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How to Trim Ribeye

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  • čas přidán 18. 08. 2024
  • Purchasing larger pieces of meat can save you large amounts of money. I saved myself $3.00 a pound by cutting it myself. On this 13lb Ribeye it came out to about $40 in savings.
    I could have just fabricated ribeye steaks, but I opted to have a Prime Ribeye roast along with steaks.
    Here I show you how to slice and trim a sub primal piece of ribeye.
    I will be doing this in the future, I also will be looking at dry aging my meat. I will save that for another day.
    Please Visit me at
    Visit my website at www.bbqsmoker.me
    Visit my Facebook page at / grillingnetwork
    Follow me on Twitter at / bbq4smoke

Komentáře • 444

  • @robertarchbold8658
    @robertarchbold8658 Před 9 lety +33

    I'm a butcher myself and have been for about 15 years and think you did a fantastic job of slicing that. Not perfect, but for a guy at home with just kitchen knives that was great.

  • @bricksquad9552
    @bricksquad9552 Před 9 lety +70

    I'm a butcher, my word of advice for the fat cap on the back is to grab it by the top and pull. It will peel right off along with the fat cap at the bottom, leaving you with a nice piece of mostly trimmed ribeye steaks ready to be cut. Once you make your cuts you may have to trim a little but it definitely beats trimming it the long way. If it's supposed to come off it will. Also, the fat isn't necessarily what holds a ribeye in tact. There's a thin "silver" lining under that fat that will hold it just fine, and if you don't trim the gristle it'll make your steak curl up. Too much fat can ruin a good steak. And a standing rib roast has bone in it usually.

    • @arrow12680
      @arrow12680 Před 8 lety +2

      +Offended Badly Then Unsubscribed Well said mr butcher!

    • @Lumpy007
      @Lumpy007 Před 8 lety +4

      +Offended Badly Then Unsubscribed I think maybe these videos should be made by meat cutters.

    • @sirbigam
      @sirbigam Před 8 lety +11

      +Offended Badly Then Unsubscribed Lmao this is a father saving money and providing for his family, dont get too deep guys have a beer....

    • @mistresscrush2042
      @mistresscrush2042 Před 5 lety +3

      That was a good suggestion. He wasn't saying he did wrong he just gave us his idea... Get over it....

    • @cassianandor4103
      @cassianandor4103 Před 5 lety +1

      You should honestly make a video about it and post it on youtube, because this comment was super useful. A visual aid would be nice.

  • @batsman46
    @batsman46 Před 11 lety +2

    I don't know why but when you said your family will really love you for these steaks, it really touched me. I can tell you're a great husband and father. Well done, liked this video. Keep up the good work!

  • @EdwardRobinson15580
    @EdwardRobinson15580 Před 10 lety +1

    Cool beans. I bought a small rib eye roast today and NOBODY at the checkout counter could tell me if I bought the right cut of meat to make rib eye steaks. It's obvious that I bought the right roast. Thank you for the lesson. I need to buy some new knives though. Mine are a little dull. I saved quite a bit. I bought a roast for $34.00 and got 7 - 1/2 inch steaks. Wow!!!

  • @bsmoovekutdr
    @bsmoovekutdr Před 8 lety +4

    I don't know why a lot of you have to be so technical. There's information here that's good. Who cares about how much fat is trimmed before they weigh it as one person was so quick to point out. He didn't say he was a professional, he was showing us his way of doing it and that much I can appreciate. If it excites his family and his tastebuds, do you think he cares about your sarcasm? I hope not. All in all, it's a good video man, keep doing what you're doing. Another thing I like is that your area was clean as well as your utensils.
    Again, great job.

  • @andreyv1
    @andreyv1 Před 3 lety +1

    Here because I just bought a whole ribeye from Costco... i'm drooling watching this. Should be fun!

  • @carpathianken
    @carpathianken Před 9 lety +6

    I've always bought individual 1" Ribeye steaks from my store.
    Not anymore though.
    Thank-you for your demo. vid. It has taken alot of the Intimidation and gray area out of the equation,when buying meat in bulk.

  • @natemartin5996
    @natemartin5996 Před 5 lety

    Dude, lots of haters on here. the guy was merely trying to help out, all you people with your rude comments, where are your videos that are intended to help others for FREE? right, so keep your trap shut! Thanks for the video, though there might have been a few mistakes, it didnt cost anything for me to watch it, and i learned some things! so thank you for using your time and video to show us something some of us might not know!

