Texas-Raised Bison from Bison Cove Ranch
Grass-finished bison raised on pasture by Bison Cove Ranch in Lometa, Texas.
At ROCK Farmhouse, we are honored to bring this special Texas-raised bison to families across Dallas–Fort Worth. Bison is a lean, rich red meat with a story rooted in native grasslands, thoughtful ranching, and regenerative land stewardship.
Bison Cove Ranch raises bison with care for the animal and the land, using pasture-based practices that support healthier soil, native grasses, and a more natural way of raising red meat.
We offer local home delivery and pickup for families across Dallas–Fort Worth and surrounding communities, including areas like Keller, Southlake, Prosper, Frisco, Grapevine, and North Fort Worth.
What to Expect from Bison
Lean, rich, and rooted in the land.
Bison is familiar enough for everyday meals, but special enough to feel different from the red meat most families are used to buying.
If your family already enjoys beef, bison is an easy step over. It works beautifully for burgers, tacos, steaks, roasts, and slow-cooked meals — but it brings its own unique flavor, texture, and story.
Bison is naturally leaner than beef, with a deep red color and a clean, slightly rich flavor. It is not usually “gamey” when raised and prepared well. The biggest difference most families notice is that bison cooks a little faster and does best when it is not overcooked.
Ground bison and burger patties are great places to start. Steaks are best cooked gently to medium-rare or medium, while roasts and shanks shine with low, slow cooking.
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.
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.
Did You Know?
Before cattle became a Texas symbol, bison were part of this land’s older story.
Bison are native to North America. Cattle are not.
Long before cattle became closely tied to Texas ranching, bison were part of the native grassland story of North America, including parts of Texas and the Southern Plains.
That is one reason this partnership feels so meaningful to us. Bison Cove Ranch is not just raising premium red meat — they are working with an animal that belongs to this land’s older story.
Bison vs. Grass-Finished Beef
Both can be wonderful choices when raised well. Bison is not here to replace beef — it simply gives families another deeply nourishing red meat option with its own flavor, texture, and land story.
What They Have in Common
Both grass-finished beef and grass-fed bison come from grazing animals and can offer rich flavor, quality protein, and important nutrients like iron, zinc, and B vitamins.
When raised with care, both can also support better land stewardship, more thoughtful animal management, and a closer connection between the food on your table and the people who raised it.
How Bison Is Different
Bison is typically leaner than beef, with a deeper red color and a clean, slightly rich flavor. Because it has less fat, it usually cooks faster and benefits from gentler heat.
Bison also carries a native grassland story. While cattle are now closely tied to Texas ranching, bison are native to North America and historically roamed parts of Texas and the Southern Plains.
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.
Shop Bison by Cut
Not sure where to start? Think about how you want to cook. Some cuts are simple weeknight staples, while others are best saved for the grill, cast iron, or a slow Sunday meal.
Everyday Staples
Ground bison, burger patties, and snack sticks.
These are the easiest ways to bring bison into your normal family rhythm. Use ground bison for burgers, tacos, chili, pasta sauce, meatballs, breakfast hash, and quick weeknight meals.
Steaks & Quick-Cooking Cuts
Ribeye, New York strip, filet, sirloin, chuck eye, skirt, and flank.
These cuts are best for the grill, cast iron, steak dinners, fajitas, and quick meals. Because bison is leaner than beef, cook steaks gently and avoid taking them too far past medium.
Slow-Cooking Cuts
Hump roast, rump roast, and cross-cut shank / osso buco.
These cuts need time, moisture, and low heat. They are wonderful for Dutch oven meals, slow cookers, braising, broth-rich dishes, and nourishing family dinners with deep flavor.
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.
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 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.
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.
Is Bison Cove Ranch bison grass-fed and grass-finished?
Yes.
Bison Cove Ranch raises grass-fed bison on pasture in Lometa, Texas.
Their herd is rotationally grazed so the animals can move across the land, graze naturally, and help reduce pressure on any one area of pasture.
For ROCK Farmhouse, this matters because we want families to know not just what they are buying, but how it was raised and who raised it.
What is the difference between grass-fed and grass-finished bison?
“Grass-fed” can sometimes mean an animal ate grass for part of its life but may have been finished on grain before processing.
“Grass-finished” means the animal remained on grass and forage through the finishing stage, instead of being moved to a grain-heavy finishing program.
For customers looking for truly pasture-raised bison, grass-finished is an important distinction.
