David Hammond wrote:Ed, the chart you posted is a thing of beauty. I printed it out and plan to study it before going to bed. Once, years ago, I had a huge poster size version of a chart like this that I got from the National Cattleman's Association -- alas, I lost it somethere in time. Would love to get one of those again to frame and keep on the kitchen wall.
Hammond
paulette wrote:Gleam,
Delmonico is another name given to rib eye see chart above and not strip steak.
Paulette
The original Delmonico steak was a boneless top sirloin, almost two inches thick with delicate marbling and cooked rare to well done (depending on the request of the diner). However, over the years it has come to signify a club steak from the short loin of beef, prepared as a boneless, very rare steak.
Some of the steak cuts now commonly referred to as Delmonico steak include:
1. a bone-in top loin steak (a triangular-shaped, short loin cut, some suggesting the first cut of the top loin next to the rib end) also known as a club steak, country club steak, shell steak, and strip loin steak;
2. a boneless or bone-in rib-eye steak (some insist it is a rib cut closest to the front end of the ribs while others say any rib-eye);
3. a boneless top loin steak (also known as a New York strip steak, Kansas City steak, strip loin, ambassador, boneless club, hotel or veiny steak); or
4. a boneless top sirloin.
gleam wrote:Delmonico these days refers to about 6 different cuts. You and I generally understand it to be ribeye, but to others, it's strip or sirloin.