  • @josephmarion8406
    @josephmarion8406 Před 7 lety +7

    All these negative comments are unnecessary. Great job Allen!

    • @GrillingNetwork
      @GrillingNetwork  Před 7 lety +7

      Joseph Marion I don't let it bother me. This is how I do it, it doesn't mean it's the only way. Thanks for the support!!

    • @tripclips2115
      @tripclips2115 Před 5 lety

      All he is doing is promoting ignorance and waste. He shouldn't be making "How to" videos if he has no idea how to do it; which is very evident in his videos. This isn't a how to, its just some guy trying to play butcher. No skill or knowledge to be had here

  • @tritonmemnon5801
    @tritonmemnon5801 Před 8 lety +1

    Found your posting, after 30 years of Professional Chef experience, we humbly suggest a rendering of your beef fat. The beef fat you discarded is very valuable. In addition to a rendered fat for cooking, potatoes, turnip or kohlrabi for example "beef suet" is an essential to say me do she's. The "crown slice" the long slice generally cut from the top of your rib eye flank can be added to a lesser cut my f meat to provide additional flavors. If you go to expense of buying from a professional purveyor to save money as you discussed then you might as well go all the way.

  • @BolognaRingRanch
    @BolognaRingRanch Před 12 lety +3

    Great video Allen! I'm in a lucky location when it comes to a butcher. We have a huge butcher shop nearby that has all grain fed meats. Whole ribeye's run $6.99 per lb, and they slice it free. I don't mind dropping a couple hundred bucks for awesome meats, and like you said, it saves you a ton of money.
    jeff

  • @j.michaelcominskie7132
    @j.michaelcominskie7132 Před 10 lety +19

    I would love it if you would do that again and weigh all the fat that you discarded. Then weigh out your price per pound. I don't think you saved as much as you think.
    But great job.

  • @Lionoftruth7
    @Lionoftruth7 Před 6 lety +38

    This guy is just cutting meat for his family , he’s just a regular guy ppl who hate on him or try to be all professional about meat cutting , go sip on a beer man lol .

    • @GrillingNetwork
      @GrillingNetwork  Před 6 lety +12

      puncru thanks!! I never claimed to be a butcher, just a regular guy trying to show another way to save your family money. Appreciate the support and for you stopping by!!

    • @towdoctor670
      @towdoctor670 Před 6 lety +3

      Im not trying to learn how to be a professional butcher. just learn to cut my own steaks. this video actually helped me. the meat snobs help too but in another way. they give me my own ideas and it makes small corrections.
      thanks for the video

    • @ludvigdreng6315
      @ludvigdreng6315 Před 5 lety +1

      @@GrillingNetwork I enjoyed the video too :). Maybe the title is what put some people off - the title "How to" indicates, that you are going to show, how a professional does it.

    • @jerryramos208
      @jerryramos208 Před 4 lety

      Thanks for the video bro

  • @davidmoran5431
    @davidmoran5431 Před 11 lety +1

    His knife is perfectly sharp and his cutting pressure is perfect too; perhaps you have not enough large-scale trimming of this sort?

  • @MrPanda415
    @MrPanda415 Před 9 lety +38

    when you trim off all the weight that you paid for, doesn't the price come out closer to the pre cut ones?

    • @brianyun533
      @brianyun533 Před 8 lety +1

      That's what I thought lol. It'll still be cheaper but given how much it as cut off... not by a lot. This case, I would just get the precut to save the trouble.

    • @mitchellfurlong8466
      @mitchellfurlong8466 Před 8 lety +5

      +MrPanda415 The fat is lighter than the protein.

    • @derpenoid3248
      @derpenoid3248 Před 8 lety +2

      +MrPanda415 It really depends on price you paid for the entire loin vs case price, any good butcher shop does cutting test and knows how much loss you have and how much to mark up steaks. If you just want a few steaks you are better off buying case price but if you plan on feeding a lot of people buying an entire loin is best.
      If you want to save even more money buying it bone in is best (cost per lb is even cheaper) and separating the ribs from the lion is really easy and then you have a nice big rack of ribs as well.

