.
Speaker A:We're gonna.
Speaker A:We're gonna.
Speaker A:Here's a little announcement.
Speaker A:It's not in the main show, so I can say this, but Leanne's gonna be working with me on the television version of my golf show, grilling at the green.
Speaker A:And one of our stories is going to be about Painted Hills and the Kinzu Golf course over there.
Speaker A:So we will be over there sometime in the early fall, and because it's beautiful over there, and we'll have some fun, and maybe she'll cook something.
Speaker A:I'll be her sous chef for the folks at Painted Hills.
Speaker B:Awesome.
Speaker A:Okay, thank you for listening, everybody.
Speaker A:Thanks to the crew here.
Speaker A:And we'll be back next week with another edition of After Hours.
Speaker A:Until then, remember our motto.
Speaker A:Turn it, don't burn it, and be kind.
Speaker A:Take care, everybody.