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  2. Rib eye steak - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rib_eye_steak

    In French Canada, mainly the province of Québec, it is called "Faux filet" (literally: "wrong" or "fake" fillet). In Austria the same cut is known as "Rostbraten", it is usually cut thinner at 0,5-1 cm. On the West Coast of the United States, a boneless rib eye steak is sometimes called a "Spencer steak". [3]

  3. Entrecôte - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Entrecôte

    Location of ribs and the entrecôte. Entrecôte (French pronunciation: [ɑ̃.tʁə.kot]) is a French term for a premium cut of beef used for steaks and roasts. A traditional entrecôte is a boneless cut from the rib area [1] [2] corresponding to the steaks known in different parts of the English-speaking world as rib, rib eye, Scotch fillet, club, or Delmonico.

  4. Cut of beef - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cut_of_beef

    The following is a list of the American primal cuts, and cuts derived from them. Beef carcasses are split along the axis of symmetry into "halves", then across into front and back "quarters" (forequarters and hindquarters). Canada uses identical cut names (and numbering) as the US, with the exception of the "round" which is called the "hip". [1]

  5. Rib steak - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rib_steak

    The rib steak is known as ancho de bife for the entire cut, served with or without the bone, and ojo de bife for the rib eye. In Spanish cuisine, in Spain, a bone-attached rib steak is called chuletón, while the same cut of meat, when its bone is removed, is called, in Spain, entrecote, a word originated in the French entrecôte.

  6. Beef tenderloin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beef_tenderloin

    The tenderloin is an oblong shape spanning two primal cuts: the short loin (called the sirloin in Commonwealth countries) and the sirloin (called the rump in Commonwealth countries). [3] The tenderloin sits beneath the ribs, next to the backbone. It has two ends: the butt and the "tail".

  7. Popeseye steak - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Popeseye_steak

    One first begins with a cut of rump steak. Then, thinly slice the rump steak across the widest face of the rump steak (shown as the top of the steak in the illustration). Slice width varies; one Scotch Beef butcher sells slices that "typically weigh around 6oz" [ 2 ] each.

  8. Carpetbag steak - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carpetbag_steak

    It consists of an end cut of steak, such as scotch fillet or eye fillet. A pocket is cut in the meat via a small entry cut and then expanded internally, into which oysters are stuffed, and the opening closed with toothpicks or thread. As the dish is grilled, the flavour of the fresh oysters permeates the steak and blends with the juice of the ...

  9. Tri-tip - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tri-tip

    The cut was known in the United States as early as 1915, called "the triangle part" of the loin butt. [4] Rondo (Ron) Brough, a butcher for the US Army during World War II working in Southern California, claimed that he created the "triangle tip" cut as a way to gain an extra portion of meat for the troops by reorienting nearby cuts and ...