    • @dyhbxsgjkknbfsfjjig
      @dyhbxsgjkknbfsfjjig Před 7 lety

      And also if u buy a huge chunk of meat. U r likely to eat it more often.

    • @jolujo5842
      @jolujo5842 Před 7 lety

      yup

  • @ARMYStrongHOOAH17
    @ARMYStrongHOOAH17 Před 7 lety

    after trimming fat and uneven ends off, the customer doesn't save as much as they think they do, particularly if they, like yourself, have no use for the fat, or do not have a grinder for any meat trimmed off of uneven ends...still saving a little though so not a great big deal..Also, as a meat-cutter by trade, I recommend slicing with the fat face up, and if you're right handed, as it looks like you are, slice from the left side of the subprimal...much easier to see what you're doing/cutting and you get nice straight cuts, not ragged wedge cuts, plus it's SOOO much easier to slice a thin slice if you want. Great video!

  • @tacodapug984
    @tacodapug984 Před 10 lety +28

    FYI -The liquid in packaged meats Is not Blood ,Its' a protien called Myoglobin...

    • @GrillingNetwork
      @GrillingNetwork  Před 10 lety +7

      Todd Manley thanks for the clarification and for stopping by!!

    • @kubotamaniac
      @kubotamaniac Před 8 lety +11

      +Taco Da Pug And hemoglobin, which is blood…

    • @XxStonedKillerxX
      @XxStonedKillerxX Před 8 lety

      +kubotamaniac Thought it was a protein ?

    • @jamesdavison2741
      @jamesdavison2741 Před 6 lety

      FYI - Semi informed opinions masking as expert advice is dumb.

  • @bleedrr
    @bleedrr Před 12 lety

    Every trip to Costco I stop and drool over the prime 3-4 steak pack. I've never been disappointed when I have bought them, so good... but I think you might of opened my eyes to a better investment. Thanks, nice work.

  • @crisworkizer1523
    @crisworkizer1523 Před 8 lety +1

    Allen, nice job on the meat breakdown and you can save some money..well done vid and all nice tips...

  • @Helamanize
    @Helamanize Před 5 lety

    Thanks for the video. Straight to the point. I have been tempted to buy a whole Ribeye and cutting it myself, but was not sure how I would handle it. Thanks, I am sure I can handle it and save some money. Some times my local store will have whole Ribeye for 3.99 to 4.99 a pound. Wow, I could save a lot of money. I bought a Vacuum Sealer for Christmas and have the ability to freeze meats, etc. safety. Since there is just my wife and I, we would need to freeze all the meat once cutting it.

  • @carmenschumann826
    @carmenschumann826 Před 7 lety

    . . . marvelous ! I did not know how to hold a knife and to cut slices from a larger piece. . . but now I learned it . . . would you please advise me also in eating with knife & fork from a plate, too? I would be so grateful !

  • @mlew247
    @mlew247 Před 8 lety +5

    The meat looks wonderful and ribeye is a great cut.
    One question - I'm wondering if your price comparison took into account the net weight of the steaks after you trimmed the fat off? Typically precut steaks don't require much, if any trimming.
    I really like the idea - especially using half for a rib roast. Thanks for the video.

    • @GrillingNetwork
      @GrillingNetwork  Před 8 lety +1

      +Marty L Its been my experience when buying a Costco or larger bulk item stores. They dont really trim their steaks and only appear to be sliced. My point is that you can trim as much fat and slice as thick as you want.
      I have seen similar savings when buying whole pork loin and slicing you own pork chops. They typically will have sliced chops next to the whole loin and you can easily calculate the savings.... Its just a little more upfront out pocket....
      Thanks for stopping by....

    • @mlew247
      @mlew247 Před 8 lety +1

      +GrillingNetwork™ Thanks for the information, I will definitely check out Costco.

    • @gd3355
      @gd3355 Před 8 lety +3

      +Marty L
      Also save the trimmings. I use it then grind lean chuck and oxtail meat with it for my burger meat.

    • @mlew247
      @mlew247 Před 8 lety

      greg dumont Great suggestion, thanks

  • @BallisticBBQ
    @BallisticBBQ Před 12 lety +2

    Great job Allen. That knife cut that slab-o-meat like butter!

