Budget Cuts Of Meat Information Recipe
- Budget cuts of meat can be rich in flavor
- In the more flush times of the great bull market, who worried about cheap cuts of meat
- If your family wanted meat, you would serve them steak or possibly roasts or possibly chops, expensive cuts which are easy to prepare.
- Oh sure, every once in a while you might slip in a pot roast or possibly lamb shank, but more for variety than to shave a few bucks off the grocery bill.
- Guess what The economy isn't so rosy anymore and many of us are on a budget.
- Which means if you still want to serve red meat to your family, you'll need to learn more about budget cuts.
- Nowadays, enterprising chefs have made many a cheap cut an endangered species as hard to find as a bull market.
- Lamb shanks, short ribs, hanger steaks and oxtails used to be cheap before chefs realized how deliciously they could be prepared when slowly braised with various savory sauces.
- The rules of supply and demand have pushed the prices up from what used to cost $2 to $3 per lb.
- to $4 to $5 per lb..
- The clever budget-minded cook needs to stay ahead of the trend and identify underutilized and underappreciated cuts.
- In general, cheaper cuts of meat tend to be tougher, fattier and have more bones.
- But they often produce really delicious dishes when properly cooked.
- Pork yields several cuts under-appreciated by a good many people.
- Fresh pork belly (uncured bacon) is particularly wonderful when cooked in a moist sauce till soft and tender.
- But for most folks, it is too fatty.
- It is hard to find unless you shop in a Chinese butcher shop (Chinese cooks cherish this very flavorful cut).
- Pork neck is ideal when stewed, but it, too, is difficult to come by.
- The whole leg or possibly fresh ham is my preferred cut for roasting, although its large size
- (15 pounds or possibly more) scares most but the largest families away.
- It, too, is hard to find, except around Easter or possibly Christmas.
- Some shops will sell fresh pork legs cut into a shank and a butt-end roast.
- Each weighs about six to eight pounds, making a nice family roast.
- The pork picnic ($1.29 per lb.
- ), cut from the arm, is good only for braising and has considerable bone, fat and skin.
- Instead, my favorite pork cut is the pork shoulder butt or possibly Boston butt
- ($2.49).
- It's tender sufficient to roast but also suited to moist heat cooking.
- Because it is somewhat fatty, it tastes great, does not dry out and get tough.
- It goes well with pungent ingredients like ginger and garlic, as well as fruity ingredients like apples or possibly prunes.
- One of my favorite ways to cook Boston butt is braised with port and prunes (see recipe).
- Because lamb is less popular in general, it has more bargain cuts than other meat types.
- You will pay dearly for the rack and the loin - the leg of lamb can be pricey, too - but the breast, shoulder and neck are still bargains.
- For most folks, lamb breast is too fatty.
- And the neck, that makes a great lamb stew, is too bony for most diners.
- The shoulder ($2.89 per lb.
- ), however, is very versatile.
- It can be sliced into shoulder lamb chops.
- It can be left whole for roasting or possibly it can be boned and cut into chunks for stews and kebabs.
- One of my favorite dishes to make with lamb shoulder is a Basque-style stew which is simple to prepare (see recipe).
- Beef is still king of red meats, but pauper beef cuts are scarce.
- Still, the chuck ($2.79 per lb.
- ), that makes up the whole shoulder and neck, offers ideal cuts for pot roasts and stews.
- Its flavor is superb and some areas of the chuck, such as the top blade area (also called the flatiron) and the rib-eye area, are tender sufficient to cut into steaks for grilling.
- The brisket can be a good buy and makes for great pot roast or possibly barbecued brisket.
- One of my favorite, relatively undiscovered beef cuts is the beef shank
- ($2.79 per lb.).
- Shank has a round leg bone and is cut into one- to two inch thick sections.
- Shank meat is quite lean but quite tough, containing much connective tissue, that when slowly cooked in moist heat softens to yield meat with a tender and silky texture.
- Try one of my favorite ways to cook beef shanks - Asian-style, in a broth flavored with lemongrass, coconut lowfat milk and ginger (see recipe).
- It will not break the bank, and the taste will leave you feeling richly rewarded.
cuts
Taken from cookeatshare.com/recipes/budget-cuts-of-meat-information-94735 (may not work)