Beef Retail Cuts:
Round:
- Round steak
- Top Round Roast
- Top Round Steak
- Boneless Rump Roast
- Bottom Round Roast
- Tip Roast Cap Off
- Eye Round Roast
- Tip Steak
Sirloin:
- Sirloin Steak Flatbone
- Sirloin Steak Round Bone
- Top Sirloin Steak
Fore Shank & Brisket
- Shank Cross Cut
- Brisket, Whole
- Corned Brisket, Point Half
- Brisket, Flat Half
Chuck
- Chuck Eye Roast
- Boneless Top Blade Steak
- Arm Pot Roast
- Boneless Shoulder Pot Roast
- Cross Rib Pot Roast
- Mock Tender
- Blade Roast
- Under Blade Pot Roast
- 7-Bone Pot Roast
- Short Ribs
- Flanken Style Ribs
Short Loin
- Boneless Top Loin Steak
- T-bone Steak
- Porterhouse Steak
- Tenderloin Roast
Rib
- Rib Roast, Large End
- Rib Roast, Small End
- Rib Steak, Small End
- Rib Eye Roast
- Rib Eye
- Back Ribs
Flank & Short Plate
- Flank Steak
- Flank Steak Rolls
- Skirt Steak
Other Cuts
- Ground Beef
- Cubed Steak
- Beef for Stew
- Cubes for Kabobs
Other Edible Meats and Byproducts:
- Blood
- Brains
- Casings (for sausages)
- Fats
- Gelatin
- Hearts
- Kidneys
- Liver
- Tails
- Ox joints
- Sweetbreads (Pancreatic and Thymus glands)
- Tongues
- Tripe (pickled rumen of cattle and sheep)
- Candies
- Canned meat
- Marshmallows
- Oleo Oil
- Oleo Stock
- Cheek Meat
The cuts of meat that a person gets from a half of cow can vary depending on what they want. Many people opt for chuck roasts, short loins (porterhouse, NY strip, filet mignon), sirloin, rump, top round, eye of round, skirt steak, brisket, and flank steak.
It depends on which one you prefer. I like the filet or 'tenderloin' because it is lean and has very little fat.
A lot of people like ribeyes, which are heavily marbled (fat), which provides much of the flavor find in beef.
NY Strips are pretty firm with less fat than a ribeye, but less than a filet.
T-Bones and Porterhouse is a filet on one side of the bone and a NY Strip on the other side of the bone.
Various cuts from the rear quarter are considered to be the highest quality meat and best cuts to eat.
The brisket is a cut of meat from the lower chest. It is generally very sought after and one of the tastiest cuts of meat from a cow.
All of the same cuts you could from a beef cow, just not as much muscular volume.
On a cow the sirloin tip comes from the backbone to middle stomach. The meat briskets is actually the breast of the cow and one of the larger cuts of meat.
it is usually posted in the meat section of the supermarket. also, you can visit the website of Monterey (just search it in google) and you can find a diagram.
No. The cow has to be dismembered and gutted, then hanged for a few weeks in a controlled environment before it can be quartered into cuts for beef. However the cow cannot be used as meat if she has an illness that will affect those who consume the meat, like BSE (or Mad Cow disease) and Anthrax. Instead she will be burned and/or buried.
Hamburger is not from a designated area of the cow, it usually is the cutoffs from making the prime, select or choice cuts (such as steaks and roasts) and any left over meat from the carcass.
Not all cuts of beef are allowed, however, there are kosher steak cuts which come from the front half of the cow such as a rib steak.
Meat from a cow, obviously.
Hamburger is not from a designated area of the cow, it usually is the cutoffs from making the prime, select or choice cuts (such as steaks and roasts) and any left over meat from the carcass.
The filet is from the hind quarters of a cow. Right at the back is the rump and topside cuts and half way down the back is the sirloin from within which you find the filet. Try Galloway filet, it's the best!
No, a cow will not eat meat, although there will be some curious cow that would probably try it, cows do not and will not eat meat.