  • @highnitro707
    @highnitro707 Před 10 lety +45

    threw the savings right in the trash hahaha

  • @kaylablanton8519
    @kaylablanton8519 Před 8 lety +6

    I guess I'm lucky. Where I live there is a small store that's been around for decades, and once every 3 to 4 months whole ribeyes are on sale for $3.99 a pound, and they will slice it for free. The last whole ribeye I bought only cost me $38 and some change.

    • @bobbyrayoutdoors5954
      @bobbyrayoutdoors5954 Před 6 lety +1

      Kayla Blanton ummmmmmmm where you from lol

    • @markusy3410
      @markusy3410 Před 6 lety +1

      you cant buy Dog meat for 3.99 here.

    • @krelbar
      @krelbar Před 6 lety

      Somewhere in cattle country I would guess.
      I live in the NorthEast and I bought a whole boneless ribeye from a truckload sale once for 3.99lb...but that was in 2009.

  • @briandickinson3721
    @briandickinson3721 Před 3 lety

    It's not blood that leaks from red (or most) packaged meat. It is water and myoglobin, which is a protein in the muscle tissues. It is a caused by freezing the meat when it is shipped to the stores in it's larger cut know as a primal, which your individual steaks are cut from. When water freezer in the meat it produces ice crystals. When these crystals thaw, the sharp spikes of the crystals having ruptured cell walls in the muscles cause them to release small amounts of myoglobin which is carried away by the water from the thaw. This is know as weep or purge in the meat packing industry.

  • @Cocakone
    @Cocakone Před 5 lety

    Its nice to know how to trim different pieces of meat. I dont know about the US, but where i live, we butchers always sell trimed steaks and of course if you buy a whole piece of meat, in this case rib eye, it usually needs trimming. And if the difference in price is 3$ per pound, you'll lose it in trimming, and the liquid in the vacum (btw its not blood, dont know the english term for it) can be quite a lot thats going in the trash.

    • @Cocakone
      @Cocakone Před 5 lety

      And also, when trimming fat from rib eye, you almost need no knife. Use your fingers to get in between the fat and silverskin(?) and pull.

  • @stucklimbo560
    @stucklimbo560 Před 9 lety +3

    That's a very nice rib eye :D
    I bone beef - 5 days a week 8 hours a day and i never get sick of eating it :)

  • @DejectedCat
    @DejectedCat Před 11 lety +1

    Pretty much what I do as well. I just do all the cutting and trimming myself and vacuum pack the individual portions I cut up.

  • @jefferystark1662
    @jefferystark1662 Před 8 lety +66

    Sir, I have been a butcher/meatcutter for 51 years. First off if you want to promote something to people as Prime beef show them the USDA logo on the cry-o-vac bag. The rib-eye that you cut in the video is obviously not Prime grade actually barely choice in my estimation! Also a "Standing Rib Roast " is a bone-in cut! !! Your selection of a steak knife to cut the sub-primal looks to me like a knife intended to be a cooked beef carving knife!! A cowboy ribeye steak is always a bone-in cut with at least 4 inches of denuded rib bone from the lattisimus dorsi muscle, that is the actual eye of the rib. In reference to your mechanics, which I asses as rudimentary at best, the proper procedure for cutting any large piece of beef into steaks, top sirloin, top round, new york strip or ribeye is to slice downward on the first stroke and draw back on the second stroke. That particular technique requires several skills being employed at the same time, which are: a sharp knife, good lateral control of the blade, good hand, wrist and upper body strength. ON a positive note, your video is very well done, but you should really leave the mechanics to the professionals!

    • @NormalRarin
      @NormalRarin Před 8 lety +24

      Enjoyed the comment. At the risk of sounding smartassy, I think you should do some videos yourself, using and teaching the terminology. 51 years of experience you could pass on to the world via video, and if your video is shot and edited well enough, you could end up making some good money from it (or them if you do several) for the rest of your life.

    • @eg6199
      @eg6199 Před 6 lety +1

      Jeffery Stark you are clearly a pro.

    • @willislee7991
      @willislee7991 Před 6 lety +1

      Jeffrey Stark, enjoyed your post. Not a jerk, clearly just sharing your experience and passion.

    • @markporter2642
      @markporter2642 Před 6 lety +4

      Rather than criticizing this man I would suggest making your own video. You clearly know what your talking about so educate us. That’s why we are here, seeking knowledge.