Is bison healthier than beef?
Bison is often valued as a naturally lean, protein-rich red meat.
Compared with many conventional beef cuts, bison is typically lower in fat and calories while still providing important nutrients like iron, zinc, selenium, and B vitamins.
That said, we do not think of bison as “better than beef” in every situation.
Well-raised grass-finished beef is still a wonderful food.
Bison is simply different — leaner, deeply flavorful, and tied to the native grassland story of North America.
How does bison taste?
Bison tastes similar to beef, but it is usually leaner, slightly richer, and a little cleaner in flavor. Many people describe it as mildly sweet or deeper in flavor than beef.
When raised and handled well, bison should not taste overly gamey. If your family already enjoys beef, ground bison, burger patties, and bison steaks are easy places to start.
Is bison gamey?
Good bison is not usually gamey.
It is not considered strongly "gamey" like venison.
It is often described as having a cleaner, slightly sweeter, and richer flavor than beef. While technically a wild game meat, its taste is very approachable and mild.
It has a clean, rich red meat flavor that many families find very approachable.
Because bison is leaner than beef, the biggest difference is usually not the flavor — it is the cooking.
Bison can dry out if it is overcooked, so gentle heat and careful timing matter.
How do you cook grass-finished bison?
Bison cooks much like beef, but because it is leaner, it usually cooks faster.
For ground bison, use it in burgers, tacos, chili, pasta sauce, meatballs, breakfast hash, or stuffed peppers. For steaks, medium-rare to medium is usually best. For roasts, hump roast, rump roast, and cross-cut shank, low and slow cooking works best.
A simple rule: cook bison a little lower, a little slower, and with a little more attention than beef.
Why is grass-finished bison more expensive?
Grass-finished bison is raised on a much smaller scale than conventional beef, and bison require careful land management, fencing, handling, and processing.
Bison are also bigger, stronger, and less domesticated than cattle, which means they require a different level of care and experience.
When you buy bison from a ranch like Bison Cove Ranch, the price reflects not only the meat, but the stewardship, time, land, and animal care behind it.
How can I know I am buying real grass-finished bison?
The best way is to buy from a trusted source that clearly names the ranch, explains how the animals are raised, and is transparent about its standards.
ROCK Farmhouse partners directly with Bison Cove Ranch in Lometa, Texas, so customers know where this bison comes from and how it was raised.
Is bison better for the land than cattle?
Bison are native to North America and historically played an important role in grassland ecosystems. Their natural movement, grazing patterns, and manure distribution can support healthier pasture systems when managed well.
That does not mean all cattle are bad for the land. We believe well-managed grass-finished beef can also support land stewardship. Bison is unique because it brings a native grassland story and a natural grazing behavior that fits beautifully with regenerative pasture management.
Are bison native to Texas?
Bison are native to North America and historically roamed the Great Plains, including parts of Texas and the Southern Plains.
Long before cattle became the symbol of Texas ranching, bison were part of this land’s older grassland story. That is one reason this Bison Cove Ranch partnership feels so meaningful to us.
What is the difference between bison and buffalo?
In everyday language, many people use the word “buffalo,” but the correct name for the North American animal is bison.
True buffalo are different animals found in other parts of the world, such as water buffalo and Cape buffalo. The meat offered here is from North American bison raised by Bison Cove Ranch in Texas.
Does bison shrink less than beef when cooked?
Because bison is naturally leaner than many beef options, it often releases less fat during cooking. Ground bison usually does not need to be drained the same way fattier ground beef might.
The tradeoff is that bison can dry out more easily, so it is important not to overcook it.
What is the fat color of grass-finished bison?
Grass-finished animals may sometimes have a more yellow tone to their fat because of nutrients found in grass and forage, including beta-carotene.
Color can vary naturally depending on season, forage, age, and the individual animal.
We see this kind of natural variation as part of buying real food from real farms and ranches.
Do you deliver bison in Dallas–Fort Worth?
Yes. ROCK Farmhouse offers Texas-raised bison from Bison Cove Ranch through local pickup and home delivery across select Dallas–Fort Worth and North Texas areas.
Customers can order online, choose pickup or home delivery at checkout, and select the available date for their area.
Do I need a subscription to order bison?
No. You do not need a subscription. You can simply order bison when your family needs it.
ROCK Farmhouse works on a pre-order rhythm, which helps us coordinate with our farm and ranch partners while keeping the ordering process simple for families..