Now accepting pre-orders for June 19th & 20th

Bison Hump Roast - Pasture Raised & Grass-Finished

  • Sold out, try another weight
0 in stock.

A Slow-Cooking Bison Roast with Deep Flavor


Bison hump roast is a richly flavored, slow-cooking roast from pasture-raised, grass-finished Texas bison — most similar to a beef chuck roast, but leaner.

This bison hump roast comes from Bison Cove Ranch in Lometa, Texas, where their bison are pasture-raised, grass-fed, and grass-finished with care for the animal and the land.

Hump roast is one of the more unique bison cuts, and it often needs a little explanation. It comes from the prominent shoulder-hump area of the bison — a hardworking part of the animal that develops deep flavor and benefits from low, slow cooking.

If you are familiar with a beef chuck roast, that is the closest comparison. Bison hump roast is a great choice for pot roast-style meals, shredded bison, Dutch oven cooking, slow cooker meals, and cozy family dinners.

What Is a Bison Hump Roast?

The hump is one of the defining features of a bison. This roast comes from that shoulder-hump area, which means it is flavorful, lean, and best treated like a slow-cooking roast. Think of it as the bison version of a chuck roast — wonderful when cooked low and slow with moisture.

Quick Details

  • Product: Bison hump roast
  • Source: Bison Cove Ranch
  • Location: Lometa, Texas
  • Raised: Pasture-raised, grass-fed, and grass-finished bison
  • Comparable to: Beef chuck roast, but leaner
  • Flavor: Deep, rich red meat flavor from a hardworking roast cut
  • Texture: Lean and firm when raw; becomes tender with low, slow cooking
  • Best for: Pot roast, shredded bison, Dutch oven meals, slow cooker meals, braising, and hearty family dinners
  • Storage: Arrives frozen; keep frozen until ready to thaw and cook

Flavor & Cooking Notes

Bison hump roast has a deep, clean red meat flavor and a naturally lean texture. Because it comes from a hardworking area of the animal, it is not a quick-cooking roast. It needs time, moisture, and gentle heat to become tender.

This is the kind of cut that rewards patience. Cook it low and slow with broth, onions, garlic, herbs, root vegetables, or a simple tomato-based braise until it becomes tender enough to slice or shred.

  • Thaw fully first: Let the roast thaw in the refrigerator before cooking.
  • Season well: Salt, pepper, garlic, onion, herbs, bay leaf, and warm spices all pair well with bison.
  • Sear before braising: Browning the outside helps build deeper flavor.
  • Add moisture: Broth, stock, tomato, wine, or a simple braising liquid helps keep the roast tender.
  • Cook low and slow: Use a Dutch oven, slow cooker, or covered roasting pan.
  • Do not rush it: This cut becomes tender with time, not high heat.

Simple Ways to Use Bison Hump Roast

Bison hump roast is best for meals where the roast has time to slowly tenderize and create a rich, comforting dinner.

  • Bison pot roast: Cook with broth, onions, carrots, potatoes, garlic, and herbs until tender.
  • Shredded bison: Slow cook until tender, then shred for tacos, bowls, sandwiches, or stuffed potatoes.
  • Dutch oven roast: Sear first, then braise slowly with vegetables and stock.
  • Slow cooker meal: Add broth, onions, garlic, and seasonings for an easy family dinner.
  • Bison roast bowls: Serve shredded roast over rice, potatoes, greens, or roasted vegetables.
  • Leftover roast hash: Use leftovers with potatoes, onions, peppers, and pasture-raised eggs.

Our Partnership with Bison Cove Ranch

As our community continues looking for well-raised, grass-fed and grass-finished red meat, we have been careful not to add just any new source. Bison Cove Ranch felt like the right fit — a Texas ranch raising bison with care for the animal, the land, and the families who will bring it to their table.

Meet Bison Cove Ranch

A Texas bison ranch in Lometa, Texas, raising grass-fed bison with care for the animal, the land, and the future of this native species.

Bison Cove Ranch is located in Lometa, Texas, and is led by owner Sam Pauly and rancher Joshua “Skeeter” Mitchell. Their family has spent more than 30 years working with bison, with a steady focus on quality over quantity.

Their bison are grass-fed and rotationally grazed in accordance with NRCS and Soil and Water Conservation guidelines. This helps reduce pressure on the land while allowing the animals to move, graze, and live in a way that more closely reflects how bison naturally behave.

For Bison Cove Ranch, raising bison is not only about producing premium meat. It is also about careful animal handling, responsible herd size, soil health, native grasses, and doing their part to regenerate the land.

That is exactly the kind of partnership we look for at ROCK Farmhouse — real people doing hard, thoughtful work so families can bring home food with a story they can trust.

Bison Cove Ranch in Lometa Texas raising grass-fed bison for ROCK Farmhouse

30+ Years with Bison

Bison Cove Ranch has spent decades raising bison with the belief that quality matters more than quantity.

Rotational Grazing

Their herd is managed with careful movement across pasture to help protect the land and support healthier grass growth.

Animal-First Handling

Bison are powerful, intelligent animals. Bison Cove Ranch believes careful handling matters for the wellbeing of the animal and the quality of the meat.

How to Cook Bison

The biggest thing to remember: bison is leaner than beef, so it usually cooks faster and does best with gentle heat.

Ground Bison

Use ground bison anywhere you would normally use ground beef — burgers, tacos, chili, pasta sauce, meatballs, breakfast hash, or stuffed peppers.

Because it is lean, avoid pressing the meat too much while cooking and be careful not to dry it out.

Bison Steaks

Bison steaks are best cooked gently and not taken too far. Medium-rare to medium is usually the sweet spot for tenderness and flavor.

A hot cast iron pan or grill works well, but keep a close eye on timing. Bison can cook faster than beef.

Roasts & Shanks

Bison roasts, hump roast, rump roast, and cross-cut shanks do best with low, slow cooking.

Add moisture, give them time, and let the cut become tender slowly. These are wonderful for braising, slow cookers, Dutch ovens, and nourishing family meals.

Simple rule of thumb: cook bison a little lower, a little slower, and with a little more attention than beef. The reward is a clean, rich flavor and a beautiful red meat your family can enjoy in familiar meals.

WHY DFW FAMILIES TRUST ROCK FARMHOUSE
Small regenerative family farms in North Texas

Small Regenerative Farms

We partner with small, family-run farms using regenerative practices. Our purpose is simple: connect your family with nutrient-dense, grass-fed and grass-finished beef, pasture-raised chicken, pork, and eggs grown right here in Texas.

Transparent local sourcing and quality for DFW families

Radical Transparency & Quality

You know where your raw milk, meats, and eggs come from, how they’re raised, and what’s in them. Every product we offer is chosen because it nourishes your family with clean, real ingredients.

Nourishing DFW families with real food

Nourishing Families, Body & Soul

Our focus is simple: real, high-quality protein and wholesome staples—raw milk, grass-fed meats, pasture-raised eggs, and more—that help families eat well, feel well, and build lifelong healthy habits.

Local delivery of pasture-raised food across Dallas–Fort Worth

Connecting Families to Real Food

We’re a husband-and-wife team serving families across Dallas–Fort Worth—bringing raw milk, grass-fed and grass-finished beef, pasture-raised chicken, pork, and eggs to your doorstep with home delivery and local pickup so it’s easier to keep clean, nutrient-dense, pasture-raised food on the table.