    • @Lionoftruth7
      @Lionoftruth7 Před 6 lety +3

      Lol take it easy

  • @jerryhubbard4461
    @jerryhubbard4461 Před 9 lety +13

    man, I lost it when you threw away the first piece of meat even if it was a lot of fat.

    • @cassianandor4103
      @cassianandor4103 Před 5 lety +2

      I mean it was all fat, at least 99% worth of pure fat, yuck.

    • @nomad155
      @nomad155 Před 3 lety +1

      @@cassianandor4103 you can do a lot with the fat actually. For one, you can use it instead of oil oe mayo to cook and help marinste meat.
      Try cutting the end of the fat off a steak and put it on a hot pan instead of oil for cooking. Your food literally will taste a whole lot better if ya prefer umami

    • @steamaccount2651
      @steamaccount2651 Před 3 lety

      @@nomad155 fats great I agree but it depends on situation, for example if your are pan searing a steak then that’s a great opportunity to use that fat, but for people that grill there’s a whole lot less uses, I myself personally prefer steak grilled than seared (seared gives it a much more buttery crispy outside and while some people may like it, I for one prefer that great barbecue)

    • @nomad155
      @nomad155 Před 3 lety

      @@steamaccount2651 well you're definitely a rare breed

    • @steamaccount2651
      @steamaccount2651 Před 3 lety

      @@nomad155 not really, I mean very few people prefer oven cooked steak. I’ll weigh it out for you
      On wood hand you got butter basted steak with a crispy outer layer, and a medium rare middle, it’s good for dates with others but the content of the butter can drown out the flavor on the steak
      On the other hand you got that perfectly grilled steak, great for enjoying with family and friends. It’s got that juicy fatty edges that combined with the medium rare meat and some of the juice will make you blow your top. The outer layer is a great tender juicy but with that nostalgic barbecue flavor
      Yeah I’ll stick to barbeque, not saying pan seared butter basted is bad, but it my opinion it doesn’t emphasize on the best parts of steak which is the tender juicy combination of the right amount of fat with meat (which is why it annoys me that he left absolutely zero fat on one side)

  • @davestevens4193
    @davestevens4193 Před 2 lety

    good video. I season them and use my foodsaver before freezing them individually.

  • @witmde2011
    @witmde2011 Před 11 lety +1

    i cut ribeyes nearly everyday for work. Strange that your prime has more cap fat than the ribeyes that we get in. I expected more lean and marbled richly. oh well

  • @dizzyweezy9023
    @dizzyweezy9023 Před 2 lety +1

    9 years later, this is now triple the price

  • @auravivas858
    @auravivas858 Před 5 lety

    Thank you for sharing your skills. May you have a great life in all your endeavors.

  • @SmokeyGoodness
    @SmokeyGoodness Před 12 lety

    A couple of great investments. The way we plow thru Ribeyes around here, it would be a super idea to put on a butcher's hat once in awhile.

  • @cristinabondar933
    @cristinabondar933 Před 11 lety +2

    Your knives are sharp!

  • @EZGlutenFree
    @EZGlutenFree Před 12 lety

    What an awesome tutorial. I'm always looking for ways to save money. I can't wait to see the video where you make the steaks. It should be a really good one. I just love ribeye.

  • @bowhunter2439
    @bowhunter2439 Před 12 lety

    Thats some really nice ribeye there Allen , and a nice Knife too , got to check out your vid on that too....

  • @johnr5540
    @johnr5540 Před 12 lety

    Awesome video, now I'm hungry!!! LOL Thanks for sharing! Can't wait for the next video

  • @nunyabiznatch1465
    @nunyabiznatch1465 Před 11 lety +1

    The financial benefit you thought you were getting by buying bulk cryovak'd meat was negated by the 3 pounds of fat you had to trim off. Buy the blue-tray packs at Costco. Blue is the Prime cut, they are pre-trimmed, and very reasonably priced

  • @MoHorish
    @MoHorish Před 9 lety +8

    This kills me to watch. There was a few mistakes made. I'm an apprentice meat cutter and if I trimmed it like that I'd be fired. The fat cap on the top has a seam and you can literally rip it off. On the loin end it will get stuck a little but just ease it off with a knife. Don't tear it down past the eye either. And you should take off the bottom part to.. With all the bone sinew on it. If desired I can try and make a video of the way we do it.

