austinag1997 said:
schmellba99 said:
Rattler12 said:
Mark Fairchild said:
Howdy, well yes I am shopping my TINY Rockport HEB. Coon Fingering all the meat and I run across something I cannot explain and need the depth of knowledge and expertise that you guys of F & S have. So, here is what I saw: Dino Ribs at $12.99 per lbs, and Tri Tip at $7.99 per lbs. So splain to me, why would a lot of bone, fat and connective tissue be $12.99 per lbs, and total 100% all meat be $7.99 per lbs. The cost of the packages of Dino's run from $80 to near $100 per package. A nearly all meat Tri Tip is about $25. I cannot for the life of me understand this pricing!!!!
Because they are DINO ribs......call them just plain beef ribs and the price would be $3.99/b . Idiots are willing to pay $9 more a lb just because they are called DINO ribs..........same for picanha. Don't get me started on wagyu........paying $65/lb for what is mostly fat and not much red meat makes no sense to me.
As to HEB pricing, I hear folks in Houston are paying 99 cents/lb for pork buttst......in the SA area they are $2.89/lb ......wish the hell we had Krogers, Handy Andys and Albertsons back to give them competition.
I see you've never had a good wagyu steak before. So sad.
I can get Wagyu brisket from SRFs. Too fatty. Prime from HEB is plenty good enough. I can't imagine enjoying an A5 steak either. A prime ribeye is all the fat I can handle.
Just me personally. I'll let you enjoy, sir!
You are really missing out on the A5. I was in the same boat for a long time - thought it was overhyped and just looked too fatty to really enjoy.
Finally tried some when we had a wagyu flight at Killens one night. 4 different types, one was I believe Snake River Farms, one was Austrailian, another from La Forteza ranch which is a Texas outfit from Hondo (it was actuall akayushi) and then Japanese A5 from wherever prefecture in Japan.
All of them were absolutely fantastic, each with a very distinctly different flavor and texture. If I were to rank them, it would be
1. Japanese A5. Tender as can be, barely needed a knife to cut it. While it had the hightest marbling, it wasn't like chewing on a chunk of fat in any shape or form. The flavor was awesome because of the high fat content, very buttery, but still plenty of meat to keep the texture of a steak.
T2. Australian Wagyu. Much beefier flavor than the A5 and almost as tender. Not quite as marbled throughout. A 4oz piece would be plenty for me, not sure I'd want to go for a full 12oz or 16oz ribeye simply because of how strong the flavor is.
T2. Akaushi Wagyu. Not quite the concentrated beefy flavor as the Australian, but unbelievably tender and had a hint of the buttery flavor that the A5 carried. Would absolutely devastate a full on steak of this.
3. SNF. Very good. Think prime, but better. Awesome flavor, but not as tender as the others and just not as robust all around. Typical domestic cut and quality and far closer to what I'd say is an at home type of steak versus higher end steakhouse.
I've done wagyu briskets and enjoyed them. Won't go out of my way to find one and depending on price I may go for prime over wagyu. I don't really think any I've done have been that much more marbled than prime. Cooked faster than prime did though, which is to be expected.
A5 fat isn't the same as what you get even with a very high quality domestic wagyu. Really what we call wagyu over here isn't a true wagyu anyway, and most are a crossbreed of some wagyu genetics with angus. Very high quality meat, but not in the same league as the real deal Japanese wagyu and the feeding and care prior to slaughter isn't the same either. Absolutely a special occasion fare for me. Don't knock it until you give it a go IMO.