Just got my next cow from the butcher. What would you cook first to evaluate the quality of the entire beef? New butcher, we'll see how it works.
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Cow
Collapse
X
-
Charter Member
- Nov 2014
- 3063
- Chico, CA
-
BBQ's
_____________________
California Custom Smokers Intensive Cooking Unit
California Custom Smokers Meat Locker
Santa Maria Grill
Vision Grill
Beer
_______________________
Sierra Nevada IPA
Wood
_______________________
Almond
Oak
Madrone
Cherry
Peach
Apple
I agree with EdF - my uncle was a butcher and used to give us beef. The marbling was outstanding and EdF's cuts will tell you that. My uncle also used to let my dad trim fat off of certain cuts but removed silver skin from others. He knew my dad had no idea what he was doing when it came to fine tuning.
Comment
-
Club Member
- Jul 2016
- 497
- Georgetown, TX
-
Cookers:
- RecTec RT-590 Stampede Pellet Grill
- RecTec RT-B380 Bullseye Pellet Grill + GrillGrates
- Camp Chef PG24 DLX Pellet Grill
- TL-20 Offset Smoker from Texas Longhorn BBQ Pits
- Weber Genesis E310 Propane Grill with GrillGrates
- A-MAZE-N Smoke Tubes
- Thermoworks Thermapen Mk4
- Thermoworks Smoke Cooking Alarm
- Thermoworks Big & Loud Timer
- IR surface temp probe
- Likes 4
Comment
-
Charter Member
- Sep 2014
- 778
- Kingwood, TX
-
Rec Tec Stampede, Pit Barrel Cooker, Weber One Touch Gold 22.5", Kamado Joe Classic
Just look at it to see quality. You can see the fat distribution. Growing up it was always hits or miss whether one of our cattle produced nice steaks. My father liked to spoil them. We only had 1 or two at a time and then butchered.
Comment
-
any steak or roast from a primal cut will tell you a lot. Most compounds ingested by the animal are fat soluble, so the "fat flavor " should be distributed throughout, obviously more on some cuts though. If you take a sirloin tip ( or a chuck steak from the front shoulder) you should get decent fat that you can taste and also a pretty robust beef flavor from a more "worked" muscle. If the meat is very tender with a sirloin tip or chuck steak, then your ribeye, tenderloins, and brisket tenderness should be fantastic....Just my 2 cents though. My uncle was a butcher in Iowa and spending some time with him during summers I learned some stuff about meat. I wish I was in your shoes! I remember when my uncle would give my mom and dad a 1/4 steer...I love looking at all those nicely wrapped white butcher paper "presents" in the freezer. My uncle would cut my mom the best "chuck steaks" and my dad would cook them on the weber...its a food memory i have going way back to maybe when i was 5 or 6.
- Likes 2
Comment
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Comment