Flat iron is said to be the best steak for those who prefer their steak cooked to a higher temperature. When you hear people say you've ruined a steak if you cook it medium well to well, this is because by the time it gets to the well stage the moisture and fat have been cooked out of the steak and it is very dry and tough. This is a genuine issue for thick steak house steaks such as an inch and a half thick rib eye. However, apparently a flat iron steak can be cooked to a higher temperature rapidly enough that it will be well done prior to loosing all its moisture. Hot tip for all of you well done weirdos out there. ;)
That whole chuck region is a great, undiscovered continent for me...and probably a lot of folk. Outside of the good old "seven bone roast" (which I like to put on the smoker), I don't know much about what that primal has to offer (outside of great hamburger).
If you cut a top blade roast into steaks The first four steaks has a very thin piece of grizzle that will melt away during cooking and they are very tender as well if you go beyond that you get a piece of grizzle that might as well be a bone
Finally a knowledgeable comment. A gold guide for which cuts to taste is to look at what was prized in the traditional cowboy culture. The Texas cowboys. The Mexican and Argentinian vaqueros. The Austrian - Hungarian cow herders. The mongolians. They would know because they lived off of the animal almost exclusively.
Well done to mid-well is over cooked doesn’t matter the cut.especially a thin steak like flat iron. Have worked in a high end steak house for years. Sorry
Starting with calling skirt steak crappy. Tell that to anyone that loves fajitas. Some of the best beefy flavor of any cut and luscious fattiness. Actually VERY easy to cook when you grill it as opposed to this dumbass Euro taking about pans that it wont fit in. I turned this crap off 2 minutes in.
Ribeye for the win. You haven't really had steak until you've had a simply prepared ribeye, kosher salt, fresh cracked pepper, grilled up or seared in the pan and finished in the oven with a pat of butter and a bit of garlic....YUM!
I wish people would stop talking about Rib Eye... it's not a very popular option here in Ireland and is not sold in many shops or butchers.. there is an Abattoir near me and I can go there and get Rib Eye steaks quite cheap.. if they gain popularity the price will shoot up so let's keep this cut a secret 😉
I love tri-tip; if you’re out west, you can usually find it whole; used to marinate it overnight then put it over charcoal or a burnt down wood fire, and keep an eye on it for 3-4 hours
Mine comes out awesome in 25-35 mins cooked indirect on my Weber Kettle with Kingsford Blue and 1-2 chunks of OAK. I bold that because Oak is where it's at with Tri-Tip. Best is just cooked over Oak logs alone but chunks of it with charcoal are close second. All you need for marinade is brush w/olive oil then coat with salt, pepper and garlic powder, let sit 8-12 hrs in fridge (I do it uncovered myself) to get the flavors to seep in. Grill it with charcoal and oak and you'll be blown away how good it is. Cut against the grain, or close to that at least.
@@ThiefOfNavarre 2 problems. 1 skirts are ab 3 feet long so unless u cut it. It doesnt fit in a pan. Second. Its not rediculously easy if you dont want well done. The thinner the steak the harder it is to cook
@@Tim_Marshall73 Who cooks a whole skirt steak all at once? 🙄 You cut it down to 8-10" portions and sear them 2 at a time, 2 minutes on each side for medium rare.
Skirt on the BBQ is ridiculously fast to prepare and tastes amazing! Skirt costs as much as Filet Mignon at least here in NY and has much more fat and tastes amazing with my special blend that I brush on B4 cooking
I'm completely impressed that you not only included the hanger (in French - onglet), but placed it correctly. Love them when I can get them. Maybe twice a year from my butcher. Other than that, dry-aged ribeye is where it's at. Had a wagu ribeye, dry aged 90 days once. $150. Intense.
Ive worked as meat cutter for a few years and i can remember when they sold the flat iron with the silveskin and called them patio steaks. When someone came up with the idea to get rid of that silverskin the price on the steaks went up almost 4X.
Porterhouse for me. The strip is almost as good as a rib eye and the filet is the most tender cut with great flavor cooked on the bone of the porterhouse bone.
"Almost as good as a rib eye" means you know rib eye is the best. My friends have always gone for a T bone which I consider not worth ordering at a steakhouse at all while I've always just gotten a rib eye. I mean seriously. I'm already out and paying a place to cook and serve it, why shouldn't I want what I like most? To cook myself? Nah. I don't do steak.
Porterhouses meat is better than rib eye especially the inner filet part. But a medium rare inner filet beats everything easily. Entrecôte/ rib eye is great, too. I rather take the Entrecôte closer to medium and inner filet always medium rare or even rare.
I think the most under-rated cut for making steaks is the tri-tip. Cut it into strips and grill on each side for 2 to 3 minutes. Season sparingly. There's just enough interstitial fat between the muscle fibers to keep it moist and very flavorful. I was introduced to this cut in Chile where I worked for a year. There, they cut into smaller chunks about 1 to 2 inches cubed and grill over flames and eat without seasoning. With a local Carmenere (or Malbec in Argentina) it's absolutely delicious, quick, and easy. Tri-tip is also great for stir-fries or any dish where thin strips grilled or fried quickly is needed. Has the additional advantage of being considerably less expensive than NY strip or rib steaks. Better than flank or flat iron steaks, in my opinion.
Tri tip is prob my favorite too. I generally cook it like a roast in the oven though. Low and slow till it's a nice med-rare. I'll let it rest and slice it tableside for people.
I really enjoy tri-tip as well. I found them in Costco of all places but had no idea what it was. After a little internet research, I was able to prepare and cook it into a delightfully tasty dish. Unfortunately, that Costco location stopped carrying them.
A cut that's often overlooked is the tri-tip, from the shoulder area. It can be tough & stringy, so maybe the best way to cook it would be slow roasting in an inch of water. It's actually got some of the sweetest, tastiest meat on the whole steer, though.
My grandfather owned a traditional Portuguese stakehouse in madeira and I would help out when younger. There's no such thing as bad cuts only bad ways of preparing and cooking them.
When we first got married 30 years ago, my wife and I always bought top sirloin when we wanted a steak because it was always so delicious and cheap and we did not have much money to spend. Later, we graduated to beef tenderloin on the holidays at the end of the year when it would sell for $4.99/pound at the local grocery stores. Those days are long gone . . . Now we look for sales where ribeye is somewhere near $4-5/pound and then we buy a lot of them and put them in our freezer in a vacuum sealer bag for later use. Amazing how expensive everything has become . . .
Lucky to find even strip steak for under $10, tenderloin was more like $40 a pound and now probably $50 at a grocery but I do not use groceries for meat.
Picanha is the best kind of steak. Also, honor it! ONLY season it with coarse salt. And sear it on open fire. I am lucky enough to have had Australian Wagyu MBS 9 picanha it is just out of this world. Waves of flavor release in your mouth after every chew. I also had A5 Mayazaki Picanha which was just too overwhelming with flavor.
@@ripdajacker23 lucky for me I get a crazy deal for the Australian picanha. I get the whole picanha for only $100 but they usually go for around $180. The A5 picanha was $130 per pound. Again, that was more of an experience I don’t think I’ll do that again for a while the flavor is too overwhelming and you get tired of it by having just a few ounces.
Great vid Mashed! I agree 100% on Ribeye being #1. Porterhouse and T-bone are great steaks, but it should be illegal to charge so much for a steak with a bone in it.
Just curious if your an American, that’s like saying you tried chicken just recently living in the US lol. I try to eat steak atleast 3-5 nights a month but kinda pricey, a 1.5lb ribeye could cost 25-35 dollars each cooking at home.
