
The beef
industry is promoting single muscles in the chuck and round
that are as tender as ribeye

By
Cindy Green
There is a beauty in the beast. One of the toughest cuts of
meat — the chuck— contains one of the most tender — the flat
iron. The national beef industry is promoting certain muscle
cuts from the chuck and round that produce tender, flavorful
steaks. “The second most tender cut in the carcass sells for
about half the price of ribeye,” says Clint Gehrke, AURI
meat technologist.
National Cattlemen’s Beef Association check-off funded
research at the University of Florida and University of
Nebraska analyzed 39 individual muscles from the chuck and
round. Tests showed several were tender enough to be sold as
steaks, rather than as ground beef or arm and shoulder
roasts.
Flat iron, ranch cut, shoulder tender, petite medallion, top
blade and ball tip are some of the new “beef value cuts”
showing up in meat cases as low-cost alternatives to
tenderloin, ribeye and New York strip.
Educating
meat eaters
Many butchers and most consumers haven’t heard of the new
value cuts, keeping the price low. “I bought a USDA Select
top blade and a USDA Choice ribeye. I gave them to my family
and asked them to guess which cost $3 a pound and which cost
$6 — they all got it wrong. I feel there needs to be some
more educational efforts,” so the beef industry can realize
the full value of the little-known cuts,
Gehrke says.
“If
I say a steak has a tenderness rating of 5.5, that doesn’t
mean anything to anybody. But if I told you it was more
tender than ribeye at half the cost, you would pay
attention.”
Carving out
quality
Jim Slavik, who has 40 years meat cutting
experience, the past 10 at Cub Foods in Stillwater, Minn.,
says the “new” value cuts aren’t new. “They’ve been in
restaurants for years.” But it’s a new trend in retail meat
to “take each muscle and turn it into a cut of beef.”
The flat iron “is the top muscle out of a chuck. It’s a
lesser-quality muscle, but it’s good if it’s prepared right.
You just can’t overcook it … it’s better on the pink side.”
The flat iron is about a six-inch long narrow cut. A tough
connective tissue that runs through the filet has to be
removed, so the flat iron is often butterflied or cut into
smaller pieces, called “petite medallions.” Some cooks wrap
the medallions in bacon and grill them like tenderloins.
Because it’s chuck, there is very little marbling in the
meat, “but it has a lot of flavor because it comes from the
shoulder. You don’t get that flavor in a tenderloin,” from
behind the rib where it “doesn’t get any work, so it doesn’t
have a real beefy flavor.”
Tender tests
Beef council research compared the tenderness
of individual muscles to the primal cuts they originate
from. Gehrke wants to take the analysis a step further to
compare the tenderness of the new value cuts with
traditional steaks. He plans to complete his analysis by the
end of the year and design educational posters for consumers
and meat cutters.
Gehrke will test 18 or 19 muscles that will be cooked to 160
degrees and cooled down. Then a coring device will cut six
samples from each muscle. The testing machine’s quarter-inch
steel plates will hit the samples to see how much force it
takes to split the muscle fiber.
“After I run a mechanical test on all the different cuts …
we’ll have five new or unknown steaks that will rank fairly
high,” Gehrke says. “Nothing will outrank tenderloin for
tenderness.” But he expects the second ranking cut will be
top blade or flat iron. “Lonestar Steak House is already
selling these for the price of ribeye. But the Marshall
Hy-Vee sells the flat iron for only $3.19 a pound.”
Retail debut
Customers are starting to get a taste for the
value cuts, but appearance may be a problem. Petite
tenderloins, for example, are dense and deep red, with
little marbeling. Consumers may be wary that they will cook
up as juicy and tender as a well-marbled ribeye or Tbone.
Cub
Foods started selling tender shoulder cuts last fall and
buys the flat irons “in bulk so we can work with them more,
package them ourselves. … When Cub cooks samples, customers
like them and come back and buy them,” Slavik says.
“At 3.99 a pound, they’re a real good value. The problem is,
will they stay a good value,” when more consumers realize
what a great steak they can get for much less.
That’s what the beef industry is counting on.