Members Login
Username 
 
Password 
    Remember Me  
Post Info TOPIC: flank steaks


Founder of The Meat Cutter's Club

Status: Offline
Posts: 5562
Date:
flank steaks


From: MSN Nicknamec.gifpreacher9071Sent: 12/28/2004 11:49 PM
I have only been cutting meat for about 5 years, and suddenly I was thrown into the position of market manager.  It is a small mom and pop store with about  800 clientel. Just to brag a little, since I've become the manager, our sales have increased from around 8,000 to 12,000.  Anyway, I've been having request lately for flank steaks, and I have no idea how to cut one, could anyone please tell me?  Also, I have a meat cutter in training and a part time wrapper, is there any suggestions to improving our output?  Thanks
Preacher


__________________

Leon Wildberger

Executive Director 



Founder of The Meat Cutter's Club

Status: Offline
Posts: 5562
Date:
RE: flank steaks


From: MSN Nicknamec.gifD-battles-MSent: 1/7/2005 11:03 PM
Ask your customers how they want it cut or how they plan to prepare it. This is going to be a sizeable
purchase for a market with your volume. Try to find a supplier who can sell you less than a sixty or seventy pound box. Otherwise except the fact that you won't make any profit only friends.
You can present it in its whole muscle form or slice it across the grain. Rolling and tieing it then slicing it for steaks are some of your basic presentations. Main thing is keep them happy and coming back.
Getting good production requires teamwork and good pay make them feel they are important and
neccesary for your business success.       Good luck, Tim


__________________

Leon Wildberger

Executive Director 



Founder of The Meat Cutter's Club

Status: Offline
Posts: 5562
Date:
RE: flank steaks


From: Sirloindave1 Sent: 4/25/2005 7:21 PM
We have made "Pinwheels" trim excess fat then tenderize against the grain, roll in a piece of fat from beer rib or strip and cut into steaks. I have got as much as 9.99lb flank steak is 7.99lb good merchandising builds good profits, even wrap bacon around if your customers prefer. dave


__________________

Leon Wildberger

Executive Director 



Founder of The Meat Cutter's Club

Status: Offline
Posts: 5562
Date:
RE: flank steaks


From: MSN Nicknamec.gifdabutchernine2fiveSent: 9/18/2007 5:21 PM
As far as flanks go, I have alot of luck making pinwheels like SirloinDave1 suggested. However, to mix it up, try getting some bulk feta cheese and spinach, smearing it on the inside of the steak before rolling it up. you can market these for as much as 10.99/lb, which is nice because the Feta and spinach don't cost that much, and you add weight to each pinwheel. when you tie your pinwheels, keep the string about an inch-inch and a half apart for nice attractive sizes. Other "stuffings" that work well are asparagus and provolone, garlic butter, mushrooms and swiss, any sort of pesto, etc. Get creative, but watch your expense, try to keep cost of any added ingredients at about half the price you charge for flanks, and watch your margins rise. I usually do two flanks per pinwheel roll, tenderize across the grain, lay them side by side, slightly overlapping on the long edge, smear the inside generously with your stuffing, roll and tie. cut to about 1.25-1.5 inch thick, and if you can, sample out your end pieces! Also remember to suggest recipes to your customers...Flank seared whole then sliced makes great fajita and stir-fry meat. Flank, marinated in balsamic vinegar, garlic, and thyme for about an hour, then seared and sliced at an angle makes a great topping for a salad, and the pan drippings make a savory dressing! good luck!


__________________

Leon Wildberger

Executive Director 



Founder of The Meat Cutter's Club

Status: Offline
Posts: 5562
Date:
RE: flank steaks


From: apcowboy Sent: 9/18/2007 6:18 PM
SOUNDS GOOD TO ME !!
Now let me trip you out, lol
I can't get flanks where i'm working, Sooooo I take a bottom round, trim it out, turn it on it's side, make 4 cuts long ways, run each piece through cuber twice, lay out two pieces where they over lap each other a bit, take a square piece of fat wraped in spinch, start at one end, roll it up into the meat, comes out like the "old type" pinwheels, I use toothpicks to hold together. An they sell

LEON, the apcowboy

__________________

Leon Wildberger

Executive Director 



Veteran Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 168
Date:
RE: flank steaks


At our market we sell tons of pinwheels. We have four varieties.

Fat - From ribeye
Parm. Cheese/Spinach
Swiss/Mushroom
Crumbled bacon/Cheddar

Just some ideas for you.

Also consider selling tenderized flank steak for a little more markup.

__________________


Veteran Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 168
Date:
RE: flank steaks


Also forgot we occasionally do a blue cheese and sundried tomato!

__________________


Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 22
Date:
RE: flank steaks


We do ours as Pinwheels and flank steaks. The pinwheels sell best.

__________________


Veteran Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 67
Date:
RE: flank steaks


I sell almost a case a day in my store. We are in a college town with a very healthy clientele, we just knock a bit of the fat off and roll'em in a 2p. 5.99lb at 28%, no labor, really no waste


__________________


Veteran Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 286
Date:
RE: flank steaks


About your cutter in training, I have found starting them on something like letting them do all the boneless pork till they get really good at that then move to something else, let them perfect it and move on to bigger better and so on.