Might have to try it. I recently discovered steak again myself. haven’t had it in years and years. Got some tenderloin, cooked to rare with some rosemary and garlic in butter, goooooddammmmmnnnnn 🤤🤤🤤
As a young butcher in my father's well-respected shop in Chicago, I used to favor the boneless NY Strip-- thick, tender and flavorful. Far superior to a Filet Mignon (to me, the choice of an uninformed consumer who'll never get their $$'s worth). Skirt Steaks -- when prepared pink inside -- are always fabulous for breakfast, with eggs & hash browns! Then, as I matured, I compared the NY Strip to a well-prepared Ribeye of equal grade & thickness... and a new champion was crowned! Now this ex-butcher seeks out a pack of those thick boneless Prime Ribeyes at his nearby Costco on a semi-regular basis for family cook-outs. They're such a treat on special occassions!
I disagree. Ribeyes are too soft for me and have way too many globs of separate fat. A prime strip has much better chew and flavor because the fat is marbled in perfectly with the flesh - no separate huge pockets of blubber that a ribeye contains. And the blubber of ribeye is also soft and of little flavor. The edge of fat on a strip on the other hand is full of flavor, is firmer, crisps up and pops in your mouth exploding with flavor.
Prime filet requires a basic knowledge of how to cook it for the best flavor, juice and tenderness. Most will stick to ribeye instead. It's OK, too but I only eat prime filet for over 30 years because I learned how to grill it. Occasionally, Porterhouse.
@@lawrence5039 First “Prime filet” isn’t an accurate meat term. 2nd why on earth would your second choice be Porterhouse that contains 2 totally different muscles that can’t possibly be cooked correctly together? Filet mignon (or the small end of the tenderloin) is the least flavored cut of muscle. And the most tender. I like it once in a while. There’s no secret to cooking it. Get a nice sear on the outside and NEVER cook the center beyond medium rare - bias the very center towards rare. And because it is low in flavor serve it with a nice Demi-glacé based sauce if you like. I prefer the chew and much deeper flavor of a prime NY strip.
I wish they had done more with the New York strip my absolute favorite. Yeah I know this supposedly better strips but not for me it has just the right texture!
Strip steak goes on sale in my area at sometimes lower than half the price of other good cuts, both w/ and w/o the bone. In this case it can be a bargain and a great choice, often being the same price or lower than top round. Love top sirloin! I'll take a t-bone or porterhouse any time. Flat iron and hanger used to be cheap, but not so now, but they still are excellent. Even a choice ribeye can be awesome! Look them over carefully, some will be a lot closer to prime in marbling than others.
@@JLilliquist Yes. Even though it is not everybody's favorite, I am a big fan of top sirloin. I've done reverse sear on this cut many times and it works very well. You wan't a thicker cut to get a good medium rare. For thin cuts I just sear alone.
@@bronovalter391 Thanks, I am always confusing cuts, like top vs bottom or tip, top is usually tender but may be high or low in fat. I got some frozen rib waiting, I usually do a cheaper cut first to get my "groove" back then cook it.
I've been spoiled growing up as a French immigrant in Australia. Tomahawk Rib Eye T-Bone Scotch Fillet Fillet Sirloin Skirt I've tried it all but I have to say that despite all the steaks I've tried Bavette (from the upper part of the Flank) was the best. ....Although having a Chateaubriand for two to myself in Paris was right up there for my best ....it was the first time I ever enjoyed Paris as i usually couldn't get out of there fast enough. AND GRASS FED ALWAYS ALWAYS ALWAYS is the best.
Best steak I ever had was a rib eye steak cooked at a huge franchise and where I wince at the thought, this thing was magnificent, it was cooked to perfection, it was juicy, moist, the flavour was unreal, and it was damn good to the point I asked to meet the chef who prepared it, upon which I tipped him £20 and tapped him on the shoulder telling him it was the best I ever had. His smile was ear to ear as he turned to walk back to the kitchen. I hope I instilled an appreciation of his work that day because 15 years later I still haven't enjoyed a steak like that.
Although I don't totally agree with the order of the rankin, I would like to remind you that you forgot a wonderful cut that comes from Chuck, which is the Denver Steak. Extremely tender, juicy and tasty. Perfect for grilling.
She almost showed it with that top butt sirloin lol. I always separate the culotte (picanha) from the top but trim the fat off and turn it into the best cabob meat ever!!
In the end it's a personal choice what cut is an individual's favorite. And that is what makes the world beautiful, different strokes for different folks. For my taste in steaks, I agree with your list. If you know how to season, grill and cut your meats you can make any of those cuts taste great.
Absolutely the best cut is the Flat Iron steak...Great on the stove or the grill and cooked to medium rare... it has nice marbling with the flavor of a Ribeye and the texture of a tenderloin.
Flank or skirt steak work very well if you use a Mexican-style marinade with lime juice or red wine vinegar, garlic, salt and pepper, and olive oil...give it 24 hours to marinate, then take it out, let it warm up to room temperature, then slap it on a very hot grill, griddle, or suitably large pan, and sear it just long enough over high, very smoky heat to get a crust on it, about 2 minutes a side. Remove, let it rest, then slice across the grain. Makes fantastic tacos.
Excellent post Patrick. I would add for the autentico Nuevo Leon flavor, a spritz of lime juice to the meat, and a pinch of salt. Dip the taco into some homemade salsita colorada and munch on down. OMG, such delicious flavors. Drink: either cerveza Bohemia, or a Hi-ball of Brandy Presidente.
Many long years ago (I'm 70, so MANY!), I thought I hated steak. It turned out that in my family, steak was really over-cooked. Years later, well away from home, my spouse and I bought something called "skirt steak". Back then, it was a strip of steak about 1" or so wide, curled around itself and skewered. Kind of looked like a cinnamon roll. IMPOSSIBLE to cook to anything more than medium [and that would have a crusty crust]. And that's when I discovered that steak ACTUALLY HAD FLAVOR!! It WASN'T shoe leather! I'm a rib-eye fan.
Flat iron steaks are unpredictable: they can often have an under-taste similar to liver. I never understood the attraction of tenderloin. It's got great mouth-feel but almost no flavor. If I'm pan-searing (usually reverse-searing), give me a ribeye. If I'm grilling, it's flank or skirt sliced thin. I never eat steak in restaurants. Why pay that kind of money for something I could easily prepare as well, if not better at home? When dining-out, I always look to order dishes I don't (or can't) make at home.
I don't understand the obsession with tenderloin, either. I think it's the name, and/or the price. I really don't prefer the "mouthfeel" either, the fine grain makes it feels incredibly dense to me and makes me feel weird. Lol
The tenderloin has little to no beef flavour, however is the most tender steak on a cow. Ribeye on the other hand, not the most tender but it does contain a lot of beef flavour. The muscle fibers on the ribeye are much larger hence not making it the most tender to eat. Flat iron is a combination of both (at least what I've been hearing and also tasted myself). You sure you're not getting mixed up with the scotch tender? After all, the scotch tender is the steak that sits right beside the flat iron on a cow, separated by a thin line of silver skin and can have contrasting texture and flavour with the flat iron.
I eat quality steak when I find it in restaurants as beef is my favourite meat and I can't afford to buy mountain-raised rare cattle dry-aged and specially-cooked beef every day. I like to cook but a steak for me is something they either make to the description on the menu or not. It's a safe bet for enjoyment.
True, its very easy to buy good quality meat and make your own steak for $20, and it'll very likely be as good or even better than most restaurants where you pay $50
Beef Tenderloin, marinated in a 3:1 red wine:teriyaki mixture for at least 4 hours. Grilled, served with FRESHLY sauteed mushrooms, onions, red peppers and a salad. Serve with some cabernet or merlot and it's a dinner.
@@nathanwahl9224 The tenderloin has the most beef flavor of any cut. I don't get all these people saying ribeye is the best. I love a ribeye but a lot of taste comes from fat. That's OK if you like fat but I like the taste of beef and the tenderloin has it more than the ribeye. Beef vs. fat.
