The co-evolutionary relationship between cows and grass is one of nature’s under-appreciated wonders it also happens to be the key to understanding just about everything about modern meat.

For the grasses, which have evolved to withstand the grazing of ruminants, the cow maintains and expands their habitat by preventing trees and shrubs from gaining a foothold and hogging the sunlight the animal also spreads grass seed, plants it with his hooves, and then fertilizes it with his manure.

In exchange for these services, the grasses offer ruminants a plentiful and exclusive supply of lunch. For cows (like sheep, bison, and other ruminants) have evolved the special ability to convert grass which single-stomached creatures like us can’t digest into high-quality protein. They can do this because they possess what is surely the most highly evolved digestive organ in nature the rumen. About the size of a medicine ball, the organ is essentially a forty- five-gallon fermentation tank in which a resident population of bacteria dines on grass.