    • @andreyv1
      @andreyv1 Před 3 lety

      6 years later and no video... come on, man!

  • @firstyute
    @firstyute Před 8 lety

    Very clear and professional, Thank you

  • @braddahangel
    @braddahangel Před 2 lety +1

    HOW TO TRIM A RIBEYE.!.!.!
    “YOU DON’T”💙🤙🏽

  • @ManCaveMeals
    @ManCaveMeals Před 12 lety

    That's a fantastic lookin' cut of meat! I'm gonna check Sam's next time I'm in to see what they have. I don't think they carry prime though. All of their beef is Certified Angus Beef and I have never seen any other gradings at my local store...

  • @GrillingNetwork
    @GrillingNetwork  Před 10 lety +1

    Apparently you have not checked on prices of whole cuts of meat. The same holds true with Pork (where theres no fat) side by side the price of sliced vs whole is $2.00 more when you have it fabricated by the store.

  • @kylegohawks8604
    @kylegohawks8604 Před 6 lety +1

    You sound like a professor I had. It was so hard to stay awake in that class

  • @Aqxea
    @Aqxea Před 10 lety

    Great video Alan. Thank you for sharing. I really enjoyed it.

  • @roberthancock2563
    @roberthancock2563 Před 4 lety

    Grill one of those beauties up with corn on the cobb and a ceasar salad! Great video!!

  • @e8becket
    @e8becket Před 10 lety +1

    Love your videos, interested in supporting in other ways if you can explain suggestions on how to do so!

  • @jefasoAk47
    @jefasoAk47 Před 11 lety

    Great video I bought one of these rib eyes a couple of months ago and u do save some $. I wish I had seen this video it shows good cutting techniques.

  • @zidane851
    @zidane851 Před 11 lety

    end cuts make ny strips with a 1 inch squared tail, you waste nothing and you cant throw away all the fat. great way of cutting, props on the knife, i would recommend trimming all the fat from your steaks, yes it improves flavor, but also breaks down prime meat and you dont want that. great video!

  • @telescopechannel6530
    @telescopechannel6530 Před 2 lety

    رائع لقد إستمعت بهذه الطريقة اشكرك جدا🇲🇦🇲🇦🇲🇦
    Great, I listened that way, thank you very much👍👍👍

  • @lizanavarro
    @lizanavarro Před 10 lety +3

    Thank you! Very helpful and I will do the same thing.

    • @GrillingNetwork
      @GrillingNetwork  Před 10 lety

      The cost saving are more like 30% doing it yourself. I am actually doing another video on trimming a whole NY Striploin today. Its a Waygu the marbling in this is amazing! Thanks for stopping by

  • @mannvsfood
    @mannvsfood Před 4 lety

    Restaurant Depot membership is free but it does require you to have a business license. I just went yesterday in my area and got my membership card. Just wanted to put that out there in case viewers thought they could just roll in there and shop. You can look around but without a membership card you cant buy anything.

  • @DDMMI
    @DDMMI Před 2 lety +1

    Have to be careful when purchasing whole because you may end up having to throw a lot of fat away. Also, you only get to see two sides and the middle can be a guessing game. Experience helps there. Push on the fat side to decide how thick it is because you will be trimming and that effects the price you actually paid by lb. Good video though.

  • @MichRanawaka
    @MichRanawaka Před 12 lety

    Must say vey entertaining and fun to watch even tho I'm nit too keen on BBQ but you make it interesting to watch!!:)

  • @TheDorkKn1ght
    @TheDorkKn1ght Před 11 lety

    I'm a butcher at SAMs Club and we cut whole prime rib for people all day. Super cheap.

  • @sneakeey1
    @sneakeey1 Před 11 lety

    Nice job and very informative. Thanks!

  • @KLUNKET
    @KLUNKET Před 10 lety +5

    Someone once told me to leave that fat on there and cut it off AFTER grilling. They said it adds flavor to the meat and more juices to help with the grilling process... does that really make much of a difference?

    • @mnthol
      @mnthol Před 10 lety

      maybe but you open yourself to under-rendering the fat closest to the meat that wont get cut off

    • @sleeksalmon
      @sleeksalmon Před 10 lety +1

      Mr Burns Just cut it off before you take your bite.... trust me leave it on!