Why did they leave off the Chuck Eye - Delmonico steak. If simply seasoned, pan seared and kissed with real fire, it will hold its own to the finest steaks. They are not called poor man's ribeye for nothing.
Not easy for most to find, as it depends how the cow was butchered (obviously). Not all butchers will cut chuck steaks as there tends to be strong demand for chuck roasts. If you use the best part for steak you lose the best part of the roast, and so it depends what the butcher's customers are looking for.
There is no bad steak just bad people that think they can cook ! Each cut requirements are different in how you cook it. High heat is not always the best way to go. Low and slow works get on cowboy cut do not constantly flip wait till you get a good crust on bottom blood is rising up the top no forks then flip leave it alone no Benny Hana other than flare up to prevent turning into charcoal. I've done 3" well done as soft as chocolate cake. Use lime juice as a marinade the acid from citrus will help break down the fibers. Everyone wants it now it takes time to cook it right. Short ribs are great but takes 4-5 hour's in a dutch oven at 275* otherwise you can give them to David to slay Goliath. Patience and practice
Ribeye, Picanha, Chuck roast (burnt ends), beef short ribs, cow tongue, flank steaks, tenderloin, etc.... if you know how to cook it, ANY cut of beef is great.
We were poor growing up but my dad would cook sirloin on a grill he made from an old wagon, better than any filet or t bone I can get at a steak house.
My steaks usually have whip marks from where the jockey was beating it. But seriously, you left out London Broil, also known as a top round steak. (you did mention top round but said they were terrible. Not True!) I get these all the time and they are about 3" thick and 3-4 pounds and very economical and...delicious. Marinate overnight, toss on the grill and slice it on an angle and you have a very tender and delicious cut of meat. I prefer it to ribeye, T-bone, strip steak or even filet mignon which is too expensive to even think about. I just cooked a 3 pounder last week and it cost me $10.00 and it was perfect and delicious. I slice the leftovers thin for sandwiches on rye bread with mustard or, dice and use over rice with gravy. Excellent.
@@vexs4883 There's a HUGE difference in flavor between propane and charcoal. It's a little less obvious on a steak that you cook right over the flame, usually fairly briefly, but with things that take a little while to cook it becomes VERY obvious. Barbeque whole turkey or chicken, or ribs, or a thick steak cut like a tri-tip roast ... night and day. I can't stand London Broil, for the record. Nothing you do to it makes it good other than soaking it in so much marinade that's all you taste. Tough, and flavorless cut. MHO.
I’m 64. My depression era mother was raised to overcook everything. The rational being if you didn’t overwork everything you died of food poisoning. It was taught in school Home Economics classes.
Yes, the "cuts" of meat are important, but there are different qualities of meat within the cuts. There is "grade" i.e. select, choice, and prime. After that its the feed and environment in which the cattle was raised. There's the bread. There the age. A choice cut could be way better than a prime cut if the cattle were fed better and had less stress.
It seems like it was too dry. Maybe it was marinated too long, or too much of the juices leached out of it. Typically, nobody ever has to inject that cut with a solution to make it tender.
Ribeye or porterhouse period if your gonna order a NY strip or filet mignon you might as well order a porterhouse and a ribeye is just the quintessential steak eating steak!!
As an argentine asado afficionado, I find that americans don't appreciate some of the best cuts of meat. Skirt Steak (falda) and flank steak (entrana) are some of my favorite asado cuts.
@@Niko_from_Kepler no its not lol. clam chowder, collard greens, bbq ribs, okra, brisket, etc. the only real eurpoean foods that are now considered american are pizza and french fries
The tenderness of the steak and flavor of the steak will aaaalways be with the skill of the person cooking it. Just because you have filet mignon doesn’t mean it will taste good.
I Agee but most people think there buying a porterhouse when really there buying a tbone I see it in stores all the time and this video is so messed up and just wrong
Porter houses in T-bones both have the entire New York strip T-bones have a tenderloin but just much less of it The tenderloin winds of having a little tail that disappears that little tail is on the T-bone When the tenderloin disappears all together the ribeye begins
In the 80's when I was a kid there was a restaurant where you picked out your steaks and grilled it yourself over a huge grill in the middle. Good times...
UR Cooks??? Went there a number of times and always had them cook it for me, came out great every time. I don't know how many times I saw my buddies ruin their steaks trying to cook it themselves on an unfamiliar grill.
When I was A Butcher there was A Steak called the Pinbone. It was the last cut just before the round. Part T Bone and a big piece of the cows pelvis. It was always sold at A lower price. Normally 2 steaks per cow.
My favorite is the strip, the only reason it is above the ribeye is because it is not as fatty and gristley. I was not a fan of tenderloin, it was honestly too soft and had a weird texture. Tritip and skirt are also very good
My experience with steaks is often the cut is less important than the seasoning and cooking. A low quality cut of steak can be very tasty, juicy and tender when property prepared, and a high quality cut of steak can be terrible when improperly prepared.
Ribeye or bust. The rest of the cuts are either less flavorful, or tougher, or both. (Not including hangar since it's so hard to find) Also, it tends to be cheaper than porterhouse and tbone.
Ribeye is just the perfect go-to steak. The true answer to the "best" quality steak is obviously tenderloin, but the best overall is almost always ribeye.
Yup the important part is how big the cap portion is , every bit as tender as a filet but packed with flavor from the fat that attaches it to the rest of the steak. Ive never seen it but I heard some places you can buy just the cap.
It's not my favorite, and I'll tell you why. That cut is so tender, so full of flavor, so full of potential, grilling it as a steak seems like a crime. Because I know how it could have tasted, if I just was able to get that cut as a roast, so I could slow cook it. We lose so much of its flavor and texture cooking it on a grill or in a pan.
I'm surprised there was no talk of the grade of meat. Prime vs. Choice, for example. Most supers sell choice. You can get Prime at Costco and butchers. Better marbling. My favorite is a Prime cut m1.5 inch New York strip.
You are exactly correct. Huge difference between Prime and Choice. Prime is all there is for me. After that I will just as soon have a great hamburger :-)
Walmart has started to sell some Prime also. Got a Prime Rib Eye the other night.. Cooked medium rare leaning more towards rare with butter and thyme, and it was heavenly.
Where are they getting their information about pricing? At my local grocery store, a choice NY Strip is fairly inexpensive, while a choice hanger is almost as much as filet/tenderloin.
All cuts are delicious if cooked correctly. This video is more about which is the easiest to prepare. Ribeye or New York Strip are my personal favorites. Easy to cook, tasty to eat.
Ribeye with that little tip of pure fat trimmed off, marinated in pure Jack Danials Sour Mash Whiskey for at least 3 hours, and fast grilled @650° for no more than 3 minutes per side is beyond any shadow of doubt the the best steak. You can have your old fashioned t-bone or porterhouse steaks. The combination of tenderness and flavor makes Ribeye superior. That being said, I'll still take a thick cut juicy Pork Chop over any steak, fried in butter in a cast iron skillet though.
i noticed they didn't mention rump steak or fillet steak two popular steaks here in new zealand. the fillet is one of the most expensive steaks to buy. size wise the fillet is small and the rump can fill a large plate.
Wagyu is a watered down American cross of Kobe with Black Angus cattle. This breed is owned primarily by Snake River Farms. Pure Kobe cows live in Japan. Sorry to correct you. Have a good day.
There’s no worst cut of steak. Only the worst cook. Honor the cow by appreciating every part of it and making sure nothing goes to waste. Any part of meat can taste outstanding as long as you know how to cook it.
What's your favorite cut of steak?
Fillet just kissed with fire.
