I thought I would add a photo of the 800 gramer on the griddle to wet everyone's appetite

cheers



The steaks from my butchers are nicely aged, nice dark maroon.aris wrote:The pit boys did one where they pseudo dry-aged the steaks in the fridge.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rBQ07UqCBPI
Worth a go if your steaks aren't a nice maroon aged colour

If you go to any decent butcher he'll cut one for you - don't worry, the Americans haven't bred their cows with extra bits that ours don't have.morefirejules08 wrote:aris wrote:The steaks from my butchers are nicely aged, nice dark maroon.
Why is T-Bone not readily available over here?



I had guessed that American cows didn't have extra parts lol! I thought the lack of interest went back to the days of BSE and the ban of beef on the bone.Pecker wrote:If you go to any decent butcher he'll cut one for you - don't worry, the Americans haven't bred their cows with extra bits that ours don't have.morefirejules08 wrote:aris wrote:The steaks from my butchers are nicely aged, nice dark maroon.
Why is T-Bone not readily available over here?
I'm going to be blunt - I think the reason you don't often see t-bone in the UK is that it's an early version of a 'man v food' thing. It's just enormous. Look at the OP - 800g is the best part of 2lb. I fed 4 adults and 2 kids with a 1250g rib of beef yesterday and there were left overs!
Unless you cut a t-bone very thin (difficult to do and makes it even more difficult to cook properly), it's far too much for any reasonable person to eat.
You can, of course, cut them up. But then it's not so much a big steak as it is a small joint, which doesn't fit with how most of us in the UK view our meat. We seem to be comfortable with a joint of beef to share, or a steak to have on our own, but a steak to share? That's just a bit...well, a bit different.
Steve W