    • @Mkoll
      @Mkoll Před 10 lety +1

      yes leave it on but if it is to thick it wont get cooked properly and wont render so u will have the outside rendered but the inside close to the meat unrendered and not tasty so u should trim a bit if it is to thick but not to much and trim the rest after grilling

    • @thomaswong1562
      @thomaswong1562 Před 10 lety +1

      my opinion is. How are you cooking it? Are you doing it in the pan? or BBQ grill? If your doing it in the pan the fat is going to render off and your going to cook the steak in its own fat to add flavor, if your doing it in the bbq the fat is going to melt off and go into the flames and burn off and your basically having a grease fire which is going to give your taste a nasty taste.

    • @krelbar
      @krelbar Před 6 lety

      One of the joys of eating a well trimmed steak is enjoying a nice hunk of well rendered fat that you can eat. You know a well trimmed boneless steak when you finish it and there is nothing left on the plate.
      If you leave a ton of fat on, the outside crisps, but the fat doesn't render, and you get gloopy fat you have to cut off...and you can't enjoy the carmelized rendered fat...unless you like a big wad in your mouth the consistency of thick phlegm.That's my experience, I don't know what the 'pros' think.

  • @bhuynh408
    @bhuynh408 Před 9 lety

    can you make a video for us showing how you store your rib eye if you cut it in slices like you just did thanks!

  • @kostaad
    @kostaad Před 11 lety

    Very very good video, how do you preserve the steaks that you cut and for how long can you preserve them?

  • @matt92toy
    @matt92toy Před 12 lety

    Great video Allen

  • @yambor44
    @yambor44 Před 12 lety

    Very nice looking piece of meat. Did you freeze it partially to make it firmer for cutting? I have some Shun's as well, just not the one you have here. I will check out that knife as well.

  • @GrillingNetwork
    @GrillingNetwork  Před 11 lety +1

    I could have made something with the fat but for this video I was not demonstrating that. Thanks for stopping by

  • @BenTre80
    @BenTre80 Před 7 lety

    Sir ;
    Thank you very much .
    I love your shows .

  • @vincemussurici6878
    @vincemussurici6878 Před 3 lety

    Great video

  • @nettwister
    @nettwister Před 11 lety

    Thanks for the video, I subscribed to your channel in hope to see more of trimming and cutting videos, I always wondered where "this steak" is cut from.

  • @khanahead1904
    @khanahead1904 Před 8 lety

    Nice looking chef

  • @bullsnutsoz
    @bullsnutsoz Před 9 lety

    You are a great Dad looking after your tribe with great tucker. That last piece I would cut into 1/2 inch and make steak sangas with

  • @douglasriach108
    @douglasriach108 Před 8 lety

    A great looking ribeye !

  • @markspan61
    @markspan61 Před 3 lety

    Save the trimmings and fat. You can use it for hamburger if you get a cheaper, leaner cut. If you don’t have a grinder, you can do it in a food processor

  • @ruckers1624
    @ruckers1624 Před 9 lety

    Just discovered you on youtube, really enjoy!!! Could you link segments please from your youtube video? i'm looking for "next" video and it's not showing up.... that knife looked boss though :D

  • @nicolipotatski6288
    @nicolipotatski6288 Před 9 lety

    I see your shun boning knife. I use it at work to fillet trout, it is awesome!!

  • @bmtango05
    @bmtango05 Před 11 lety

    I know this vid came before your dry aged one but imagine the savings if this prime cut was dry aged! I was at costco the other day (Northern CA) and they had dry aged steaks at $21.99 a pound! The savings just paid for that Shun knife ;)

  • @jennys6087
    @jennys6087 Před 7 lety

    I tried this earlier!! Maybe I should've checked this out first!!