RIBEYE..................CHARRED AND RARE
Chuck eye
5:43 Nonsense
Of course I like the fatty cuts of beef
I avoid carbohydrates so the body can use the fat from the beef as energy
Picanha is the best by far. All the flavor of the ribeye and tenderness of filet
Skirt steak is easily the most underrated steak. Try it how Alton Brown cooks it and you'll see what you've been missing.
0p
Skirt can be fantastic if from hi quality meat, Not that easy to find. Meat in general is not as good as in years past
It's tri-tip in my opinion, skirt steak is pretty popular
There's no point. Grocery stores charge the same for that as they do for a better quality steak like ribeye nowadays.
10-15 years ago it was underrated. Now it's a pretty pricey piece of meat. >.
Flat iron is said to be the best steak for those who prefer their steak cooked to a higher temperature. When you hear people say you've ruined a steak if you cook it medium well to well, this is because by the time it gets to the well stage the moisture and fat have been cooked out of the steak and it is very dry and tough. This is a genuine issue for thick steak house steaks such as an inch and a half thick rib eye. However, apparently a flat iron steak can be cooked to a higher temperature rapidly enough that it will be well done prior to loosing all its moisture. Hot tip for all of you well done weirdos out there. ;)
That whole chuck region is a great, undiscovered continent for me...and probably a lot of folk. Outside of the good old "seven bone roast" (which I like to put on the smoker), I don't know much about what that primal has to offer (outside of great hamburger).
If you cut a top blade roast into steaks
The first four steaks has a very thin piece of grizzle that will melt away during cooking and they are very tender as well if you go beyond that you get a piece of grizzle that might as well be a bone
Finally a knowledgeable comment. A gold guide for which cuts to taste is to look at what was prized in the traditional cowboy culture. The Texas cowboys. The Mexican and Argentinian vaqueros. The Austrian - Hungarian cow herders. The mongolians. They would know because they lived off of the animal almost exclusively.
Flat irons are the best!!!!
Well done to mid-well is over cooked doesn’t matter the cut.especially a thin steak like flat iron. Have worked in a high end steak house for years. Sorry
I’ve been a butcher in a prime shop for 50 years. There’s a lot wrong with this video.
Agreed
Do tell, please
cough cough chuck eye
Starting with calling skirt steak crappy. Tell that to anyone that loves fajitas. Some of the best beefy flavor of any cut and luscious fattiness. Actually VERY easy to cook when you grill it as opposed to this dumbass Euro taking about pans that it wont fit in. I turned this crap off 2 minutes in.
@@jaysantos536 Seriously. Agreed.
The flank steak and skirt steak is amazing. I’m sorry lady, you are mistaken.
For tacos yea but not a stand-alone steak to eat
In Miami they love skirt steak
@@mikezoo4856 Wrong,in Argentina we make skirt steak,called entrania,is lovely.
@@mikezoo4856 for tacos and steak is good it's super tasty and it's not super tender but the taste is worth the money
@@arielabril1981 oh nice, sounds like a good dish
Ribeye for the win. You haven't really had steak until you've had a simply prepared ribeye, kosher salt, fresh cracked pepper, grilled up or seared in the pan and finished in the oven with a pat of butter and a bit of garlic....YUM!
@Bob Watters a respectable opinion
Has to be one of if not my fav food, I cook it almost exactly the same as u
You forgot the rosemary too
I wish people would stop talking about Rib Eye... it's not a very popular option here in Ireland and is not sold in many shops or butchers.. there is an Abattoir near me and I can go there and get Rib Eye steaks quite cheap.. if they gain popularity the price will shoot up so let's keep this cut a secret 😉
@@aus3492 ha, good luck with that!
Give me a nice medium-rare ribeye steak any day of the week
Or a nice Tube steak smothered in underwear? Lol jk
STEAK EGGS BACON
Nothing can beat that combo
Well done with ketchup. Just kidding. That's Donnie's favorite steak.
Can I get a amen
There is a reason ribeye is the steak of choice for BBQ competitions.
I love tri-tip; if you’re out west, you can usually find it whole; used to marinate it overnight then put it over charcoal or a burnt down wood fire, and keep an eye on it for 3-4 hours
The best cut for its value.
That's a cut I've been yearning to explore. Can you smoke that thing?
@Adam Yoksas Sure you can. It is tasty.
Hell yeah, it’s so good 💯
Mine comes out awesome in 25-35 mins cooked indirect on my Weber Kettle with Kingsford Blue and 1-2 chunks of OAK. I bold that because Oak is where it's at with Tri-Tip. Best is just cooked over Oak logs alone but chunks of it with charcoal are close second. All you need for marinade is brush w/olive oil then coat with salt, pepper and garlic powder, let sit 8-12 hrs in fridge (I do it uncovered myself) to get the flavors to seep in. Grill it with charcoal and oak and you'll be blown away how good it is. Cut against the grain, or close to that at least.
I’m not sure your “research team” should get paid this week.
I've prepared skirt steaks quite often and I don't see the difficulty. They're easy to cook and very flavorful.
Very difficult to get a good crust and get medium rare. Since it is so thin. But if you like well done then ig it wouldnt be difficult
@@Tim_Marshall73 Searing pan, 2mins either side. It's rediculously easy!
@@ThiefOfNavarre 2 problems. 1 skirts are ab 3 feet long so unless u cut it. It doesnt fit in a pan. Second. Its not rediculously easy if you dont want well done. The thinner the steak the harder it is to cook
@@Tim_Marshall73 Who cooks a whole skirt steak all at once? 🙄 You cut it down to 8-10" portions and sear them 2 at a time, 2 minutes on each side for medium rare.
Skirt on the BBQ is ridiculously fast to prepare and tastes amazing! Skirt costs as much as Filet Mignon at least here in NY and has much more fat and tastes amazing with my special blend that I brush on B4 cooking
I'm completely impressed that you not only included the hanger (in French - onglet), but placed it correctly. Love them when I can get them. Maybe twice a year from my butcher. Other than that, dry-aged ribeye is where it's at. Had a wagu ribeye, dry aged 90 days once. $150. Intense.
I think all the meat I get is aged 20 days which is still longer than usual.
Ive worked as meat cutter for a few years and i can remember when they sold the flat iron with the silveskin and called them patio steaks. When someone came up with the idea to get rid of that silverskin the price on the steaks went up almost 4X.
Once a garbage cut always a garbage cut.
Same goes for steaks with the fat trimmed off, costs more and tastes less.
@Bob Watters TPTB manipulate the public's will...Its not at all by nature, but rather by covert advertising and manipulation.........Willie
Same as fajitas, beef skirt
Porterhouse for me. The strip is almost as good as a rib eye and the filet is the most tender cut with great flavor cooked on the bone of the porterhouse bone.
Filets hardly have any flavor
"Almost as good as a rib eye" means you know rib eye is the best. My friends have always gone for a T bone which I consider not worth ordering at a steakhouse at all while I've always just gotten a rib eye. I mean seriously. I'm already out and paying a place to cook and serve it, why shouldn't I want what I like most? To cook myself? Nah. I don't do steak.
Porterhouses meat is better than rib eye especially the inner filet part. But a medium rare inner filet beats everything easily. Entrecôte/ rib eye is great, too. I rather take the Entrecôte closer to medium and inner filet always medium rare or even rare.
@@peterhammer6915 filet is the least flavorful so there is no way it could ever be the best steak.
@@Grande79 the least😂😂😂. I know you have different taste there but this. You made my day😂😂😂
I use to only buy porterhouse steaks when it's grill steak day, but as I got wiser I learned a nicely marbled thick NY strip is the way to go.
Agreed
I prefer my NY basted so I use pan.
