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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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well, obviously, in other countries. I can't imagine it is called a New
York steak the world over. |
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![]() "Pico Rico" > wrote in message ... > well, obviously, in other countries. I can't imagine it is called a New > York steak the world over. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cut_of_beef And the French: http://postedinparis.wordpress.com/2...-cuts-of-meat/ Graham |
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On Thu, 4 Jul 2013 11:06:58 -0700, "Pico Rico" >
wrote: > well, obviously, in other countries. I can't imagine it is called a New > York steak the world over. > Have you ever wondered what they call it in New York? -- Food is an important part of a balanced diet. |
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On 7/5/2013 12:35 AM, sf wrote:
> On Thu, 4 Jul 2013 11:06:58 -0700, "Pico Rico" > > wrote: > >> well, obviously, in other countries. I can't imagine it is called a New >> York steak the world over. >> > Have you ever wondered what they call it in New York? > A Jersey fillet? ;-) |
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They call them strip steaks around here and they usually come with a bone. Real tasty. Much more flavorful but not as tender as the other chunk of the T Bone which is called a Filet Mignon.
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On 7/5/13 2:53 PM, bigwheel wrote:
> > They call them strip steaks around here and they usually come with a > bone. Real tasty. Much more flavorful but not as tender as the other > chunk of the T Bone which is called a Filet Mignon. Not really -- it's the tenderloin. Filet mignon is a much more specific term. -- Larry |
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On Friday, July 5, 2013 1:17:53 PM UTC-4, casa bona wrote:
> On 7/5/2013 12:35 AM, sf wrote: > > > On Thu, 4 Jul 2013 11:06:58 -0700, "Pico Rico" > > > > wrote: > > > > > >> well, obviously, in other countries. I can't imagine it is called a New > > >> York steak the world over. > > >> > > > Have you ever wondered what they call it in New York? > > > > > > > A Jersey fillet? ;-) Spam. |
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On 7/4/2013 1:06 PM, Pico Rico wrote:
> well, obviously, in other countries. I can't imagine it is called a New > York steak the world over. > > I used to live in the New York Metro area. They called it a "shell steak" There was also a chuck steak or roast called "California". There is no such cut in California. I wonder if they sell "Boston" butts in Boston. -- Janet Wilder Way-the-heck-south Texas Spelling doesn't count. Cooking does. |
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Sometimes, Wikipedia is your friend:
"The strip steak is a type of cut of beef steaks. Internationally it is called a club steak. In the United States and Canada it is also known as New York strip, strip loin, shell steak, or Kansas City strip steak. In Australia it is known as a porterhouse steak or boneless sirloin. Cut from the short loin, the strip steak consists of a muscle that does little work, and so it is particularly tender,[1] although not so tender as the nearby rib eye or tenderloin (fat content of the strip is somewhere between these two cuts). Unlike the nearby tenderloin, the short loin is a sizable muscle, allowing it to be cut into the larger portions. When still attached to the bone, and with a piece of the tenderloin also included, the strip steak becomes a T-bone steak or a Porterhouse steak, the difference being that the Porterhouse has a larger portion of tenderloin included. The strip steak may be sold with or without the bone. Strip steaks may be substituted for most recipes calling for T-bone and porterhouse steaks, and sometimes for fillet and rib eye steaks." -- Larry |
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On Fri, 05 Jul 2013 19:25:05 -0500, Janet Wilder
> wrote: > On 7/4/2013 1:06 PM, Pico Rico wrote: > > well, obviously, in other countries. I can't imagine it is called a New > > York steak the world over. > > > > > I used to live in the New York Metro area. They called it a "shell > steak" There was also a chuck steak or roast called "California". > There is no such cut in California. > > I wonder if they sell "Boston" butts in Boston. LOL! That's exactly why I wondered what they call it in NY. I know already they aren't called French windows (or doors) in France. I know there are more examples, but that's what I came up with. -- Food is an important part of a balanced diet. |
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![]() "Pico Rico" wrote in message ... well, obviously, in other countries. I can't imagine it is called a New York steak the world over. Porterhouse Steak in Australia...... Barry Oz |
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On Sat, 6 Jul 2013 17:53:48 +1000, " Bigbazza" >
wrote: > > > "Pico Rico" wrote in message ... > > well, obviously, in other countries. I can't imagine it is called a New > York steak the world over. > > > > Porterhouse Steak in Australia...... > Here, a porterhouse here is the T-bone with a small portion of fillet (tenderloin) on one side and loin on the other. A T-bone has no fillet, but it still has the bone and a New York steak (aka: strip loin) is a boneless T-bone. -- Food is an important part of a balanced diet. |