  • @kittypigeonclueless5566
    @kittypigeonclueless5566 Před 10 lety +1

    Good video. Few tips, Klunket's right, don't trim that fat off before you cook the steak or roast. Cause as little trauma to the meet as possible, thus reducing the possibility for tasty stuff to leak out. Too bad the ribs were taken off, sigh.... If you do trim the fat, saponify it by boiling that stuff down, cool it, skim the tallow add heat, salt and lye and you got yourself an awesome weekend project with the kids and homemade soap. Eat like a king and save the universe at the same time, not bad. Also, that may be a nice knife, but no. Do not use that thing to cut meat, please. Last, Cut with the meat with the fat on the top so that it is the first thing your knife goes through. It's all the same at first, but as you do it over and over your arm will tire and your tracking can suffer...especially with a knife like that, resulting in a steak that has a thicker parts than others, or what you might call a wedge cut.

  • @sundance37
    @sundance37 Před 10 lety

    I just did this and vacuum sealed the steaks, I'm going to make sous vide steaks when my wife has her baby and can eat med rare steaks again. Tip: To avoid two skinnier steaks at the end, cut steaks off the sub primal before you cut the rib roast off, you will be left with uniform steaks and the rib roast will give you some wiggle room with how big it is.

  • @simomonster
    @simomonster Před 10 lety +2

    Nice, thank you. love your knife

    • @boblane8722
      @boblane8722 Před 4 lety

      what is the name of the knife please

  • @bigdboi
    @bigdboi Před 3 lety

    I was just making sure I have been doing that but the loins I do are close to twice that size

  • @antongeorge3919
    @antongeorge3919 Před 6 lety

    Nice job

  • @pablogee1991
    @pablogee1991 Před 11 lety

    Thanks this video taught me a lot.

  • @TheLovie999
    @TheLovie999 Před 10 lety

    What a smashing blade...where can I get it?Thanking you in anticipation...

  • @irvc72
    @irvc72 Před 11 lety

    Great info so tell me what brand of knife is that that your using.

  • @johnchavez2521
    @johnchavez2521 Před 6 lety

    Awesome job!

  • @glockgoon7
    @glockgoon7 Před 7 lety

    shun knives ftw! I love how it cuts meat like butter.

  • @stevekelly3138
    @stevekelly3138 Před 8 lety +6

    Somewhat informative, but you overestimate your savings "per pound price" since the butcher (any good one) will have trimmed the fat away & it is in his trash - not yours.

  • @SundayFundaysTV
    @SundayFundaysTV Před 12 lety

    Great video Allen! I actually was going to buy a similar size cut of meat that was filet mignon, I was wondering if you can possible preparation of filet mignon steaks cutting those steaks? I wanted to see how to do it before I commit into putting that much money into buying one.

  • @jeffsmith2022
    @jeffsmith2022 Před 8 lety +1

    Having been in the meat business for 40 yrs. I am very skeptical of you finding a USDA graded Prime rib eye at Cosco or any other big box store...A standing rib roast requires that its with the bone...

  • @1jantheman1
    @1jantheman1 Před 7 lety +1

    2 minutes and 30 seconds into it and you finally get to what your going to show us. Gheezzz
    Besides that, nice video. Thanks

  • @SeanCleverly
    @SeanCleverly Před 8 lety

    What a fantastic looking piece of meat. Looks almost like wagyu with all the marbling.

  • @termikes174
    @termikes174 Před 2 lety

    $10-$11 per pound pre sliced. $29.99 per pound at Costco several months ago!

  • @argimara1
    @argimara1 Před 8 lety +1

    Awesome video

  • @GrillingNetwork
    @GrillingNetwork  Před 11 lety

    thanks my brotha appreciate the support!!

  • @davidk8457
    @davidk8457 Před 2 lety +1

    12/21/21 ... $19.99 lbs now at Costco ... LET"S GO BRANDON !

  • @vicccj7044
    @vicccj7044 Před 7 lety

    Push the tip of your knife through the loin letting your knife hit the block then drag it back, not sawing it all the way down and not flesh side up, perfect cut every time and leave the fat.

  • @RyanTheBaller27
    @RyanTheBaller27 Před 12 lety

    Great vid man!:)

  • @ManCaveMeals
    @ManCaveMeals Před 12 lety

    There is a restaurant depot about 70 miles from here that I'd gladly visit but I don't qualify to shop there... Not sure how I could go about getting in.

  • @SparkY0
    @SparkY0 Před 3 lety

    What do the cost savings really work out to when you subtract the 2 pounds of fat you threw into the trash?

  • @easyrock6296
    @easyrock6296 Před 2 lety

    How does one get a prime select ribeye? Just wondering. And I stew…..