I think the most under-rated cut for making steaks is the tri-tip. Cut it into strips and grill on each side for 2 to 3 minutes. Season sparingly. There's just enough interstitial fat between the muscle fibers to keep it moist and very flavorful. I was introduced to this cut in Chile where I worked for a year. There, they cut into smaller chunks about 1 to 2 inches cubed and grill over flames and eat without seasoning. With a local Carmenere (or Malbec in Argentina) it's absolutely delicious, quick, and easy. Tri-tip is also great for stir-fries or any dish where thin strips grilled or fried quickly is needed. Has the additional advantage of being considerably less expensive than NY strip or rib steaks. Better than flank or flat iron steaks, in my opinion.
My favorite steak is the Delmonico
Tri tip makes the best roast
Tri tip is prob my favorite too. I generally cook it like a roast in the oven though. Low and slow till it's a nice med-rare. I'll let it rest and slice it tableside for people.
I really enjoy tri-tip as well. I found them in Costco of all places but had no idea what it was. After a little internet research, I was able to prepare and cook it into a delightfully tasty dish. Unfortunately, that Costco location stopped carrying them.
A cut that's often overlooked is the tri-tip, from the shoulder area. It can be tough & stringy, so maybe the best way to cook it would be slow roasting in an inch of water. It's actually got some of the sweetest, tastiest meat on the whole steer, though.
Tri tips
Are from the rear quarter not from the front quarter or Chuck
Cut it against the grain.
My grandfather owned a traditional Portuguese stakehouse in madeira and I would help out when younger. There's no such thing as bad cuts only bad ways of preparing and cooking them.
i understand. this is why the video is about "Steak" not stew. A steak is marinaded and then seared on a grilll.
@@jimbrown571 The best cuts of steak most certainly are NOT marinated.
When we first got married 30 years ago, my wife and I always bought top sirloin when we wanted a steak because it was always so delicious and cheap and we did not have much money to spend. Later, we graduated to beef tenderloin on the holidays at the end of the year when it would sell for $4.99/pound at the local grocery stores. Those days are long gone . . .
Now we look for sales where ribeye is somewhere near $4-5/pound and then we buy a lot of them and put them in our freezer in a vacuum sealer bag for later use. Amazing how expensive everything has become . . .
Lucky to find even strip steak for under $10, tenderloin was more like $40 a pound and now probably $50 at a grocery but I do not use groceries for meat.
Nothing better than a Rib-eye ,grilled with salad and baked potato .
Cut about two inches thick slowly cooked over pecan with a side of spaghetti is my favorite combination.
A garlic lemon butter lobster tail right next to that Rib-eye,oh man and don’t forget a good wine or beer that’s totally up to you.
@Blue 30's you talking about the cut of ribeye called a tomahawk?
I agree!!!!
@@edsalinas9996 thank you, your reply made my day. 😄
Picanha is the best kind of steak. Also, honor it! ONLY season it with coarse salt. And sear it on open fire. I am lucky enough to have had Australian Wagyu MBS 9 picanha it is just out of this world. Waves of flavor release in your mouth after every chew. I also had A5 Mayazaki Picanha which was just too overwhelming with flavor.
This sounds equally delicious and pricey
@@ripdajacker23 lucky for me I get a crazy deal for the Australian picanha. I get the whole picanha for only $100 but they usually go for around $180. The A5 picanha was $130 per pound. Again, that was more of an experience I don’t think I’ll do that again for a while the flavor is too overwhelming and you get tired of it by having just a few ounces.
@@Joshfuentes77 dude that’s almost half off, you’re lucky indeed!! Cheers
@@ripdajacker23 if you live anywhere L.A. go to Amboy burger in chinatown they’ll hook you up.
@@Joshfuentes77 I’m in NorCal so not far at all. Thanks for the info
Porterhouse all the way.
Ribeye is everything. 🥰🥰🥰
Porterhouse then t bone. Chuckeye center cut steaks are good too. The flavor is delicious but a bit tougher than ribeye.
Heck ya!!!
yeah i love the chuck eye also
Chuck eye is my go-to cut! All the flavor of rib eye at about half the price. I'd take a chuck eye over a strip or tenderloin any day.
When they break a front quarter there are three ribeyes left in the front half or chuck half those are called Chuck eyes
@@henryperez3559 before the latest ransomware "shortage" our local store had super chuck-eye for $5.99.
Great vid Mashed! I agree 100% on Ribeye being #1. Porterhouse and T-bone are great steaks, but it should be illegal to charge so much for a steak with a bone in it.
All my life I never ate steak. I recently discovered ribeye. Best steak ever 🤯
Proud of you Jon
Try a rib cap if you get the chance to. It’s the most tender steak I’ve ever had.
Just curious if your an American, that’s like saying you tried chicken just recently living in the US lol. I try to eat steak atleast 3-5 nights a month but kinda pricey, a 1.5lb ribeye could cost 25-35 dollars each cooking at home.
@@Max_Krypto seriously I just never liked steak until I recently had a ribeye at a Lonestar. Amazing
Might have to try it. I recently discovered steak again myself. haven’t had it in years and years. Got some tenderloin, cooked to rare with some rosemary and garlic in butter, goooooddammmmmnnnnn 🤤🤤🤤
Tenderloin, Sous Vide to 130 degrees, then quickly seared on the grill. Perfect every time.
I challenged myself after watching this and purchased a top round steak. Marinated it for 3 hours, cooked slow and sliced thin. Amazing.
Now go cook a Ribeye and get back to us.
As a young butcher in my father's well-respected shop in Chicago, I used to favor the boneless NY Strip-- thick, tender and flavorful. Far superior to a Filet Mignon (to me, the choice of an uninformed consumer who'll never get their $$'s worth). Skirt Steaks -- when prepared pink inside -- are always fabulous for breakfast, with eggs & hash browns! Then, as I matured, I compared the NY Strip to a well-prepared Ribeye of equal grade & thickness... and a new champion was crowned! Now this ex-butcher seeks out a pack of those thick boneless Prime Ribeyes at his nearby Costco on a semi-regular basis for family cook-outs. They're such a treat on special occassions!
I disagree. Ribeyes are too soft for me and have way too many globs of separate fat. A prime strip has much better chew and flavor because the fat is marbled in perfectly with the flesh - no separate huge pockets of blubber that a ribeye contains. And the blubber of ribeye is also soft and of little flavor. The edge of fat on a strip on the other hand is full of flavor, is firmer, crisps up and pops in your mouth exploding with flavor.
Prime filet requires a basic knowledge of how to cook it for the best flavor, juice and tenderness. Most will stick to ribeye instead. It's OK, too but I only eat prime filet for over 30 years because I learned how to grill it. Occasionally, Porterhouse.
@@lawrence5039 First “Prime filet” isn’t an accurate meat term. 2nd why on earth would your second choice be Porterhouse that contains 2 totally different muscles that can’t possibly be cooked correctly together? Filet mignon (or the small end of the tenderloin) is the least flavored cut of muscle. And the most tender. I like it once in a while. There’s no secret to cooking it. Get a nice sear on the outside and NEVER cook the center beyond medium rare - bias the very center towards rare. And because it is low in flavor serve it with a nice Demi-glacé based sauce if you like. I prefer the chew and much deeper flavor of a prime NY strip.
Once a butcher always a butcher! I have the same feelings, also a former butcher (still slaughter and process for friends).
@@maxwellmortimermontoure7274 Wouldn't you say the tomahawk is #1 since the bone gives the ribeye extra flavor?
I wish they had done more with the New York strip my absolute favorite. Yeah I know this supposedly better strips but not for me it has just the right texture!
K.C. Strip.
