This has been so interesting!!! I’ve only bought oyster blade before from Woolies or Cole’s who cut it just like any other cut, so you get the silver skin through the middle ruining it! Now I know how it SHOULD be done!!
Thank you, I’m just starting to really appreciate where all the different cuts come from (and best ways to cook them) and these videos really help. What I don’t understand is if silver skin is basically inedible on “steak” type of cuts why do butchers leave it on them? I’m happy to pay more at my local butcher but I also expect more, I don’t accept paying 50/60% more and still having to trim excess fat! Silver skin etc.
Around the 9:00 min mark, you've removed the first part of flat iron and then turn it over to remove the second part. At this point, you remove the outer silver skin. Would it be better/easier to remover both side of silver skin before removing the two halves of the meat? Thanks if anyone can answer and great video. Very much appreciated 👍
You don't have to yield the most meat. You need to bring out the value of the meat. I had paid US$ 90 for a pound of Denver steak in a Hong Kong restaurant. Flat Iron would probably be the same. How much is a pound of that Oyster Blade?
A pound of USDA Choice flat Iron is like $10 a pound, if you're paying $90 a pound for something I hope it's Kobe or Wagyu or something but idk how much a more premium option of flat Iron would be since the place I work only has choice blades.
@@zethloveless7238 Wagyu is japanese cattle, Kobe is a very specific japanese cattle type, region, and method of raising the cattle. Yes Kobe is a form of Wagyu but you don't use the two interchangeably.
@@ChrissW528 yes you literally do my guy lol “waygu” simply means any Japanese cattle in Japanese yes diff prefectures have their own ways but Kobe beef is in fact waygu beef just like Miyazaki Gyu is also waygu beef Gunma is waygu and in fact the top winner is Iwate which waygu cattle has 11 awards in Japan.
@@zethloveless7238 exactly, Wagyu is Japanese cattle, Kobe is breed, region and the method of raising it. Kobe is Wagyu but not all Wagyu is Kobe, so you don't use them interchangeably, I said "unless is Kobe or Wagyu or something" I get that Kobe is Wagyu beef but you can buy Wagyu that isn't Kobe... You can keep looking up Wikipedia articles though to try and make yourself seem smart in UA-cam comments though. But the fact that you list other types of Wagyu shows that you don't believe Kobe and Wagyu are just universally interchangeable...
Super informative, particularly in the knife work and mentioning the blunt blade scrape. Thank you
This has been so interesting!!! I’ve only bought oyster blade before from Woolies or Cole’s who cut it just like any other cut, so you get the silver skin through the middle ruining it! Now I know how it SHOULD be done!!
Great video mate.
Nice work David. Just what I needed today.
This was so clear and helpful, thank you! Have just cut my first oyster blade while watching this video and I think it came out pretty well.
I love the zero waste, low process policy. Food education is greater than food marketing
Thank you, I’m just starting to really appreciate where all the different cuts come from (and best ways to cook them) and these videos really help. What I don’t understand is if silver skin is basically inedible on “steak” type of cuts why do butchers leave it on them? I’m happy to pay more at my local butcher but I also expect more, I don’t accept paying 50/60% more and still having to trim excess fat! Silver skin etc.
FINALLY someone mentioned how great braising that sinew/silver skin in that blade can be.
Honestly, that "skin" is not a problem to cook at all. Even on the grill.
What knife are you using to filter the flat iron? You called it a blunt knife
Around the 9:00 min mark, you've removed the first part of flat iron and then turn it over to remove the second part. At this point, you remove the outer silver skin. Would it be better/easier to remover both side of silver skin before removing the two halves of the meat? Thanks if anyone can answer and great video. Very much appreciated 👍
Petite steaks come from that oyster blade cross cut?
Comes from the bolar blade.
What is the common name of the cut?
Where is oyster blade situated FQ or HQ
Fq
@@mujiono3920 thank you
The silver skin is not wasted. It makes very good soup meat
👍🏼
How many oyster in beef..??
You don't have to yield the most meat. You need to bring out the value of the meat. I had paid US$ 90 for a pound of Denver steak in a Hong Kong restaurant. Flat Iron would probably be the same. How much is a pound of that Oyster Blade?
A pound of USDA Choice flat Iron is like $10 a pound, if you're paying $90 a pound for something I hope it's Kobe or Wagyu or something but idk how much a more premium option of flat Iron would be since the place I work only has choice blades.
@@ChrissW528 Kobe is waygu beef
@@zethloveless7238 Wagyu is japanese cattle, Kobe is a very specific japanese cattle type, region, and method of raising the cattle. Yes Kobe is a form of Wagyu but you don't use the two interchangeably.
@@ChrissW528 yes you literally do my guy lol “waygu” simply means any Japanese cattle in Japanese yes diff prefectures have their own ways but Kobe beef is in fact waygu beef just like Miyazaki Gyu is also waygu beef Gunma is waygu and in fact the top winner is Iwate which waygu cattle has 11 awards in Japan.
@@zethloveless7238 exactly, Wagyu is Japanese cattle, Kobe is breed, region and the method of raising it. Kobe is Wagyu but not all Wagyu is Kobe, so you don't use them interchangeably, I said "unless is Kobe or Wagyu or something" I get that Kobe is Wagyu beef but you can buy Wagyu that isn't Kobe... You can keep looking up Wikipedia articles though to try and make yourself seem smart in UA-cam comments though.
But the fact that you list other types of Wagyu shows that you don't believe Kobe and Wagyu are just universally interchangeable...
rip it 😂
Ditch the background music. It's tacky and adds nothing.
Yeh it does. Makes it interesting and relevant. Without it, the video would be sterile.
Man...Just get on with it.