__________________


Veteran Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 1041
Date:
RE: flank steaks


FemaleCutter96 wrote:

About your cutter in training, I have found starting them on something like letting them do all the boneless pork till they get really good at that then move to something else, let them perfect it and move on to bigger better and so on.


i do the same thing i put who ever im  training on what ever the big sale item is..........by the end of the week they will never for get to cut what the sale is again

 

 



__________________


Veteran Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 564
Date:
RE: flank steaks


I do damn near the same thing. The only problem I have is getting the apprentice to move on with out being pushed. But sometimes that's what they need. And I'm just the man to do it!!! You won't move on until you get ALL the cuts down and pass the testing.

__________________


Veteran Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 1041
Date:
RE: flank steaks


today one kid im training i made him take the oyster bone and bone out 9 cases of bone in pork loins he looked like he was gonna cry outta fustration..lol......but he finished it all and got all my pork preped for me in the morning......

__________________
-


Guru

Status: Offline
Posts: 1713
Date:
flank steaks


wow how cruel of you butcher29.  Nine cases?  Each one about 90 lbs with 4 loins in it?

must sell alot of fresh baby back ribs there if you bone them all out.  i guarantee that kid will thank you someday because boning out things is going to be easy for him after that.



-- Edited by fdarn on Thursday 26th of May 2011 05:37:36 PM

__________________

 



Veteran Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 643
Date:
RE: flank steaks


I get Flanks in a box with 15 in it
trimmed &Cryrovac.
We price them and put them out
7.99/lb

We also do pinwheels
Spinach and feta is our #1 seller


__________________

Joe Parajecki

Operations Manager/ Partner

Kettle Range Meat Company, Milwaukee WI

Member Meat Cutter Hall of Fame and The Butcher's Guild



Veteran Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 445
Date:
RE: flank steaks


baby spinach,roastedpeppers and provolone cheese with some minced garlic is my favorite. i used to get yelled at by the former meat boss about the ribeye fat. i think i will pick it up again.

__________________


Veteran Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 1041
Date:
RE: flank steaks


fdarn wrote:

wow how cruel of you butcher29.  Nine cases?  Each one about 90 lbs with 4 loins in it?

must sell alot of fresh baby back ribs there if you bone them all out.  i guarantee that kid will thank you someday because boning out things is going to be easy for him after that.



-- Edited by fdarn on Thursday 26th of May 2011 05:37:36 PM


 this is how i learned............and i go threw a crazy amount of back ribs and pork tenderloin 2 bbest sellers..........and we have bonless pork loins on for 1.99 a lbs there moving like crazy

 

 



__________________


Veteran Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 643
Date:
RE: flank steaks


I still remember my Journeyman test.
1 side of beef
1 whole Hog
1 Whole Lamb

You now have 8 hours to cut these into sellable pieces after that we will look at your trimmings, your bone can and your packages and decide if you are worthy.
You may now begin

__________________

Joe Parajecki

Operations Manager/ Partner

Kettle Range Meat Company, Milwaukee WI

Member Meat Cutter Hall of Fame and The Butcher's Guild



Veteran Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 1041
Date:
RE: flank steaks


lmao talk about pressure

__________________


Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 22
Date:
RE: flank steaks


yeah we get our flanks the same way we stop cutting them about 2 years ago they become cryovac now



__________________
Ryan Payseur


Veteran Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 303
Date:
flank steaks


Learning to cut carcass beef (4-hours per day), I pull two flank-steaks everyday (sometimes three if I get into a third side). Nobody ever actually wants them but I pull them anyway... into the grind they go! If they are especially thick I have turned them into jerky, which sells at (currently) $16.83/lbs. Not a bad %net profit.


If only I weren't hemorraging cash doing this... I'm living the butchers' dream: knock, harvest, face, skin, weeze, bung, gut, halve, rail, quarter, pack, ship, unpack, hang, rail, break, fabricate, wrap, sell.... The whole kit and kaboodle. 



-- Edited by JimmyMac on Tuesday 1st of May 2012 10:01:29 PM

__________________

extra ecclesiam nulla salus

 



Veteran Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 221
Date:
RE: flank steaks


The Fresh Market pinwheels are as follows: Tenderize a whole flank twice. Mix Pepperidge Farm Herb stuffing, fresh chopped celery and a little water together. Spread on flank. Roll up, slice about 1 1/4. " we sold them as units, not by the pound. I was there 1993-1997. Back then, about 3.99 each, I think.

We did 10 cutting tests per week per man-required-I strongly suggest frequent cutting tests to determine profit margins. Sales are worth a dime without gross profit.

Good luck and congrats!

__________________
Allen Scott
Page 1 of 1  sorted by
 
Quick Reply

Please log in to post quick replies.

Tweet this page Post to Digg Post to Del.icio.us


Create your own FREE Forum
Report Abuse
Powered by ActiveBoard