Strip steak goes on sale in my area at sometimes lower than half the price of other good cuts, both w/ and w/o the bone. In this case it can be a bargain and a great choice, often being the same price or lower than top round. Love top sirloin! I'll take a t-bone or porterhouse any time. Flat iron and hanger used to be cheap, but not so now, but they still are excellent. Even a choice ribeye can be awesome! Look them over carefully, some will be a lot closer to prime in marbling than others.
Would reverse sear work well on a top sirloin since I do not have a sous vide machine?
@@JLilliquist Yes. Even though it is not everybody's favorite, I am a big fan of top sirloin. I've done reverse sear on this cut many times and it works very well. You wan't a thicker cut to get a good medium rare. For thin cuts I just sear alone.
@@bronovalter391 Thanks, I am always confusing cuts, like top vs bottom or tip, top is usually tender but may be high or low in fat. I got some frozen rib waiting, I usually do a cheaper cut first to get my "groove" back then cook it.
I've been spoiled growing up as a French immigrant in Australia.
Tomahawk
Rib Eye
T-Bone
Scotch Fillet
Fillet
Sirloin
Skirt
I've tried it all but I have to say that despite all the steaks I've tried Bavette (from the upper part of the Flank) was the best.
....Although having a Chateaubriand for two to myself in Paris was right up there for my best
....it was the first time I ever enjoyed Paris as i usually couldn't get out of there fast enough.
AND GRASS FED ALWAYS ALWAYS ALWAYS is the best.
GRASS FED LOL THE DRYEST MEAT EVER LOL. NO THANK YOU. PASS HARD PASS
@@minibuns5397 Most beef is grass fed and then grain finished. The bison steaks I buy are grass fed and so juicy that I prefer to eat them raw.
@@RayleighCriterion you do you man, just be careful
Thank you for being a man.
Tomahawk is one ridiculous looking cut.
Flat Iron is VERY underated😔 such a good piece of beef without being expensive
Best steak I ever had was a rib eye steak cooked at a huge franchise and where I wince at the thought, this thing was magnificent, it was cooked to perfection, it was juicy, moist, the flavour was unreal, and it was damn good to the point I asked to meet the chef who prepared it, upon which I tipped him £20 and tapped him on the shoulder telling him it was the best I ever had. His smile was ear to ear as he turned to walk back to the kitchen.
I hope I instilled an appreciation of his work that day because 15 years later I still haven't enjoyed a steak like that.
It is pretty hard to mess up any cut of rib.
Where was this, London Broil?...
That was a good video I learned a lot. My favorite is whatever is on sale. Next is the T-bone
You forgot the RIB STEAK which is NOT the ribeye but the ribeye + cap+ the Bone, it is
my #1
What about the standing rib?
Would a Hanger steak do well in a crock pot. If so, how long should it be cooked in the crock pot?
Yes but it depends on how you like your steak .
Although I don't totally agree with the order of the rankin, I would like to remind you that you forgot a wonderful cut that comes from Chuck, which is the Denver Steak. Extremely tender, juicy and tasty. Perfect for grilling.
Half as good as the Chuck Eye steak from the same area!
@@mynameisgladiator1933 Just found the chuck eye OMG that was some tender steak .
@@smooveb191 My favorite! It's basically a Ribeye steak - on the same muscle but too high up to be sold as Ribeye. So it's way cheaper too!
My favorite steak, bats waaaaayyyyyyy higher than it's cost would tell you it would, an unknown gem
Denver is the same as Flatiron. It's like Delmonico and Ribeye, same cut, two names.
It’s a lot of popularity contest supply and demand with prices but depends what your actual using the cut for. It’s really preference for how you cook
Just started a job running my first steakhouse. This is very helpful. 👏🏽
Best of luck to you!!
Good luck in your new job. 🥰
Best of luck!!! What they said about skirt isn't very fair though. A good cook with a cook piece of skirt can transform it into an amazing steak
Best of luck on your job, but please do not take this bullshit video as the Bible truth!
Learn how to age meat that will really help on tenderness
Picanha or rump cap ( which you dont even show) is a superb steak. Great flavour and nicely tender
Was hoping someone would mention picanha. Yummo!!
She almost showed it with that top butt sirloin lol. I always separate the culotte (picanha) from the top but trim the fat off and turn it into the best cabob meat ever!!
Skirt steak, flank steak, and flap steak are my favorites. If you can prepare, cook, and cut these properly they are incredible.
Yes, those traditional fajita steaks are all great, even as stand alone steaks. She ranks those too low along with the NY strip.
In the end it's a personal choice what cut is an individual's favorite. And that is what makes the world beautiful, different strokes for different folks. For my taste in steaks, I agree with your list. If you know how to season, grill and cut your meats you can make any of those cuts taste great.
well , Remember the definition of Sociology. Its about numbers and "Standard Deviations " and Normals...68.3% agree, that is 1 Standard Deviation.
Absolutely the best cut is the Flat Iron steak...Great on the stove or the grill and cooked to medium rare... it has nice marbling with the flavor of a Ribeye and the texture of a tenderloin.
Yeah right. It has flavor and that is it.
@@richwilson7619 flat iron is amazing and not only for the flavor alone. So wtf are you smoking ?
Flank or skirt steak work very well if you use a Mexican-style marinade with lime juice or red wine vinegar, garlic, salt and pepper, and olive oil...give it 24 hours to marinate, then take it out, let it warm up to room temperature, then slap it on a very hot grill, griddle, or suitably large pan, and sear it just long enough over high, very smoky heat to get a crust on it, about 2 minutes a side. Remove, let it rest, then slice across the grain. Makes fantastic tacos.
Excellent post Patrick.
I would add for the autentico Nuevo Leon flavor, a spritz of lime juice to the meat, and a pinch of salt. Dip the taco into some homemade salsita colorada and munch on down. OMG, such delicious flavors. Drink: either cerveza Bohemia, or a Hi-ball of Brandy Presidente.
My favorite steak is a thick cut NY strip around 1 pound before cooking. I'm not a fan of overly fatty steaks like some ribeyes.
Try a flat iron steak
Many long years ago (I'm 70, so MANY!), I thought I hated steak. It turned out that in my family, steak was really over-cooked. Years later, well away from home, my spouse and I bought something called "skirt steak". Back then, it was a strip of steak about 1" or so wide, curled around itself and skewered. Kind of looked like a cinnamon roll. IMPOSSIBLE to cook to anything more than medium [and that would have a crusty crust]. And that's when I discovered that steak ACTUALLY HAD FLAVOR!! It WASN'T shoe leather! I'm a rib-eye fan.
you need to put a lot more effort into the leaner cuts to make them taste good...
Go Hawks!!
Flat iron steaks are unpredictable: they can often have an under-taste similar to liver.
I never understood the attraction of tenderloin. It's got great mouth-feel but almost no flavor.
If I'm pan-searing (usually reverse-searing), give me a ribeye. If I'm grilling, it's flank or skirt sliced thin. I never eat steak in restaurants. Why pay that kind of money for something I could easily prepare as well, if not better at home? When dining-out, I always look to order dishes I don't (or can't) make at home.
I don't understand the obsession with tenderloin, either. I think it's the name, and/or the price. I really don't prefer the "mouthfeel" either, the fine grain makes it feels incredibly dense to me and makes me feel weird. Lol
@@Myusernameistakenwtf "I think it's the name, and/or the price."
I feel the same way about T-bone. Most overrated steak on the planet IMO.
The tenderloin has little to no beef flavour, however is the most tender steak on a cow. Ribeye on the other hand, not the most tender but it does contain a lot of beef flavour. The muscle fibers on the ribeye are much larger hence not making it the most tender to eat. Flat iron is a combination of both (at least what I've been hearing and also tasted myself). You sure you're not getting mixed up with the scotch tender? After all, the scotch tender is the steak that sits right beside the flat iron on a cow, separated by a thin line of silver skin and can have contrasting texture and flavour with the flat iron.
