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ShutterstockSteakhouses are an all-American restaurant genre typified by the notion that bigger equals better. In some cases, like with tomahawk chops, that's true. But even at a steakhouse where ...
Two men take the steak challenge on April 6, 2008. The Big Texan is best known for its 72 ounce (4.5 pounds or 2.04 kg) steak.The steak is free to anyone who, in one hour or less, can eat the entire meal, consisting of the steak itself, a bread roll with butter, a baked potato, shrimp cocktail, and a side salad; otherwise, the meal costs $72. [3]
T-bone steaks are cut closer to the front, and contain a smaller section of tenderloin. The smaller portion of a T-bone, when sold alone, is known as a filet mignon (called fillet steak in Commonwealth countries and Ireland), especially if cut from the small forward end of the tenderloin.
[6] [failed verification] It is known as petite tender medallion, petite tender [9] or tender medallions if sliced into medallions (after being roasted or grilled whole). [8] [10] It is shaped like a pork tenderloin, [10] and weighs 8 to 10 ounces (230 to 280 g). [8]
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A beef tenderloin (US English), known as an eye fillet in Australasia, nautalund in Iceland, filetto in Italy, filet in France, filet mignon in Brazil, and fillet in the United Kingdom and South Africa, [1] is cut from the loin of beef.
Top sirloin steak, topped with an onion ring.. Top sirloin is a cut of beef from the primal loin or subprimal sirloin. Top sirloin steaks differ from sirloin steaks in that the bone and the tenderloin and bottom round muscles have been removed; the remaining major muscles are the gluteus medius and biceps femoris (top sirloin cap steak).
Filet mignon (pork) cooking in a pan. In France, the term filet mignon refers to pork. The cut of beef referred to as filet mignon in the United States has various names across the rest of Europe; e.g., filet de bœuf in French and filet pur in Belgium, fillet steak in the UK, Filetsteak in German, solomillo in Spanish (filet in Catalan), lombo in Portuguese, filee steik in Estonian, and ...