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On 7/6/2013 1:53 AM, Bigbazza wrote:
> > > "Pico Rico" wrote in message ... > well, obviously, in other countries. I can't imagine it is called a New > York steak the world over. > > > > > > > Porterhouse Steak in Australia...... > > Barry Oz > But that is two cuts, the tenderloin steak and a top loin (New York Strip) with the bone in the center. |
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On Friday, July 5, 2013 10:50:02 PM UTC-4, casa bona wrote:
> On 7/5/2013 4:47 PM, wrote: > > > On Friday, July 5, 2013 1:17:53 PM UTC-4, casa bona wrote: > > >> On 7/5/2013 12:35 AM, sf wrote: > > >> > > >>> On Thu, 4 Jul 2013 11:06:58 -0700, "Pico Rico" > > > >> > > >>> wrote: > > >> > > >>> > > >> > > >>>> well, obviously, in other countries. I can't imagine it is called a New > > >> > > >>>> York steak the world over. > > >> > > >>>> > > >> > > >>> Have you ever wondered what they call it in New York? > > >> > > >>> > > >> > > >> > > >> > > >> A Jersey fillet? ;-) > > > > > > Spam. > > > > > No, that's Hawaii. No, that's you and your posts. |
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On Thursday, July 4, 2013 12:06:58 PM UTC-6, Pico Rico wrote:
> well, obviously, in other countries. I can't imagine it is called a New > > York steak the world over. Strip loin. |
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On 7/6/2013 10:56 AM, Roy wrote:
> On Thursday, July 4, 2013 12:06:58 PM UTC-6, Pico Rico wrote: >> well, obviously, in other countries. I can't imagine it is called a New >> >> York steak the world over. > > Strip loin. > +1 |
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On 7/6/2013 11:19 AM, T wrote:
> In article om>, > says... >> >> On 7/4/2013 1:06 PM, Pico Rico wrote: >>> well, obviously, in other countries. I can't imagine it is called a New >>> York steak the world over. >>> >>> >> I used to live in the New York Metro area. They called it a "shell >> steak" There was also a chuck steak or roast called "California". >> There is no such cut in California. >> >> I wonder if they sell "Boston" butts in Boston. > > You know one of the things that annoys me is no standardized terms for > cuts of meat. But then I realize - most of the world now runs on the > metric system EXCEPT the U.S. But even that isn't' true as we've long > been metric here, just not where it counts. > > For example, look at the tires on your car. All in milimeters. Then look > at the bolts - same thing. > > Look at that bottle of soda or water - it too is now in mililiters. > > But our roadways are still marked in miles. And our weights still for > the most part in pounds. And I do hope it stays that way, tradition ought not be swept away for the sake of "standards" written by the latest consortium. The metric (Celsius) scale of temperatures is far more coarse then degrees of Fahrenheit. |
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On Sat, 06 Jul 2013 10:21:15 -0600, casa bona > wrote:
>On 7/6/2013 1:53 AM, Bigbazza wrote: >> >> >> "Pico Rico" wrote in message ... >> well, obviously, in other countries. I can't imagine it is called a New >> York steak the world over. >> >> >> >> >> >> >> Porterhouse Steak in Australia...... >> >> Barry Oz >> > >But that is two cuts, the tenderloin steak and a top loin (New York >Strip) with the bone in the center. Not in Australia. What you describe is what we call a T Bone. JB |
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On 7/6/2013 6:51 PM, JBurns wrote:
> On Sat, 06 Jul 2013 10:21:15 -0600, casa bona > wrote: > >> On 7/6/2013 1:53 AM, Bigbazza wrote: >>> >>> >>> "Pico Rico" wrote in message ... >>> well, obviously, in other countries. I can't imagine it is called a New >>> York steak the world over. >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> Porterhouse Steak in Australia...... >>> >>> Barry Oz >>> >> >> But that is two cuts, the tenderloin steak and a top loin (New York >> Strip) with the bone in the center. > > Not in Australia. > > What you describe is what we call a T Bone. > > JB > > We have that too: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T-bone_steak The T-bone and porterhouse are steaks of beef cut from the short loin. Both steaks include a "T-shaped" bone with meat on each side. Porterhouse steaks are cut from the rear end of the short loin and thus include more tenderloin steak, along with (on the other side of the bone) a large strip steak. T-bone steaks are cut closer to the front, and contain a smaller section of tenderloin. Interesting how they are the same, just from different ends of the loin. I prefer a T-bone myself. |
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On 06/07/2013 8:51 PM, JBurns wrote:
>> >> But that is two cuts, the tenderloin steak and a top loin (New York >> Strip) with the bone in the center. > > Not in Australia. > > What you describe is what we call a T Bone. > Tbones are next to the Porterhouse zone. The loin in the porterhouse is larger than in a tbone |
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