I eat quality steak when I find it in restaurants as beef is my favourite meat and I can't afford to buy mountain-raised rare cattle dry-aged and specially-cooked beef every day. I like to cook but a steak for me is something they either make to the description on the menu or not. It's a safe bet for enjoyment.
True, its very easy to buy good quality meat and make your own steak for $20, and it'll very likely be as good or even better than most restaurants where you pay $50
Beef Tenderloin, marinated in a 3:1 red wine:teriyaki mixture for at least 4 hours. Grilled, served with FRESHLY sauteed mushrooms, onions, red peppers and a salad. Serve with some cabernet or merlot and it's a dinner.
I'd rather just have steak. But I suppose you need to do something to make up for the lack of beef flavor.
@@nathanwahl9224 The tenderloin has the most beef flavor of any cut. I don't get all these people saying ribeye is the best. I love a ribeye but a lot of taste comes from fat. That's OK if you like fat but I like the taste of beef and the tenderloin has it more than the ribeye. Beef vs. fat.
Is that similar to Chateau Bryant. That is good .
Why did they leave off the Chuck Eye - Delmonico steak. If simply seasoned, pan seared and kissed with real fire, it will hold its own to the finest steaks. They are not called poor man's ribeye for nothing.
I love chuck eyes. You are absolutely right, they’re very close to a rib eye without the high price tag. Fantastic on a charcoal grill!
it's almost all i buy but beware of fat and grissle as not all chuck eye's are good cuts...
Center cut chuck eye is very tender and flavorful. The butcher told me it was the top of the ribeye
Not easy for most to find, as it depends how the cow was butchered (obviously). Not all butchers will cut chuck steaks as there tends to be strong demand for chuck roasts. If you use the best part for steak you lose the best part of the roast, and so it depends what the butcher's customers are looking for.
And, where I live, the Chuck-eye is 1/3 the cost of the Rib-eye!
I had a dry aged ribeye last week. Couldn't believe steak could be that good.
There is no bad steak just bad people that think they can cook ! Each cut requirements are different in how you cook it. High heat is not always the best way to go. Low and slow works get on cowboy cut do not constantly flip wait till you get a good crust on bottom blood is rising up the top no forks then flip leave it alone no Benny Hana other than flare up to prevent turning into charcoal. I've done 3" well done as soft as chocolate cake. Use lime juice as a marinade the acid from citrus will help break down the fibers. Everyone wants it now it takes time to cook it right. Short ribs are great but takes 4-5 hour's in a dutch oven at 275* otherwise you can give them to David to slay Goliath. Patience and practice
Ribeye, Picanha, Chuck roast (burnt ends), beef short ribs, cow tongue, flank steaks, tenderloin, etc.... if you know how to cook it, ANY cut of beef is great.
Ribeye medium rare is the oreference of every butcher and chef i've known
We were poor growing up but my dad would cook sirloin on a grill he made from an old wagon, better than any filet or t bone I can get at a steak house.
Yeah, sirloin to me is the best cheap steak.
the skirt steak is actually good when cooked medium. A rare/MR skirt steak is tough to chew, but much easier when cooked medium
Cutting against the grain is probably the most important thing to do when working with skirt steak.
My steaks usually have whip marks from where the jockey was beating it. But seriously, you left out London Broil, also known as a top round steak. (you did mention top round but said they were terrible. Not True!) I get these all the time and they are about 3" thick and 3-4 pounds and very economical and...delicious. Marinate overnight, toss on the grill and slice it on an angle and you have a very tender and delicious cut of meat. I prefer it to ribeye, T-bone, strip steak or even filet mignon which is too expensive to even think about. I just cooked a 3 pounder last week and it cost me $10.00 and it was perfect and delicious. I slice the leftovers thin for sandwiches on rye bread with mustard or, dice and use over rice with gravy. Excellent.
What do you use the marinate the top round also I’ve been wondering is there a difference in flavor between a propane and charcoal
@@vexs4883 There's a HUGE difference in flavor between propane and charcoal. It's a little less obvious on a steak that you cook right over the flame, usually fairly briefly, but with things that take a little while to cook it becomes VERY obvious. Barbeque whole turkey or chicken, or ribs, or a thick steak cut like a tri-tip roast ... night and day. I can't stand London Broil, for the record. Nothing you do to it makes it good other than soaking it in so much marinade that's all you taste. Tough, and flavorless cut. MHO.
I slice these raw and marinate the strips in a garlic-soy concoction overnight. Zig-zag the slices onto bamboo skewers and grill. Mighty good.
Absolutely. I'll place the slices on top of thin white buttered toast pieces, like Dad did. Mmmmmmm
I’m 64. My depression era mother was raised to overcook everything. The rational being if you didn’t overwork everything you died of food poisoning. It was taught in school Home Economics classes.
Yes, the "cuts" of meat are important, but there are different qualities of meat within the cuts. There is "grade" i.e. select, choice, and prime. After that its the feed and environment in which the cattle was raised. There's the bread. There the age. A choice cut could be way better than a prime cut if the cattle were fed better and had less stress.
Definitely the most important thing. I will not even waste my time on a Select grade steak. Just disappointing
@@drewgrows7765 That depends, a "select" steak from a really good farm and breed may be better than a "prime" steak from an industrial farm.
The beef I buy is pasture raised so it tends to be marbled but leaner so it take more care to cook correctly. It is aged 20 days.
I find filet minion lately to have a chalky , liver texture! I always blamed the use of meat tenderizer!
Thoughts?
It seems like it was too dry. Maybe it was marinated too long, or too much of the juices leached out of it. Typically, nobody ever has to inject that cut with a solution to make it tender.
Ribeye or porterhouse period if your gonna order a NY strip or filet mignon you might as well order a porterhouse and a ribeye is just the quintessential steak eating steak!!
How is chuck eye not on this list?!? Chuck eye is by far the best budget steak you can get. By far.
I know some people like the brown eye stank
@@lewdecker1442 or the brown eyed winkie
I call it the poor man's ribeye.... It is absolutely delicious.
and i get them all day for 5 or 6 bucks a pound !!!
As an argentine asado afficionado, I find that americans don't appreciate some of the best cuts of meat. Skirt Steak (falda) and flank steak (entrana) are some of my favorite asado cuts.
I had flatiron steak the day before yesterday. It's so succulent and flavorful, the best beef I've ever eaten other than prime rib.
There is no such thing as a bad cut of steak. Its all great.
One only has to know how to cook
@@rickwilliams967 Therein lies the rub. Pardon the pun.
Skirt steak is Fajitas, come to Texas and we will show you how good this cut of beef can be
Oh hell yes my fellow Texan my step dad makes the best fajitas on both sides of the pecos
I was thinking the same thing..Fajitas !
My favourite has been ribeye for as long as I can remember - until I recently had flat iron with teriyaki sauce. Unbelievable!
Dude I just had a prime ribeye and I almost cried because of how good it was
@@anvg2902 I unwittingly had a _choice_ ribeye. I almost cried because of how mediocre it was (and how expensive!).
I love ribeyes with teriyaki. Yummy 🤤
This video taught me that Europeans don't know shlt about steak lol
Pls do not generalise.
Please keep generalizing
Europeans apparently can't cook.
@@thatsameenergy Them you might have never been to Europe. 90% of American Food is european.
@@Niko_from_Kepler no its not lol. clam chowder, collard greens, bbq ribs, okra, brisket, etc.
the only real eurpoean foods that are now considered american are pizza and french fries
The tenderness of the steak and flavor of the steak will aaaalways be with the skill of the person cooking it. Just because you have filet mignon doesn’t mean it will taste good.
Porterhouse also has the entire strip attached a tbone does not.
