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WHERE'S THE BEEF?
Comprehending all the different cuts of beef can be a little confusing. For
example, did you know that a strip steak, New York strip, Kansas City steak,
club steak, shell steak, and top loin steak all come from the same section
of beef? Who wouldn’t be confused with such jargon? The diagram below
depicts all the cuts found on your typical bovine.
Beef is muscle tissue. The first thing that must be understood is that
frequently used muscles are tougher and generally require long, slow, moist
heat cooking methods to loosen their connective tissue, while lesser used
muscles are tender and need dry heat methods. Moist heat cooking methods
for beef include braising, boiling and stewing. Dry heat methods include
sautéing, grilling, roasting, and broiling.
The chuck, brisket, round and shank are the most exercised muscles and
hence, the toughest. A pot roast can be made from chuck via braising,
(cooking the meat in a small amount of liquid for an extended period of
time). Chuck is also useful for stew meat, making stock, and ground beef.
Your average hamburger is mostly ground chuck.
The brisket is home to corned and barbequed beef. The infamous corned beef
and cabbage is made from boiling the meat. Pot roast can also be done with
brisket, again by braising.
The round includes the top round, bottom round, heel round, eye round, and
rump roast. Sometimes ground beef is made from the round as well. Although
all round cuts are tough, the top round is the tenderest, relatively
speaking. Because of this, it can be roasted. London broil comes from the
top round and can also be grilled. All of the others however, do best made
into roasts with moist heat methods. One exception is your deli roast
beef. Because it is sliced thin, producers can get away with roasting, (dry
heat), the bottom or eye round which are cheaper than the top round. Notice
that making a “roast” does not necessarily mean that the meat will be
roasted. At the risk of belaboring the point for clarification, roasts
such as pot roasts from tough cuts, require braising. Roasts made from more
tender meat are made by actually roasting.
The shank is definitely best when braised as in the classic dish osso buco.
It can also be used for stews and stocks.
The short plate and flank contain meat of medium toughness. The muscle
fibers are relatively coarse but contain sufficient intramuscular fat to
maintain tenderness. The short plate gives us short ribs which are braised
or boiled as in New England boiled beef. Skirt steak, (from the short
plate) and flank and hanger steaks, (from the flank), are delicious when
grilled. However, they must not be overcooked, benefit from being
marinated, and should be cut against the grain for a softer texture.
Mexican fajitas are often made from marinated strips of flank steak.
The rib, short loin, and sirloin render the most delicate cuts of beef.
Broiling, grilling, sautéing and roasting reign supreme here. Rib steaks,
(also known as delmonico or prime rib), rib eye steaks, (without the bone),
and rib roasts, naturally come from the rib. The sirloin provides a variety
of sirloin steaks differing on where in the sirloin they are cut from.
Sirloin can also be ground and mixed with ground chuck for primo hamburgers.
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Finally, the crème de la crème of beef: the
short loin. Picture a porterhouse or T-bone steak. The larger side is
referred to by all the names at the top of the article: top loin,
strip, New York strip, shell steak, etc. The smaller side is the
tenderloin or filet mignon. The porterhouse and the T-bone are the same
except that the porterhouse is cut from the larger end of the
short loin and thus provides more of the filet mignon. Both the top
loin and the tenderloin can be cut into individual steaks, or larger
roasts. In the case of the top loin, the steaks may or may not be
attached to the bone. The tenderloin is always boneless except when
part of a porterhouse or T-bone steak. |
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