T-bone has no tenderloin, porterhouse does..... So agree video is wrong ,was a butcher for many years
I Agee but most people think there buying a porterhouse when really there buying a tbone I see it in stores all the time and this video is so messed up and just wrong
Porter houses in T-bones both have the entire New York strip
T-bones have a tenderloin but just much less of it
The tenderloin winds of having a little tail that disappears that little tail is on the T-bone
When the tenderloin disappears all together the ribeye begins
In the 80's when I was a kid there was a restaurant where you picked out your steaks and grilled it yourself over a huge grill in the middle. Good times...
UR Cooks??? Went there a number of times and always had them cook it for me, came out great every time. I don't know how many times I saw my buddies ruin their steaks trying to cook it themselves on an unfamiliar grill.
Calling Skirt steak average is a good way (Just like Chuck) of knowing a talker from a doer.
Agreed, it is my favorite.
When I was A Butcher there was A Steak called the Pinbone. It was the last cut just before the round. Part T Bone and a big piece of the cows pelvis. It was always sold at A lower price. Normally 2 steaks per cow.
Skirt steak and flank steak are amazing if you know how to prepare it and cut against the grain thin so good
Trash can steak 🗑 🥩
My favorite is the strip, the only reason it is above the ribeye is because it is not as fatty and gristley. I was not a fan of tenderloin, it was honestly too soft and had a weird texture. Tritip and skirt are also very good
You must be on a budget.
Strip is the best cut imo. Most flavorful due to marbling and not all that tough at all.
My experience with steaks is often the cut is less important than the seasoning and cooking. A low quality cut of steak can be very tasty, juicy and tender when property prepared, and a high quality cut of steak can be terrible when improperly prepared.
Agreed I personally never spend over six bucks a pound and can make any steak tender. A good cook can make so you won't even know it is low quality.
some prioritize more lean cuts,
so in that sense the cut does matter.
Yeah but a well cooked ribeye is gonna be way better then a well cooked flank
@@MistaTofMaine oh well you’re missing out buddy
A good comparison of cuts of beef.
Obviously opinions vary but i like your explanations as they are fundamentally sound.
Jamie Oliver says that the flatiron steak is his favourite and I agree. Unfortunately, it has become very difficult to find in Canada.
GREAT EDUCATIONAL VIDEO! LOVED IT! THANK YOU!
Chuck Eye is hands down the best in terms of taste and cost. It tastes better than a ribeye and is no more than half the price
I agree.
Eating my fast food burger, any of these cuts looks 5 star restaurant quality to me.
Good info in this video! 👍
Subbed!!
Flat Iron steak is an EXCELLENT substitute for skirt steak when used in Fajitas. I prefer a Porterhouse over a Ribeye.
I just bought a skirt steak and 4 bacon wrapped filets.
I'm making skirt steak tacos tomorrow. Cooked rare. That's the only way I eat steaks.
Ribeye or bust. The rest of the cuts are either less flavorful, or tougher, or both. (Not including hangar since it's so hard to find) Also, it tends to be cheaper than porterhouse and tbone.
I agree. IMHO It is Ribeye or nothing for .me
Ribeye is just the perfect go-to steak. The true answer to the "best" quality steak is obviously tenderloin, but the best overall is almost always ribeye.
Yup the important part is how big the cap portion is , every bit as tender as a filet but packed with flavor from the fat that attaches it to the rest of the steak. Ive never seen it but I heard some places you can buy just the cap.
It's not my favorite, and I'll tell you why. That cut is so tender, so full of flavor, so full of potential, grilling it as a steak seems like a crime. Because I know how it could have tasted, if I just was able to get that cut as a roast, so I could slow cook it. We lose so much of its flavor and texture cooking it on a grill or in a pan.
Ribeye Cap, Ribeye, NY strip, Top Sirloin.
I'm surprised there was no talk of the grade of meat. Prime vs. Choice, for example. Most supers sell choice. You can get Prime at Costco and butchers. Better marbling. My favorite is a Prime cut m1.5 inch New York strip.
Prime makes a HUGE difference. Choice is good. But Prime is...well, Prime.
You are exactly correct. Huge difference between Prime and Choice. Prime is all there is for me. After that I will just as soon have a great hamburger :-)
Walmart has started to sell some Prime also. Got a Prime Rib Eye the other night.. Cooked medium rare leaning more towards rare with butter and thyme, and it was heavenly.
Where are they getting their information about pricing? At my local grocery store, a choice NY Strip is fairly inexpensive, while a choice hanger is almost as much as filet/tenderloin.
All cuts are delicious if cooked correctly. This video is more about which is the easiest to prepare. Ribeye or New York Strip are my personal favorites. Easy to cook, tasty to eat.
I like every cut of steak because my favorite meat is steak
Also my favorite cook for them is rare (I don’t think anyone else likes rare)
The rarer the BETTER!
I prefer Medium Rare but my 2nd would be Rare.
@@quincee3376 Medium Rare is good...but not cooked past that.
I consider just "rare" well-done.
@@chriss1757 👍
Ribeye with that little tip of pure fat trimmed off, marinated in pure Jack Danials Sour Mash Whiskey for at least 3 hours, and fast grilled @650° for no more than 3 minutes per side is beyond any shadow of doubt the the best steak. You can have your old fashioned t-bone or porterhouse steaks. The combination of tenderness and flavor makes Ribeye superior. That being said, I'll still take a thick cut juicy Pork Chop over any steak, fried in butter in a cast iron skillet though.
Way to ruin a steak…
@@TetaPehta03 Ruins JD too
New York strip cooked medium with sauteed mushrooms is my favorite.
I prepared some crispy onion strips and a little bit of compound butter
Cant believe the put the ny strip so low.
Will have to admit, this was very educational. Pinned as a favorite and will come back. Car hop trays from amazon.
i noticed they didn't mention rump steak or fillet steak two popular steaks here in new zealand. the fillet is one of the most expensive steaks to buy. size wise the fillet is small and the rump can fill a large plate.
Bone-in rib eye, the best. Meat for me, bone for the dog.
Cooked bone is dangerous for your dog (choking hazard from breakage). Dogs need raw bone only.
That's rib steak, ribeye is always boneless.
@@RayleighCriterion Interchangeable terms
As a rancher and lover of beef I must strenuously disagree with this ranking!
Exactly Sir! A5 Kobe Dry Aged only for us. The rest of it can go into dog food or the compost pile!!!
its not kobe that you were showing that was "Japanese A5 Olive Oil Wagyu" the best cuts of steak you can get.
If you like chewy and fat. The melt in your mouth is fat.
Wagyu is a watered down American cross of Kobe with Black Angus cattle. This breed is owned primarily by Snake River Farms. Pure Kobe cows live in Japan. Sorry to correct you. Have a good day.
Good to know that my decision in getting top sirloin when I buy steak makes sense. Lean, affordable and tasty. Can’t go wrong with that one.
Eye round makes a good roast beef
It makes good beef jerky and that’s its only use!!
Hanger steaks are underrated!
They are the part of the cow that goes into dog food.
@@minibuns5397 what a waste of good meat . No wonder Mel Gibson tore up the dog food in mad max . The original.
We should start a petition to rename "well done" to "fully cooked" because there's nothing well done about a "well done" steak...
Agreed... PURE LIES!!
How about calling it what it is... Burnt! Anything more than Medium Rare to Medium is a sin against the steak.
@username 60fps You're right dude. Some people just like overcooked meat.
well done = dry rubber with a beefy taste
@@NickDunner leather, lol
There’s no worst cut of steak. Only the worst cook. Honor the cow by appreciating every part of it and making sure nothing goes to waste. Any part of meat can taste outstanding as long as you know how to cook it.
Rarely am I happy with the decisions for these top “ “. But this was an exception. Ribeye is the best!