When I start this business this was the way we cut shoulder roast, we left the ribs on. This roast at that time was a good seller, out sold chuck roast and we got 40 to 50 cents a lb more for it. Hardly any woman over 40 back then wanted anything but a bone in shoulder roast for Sunday dinner. Around 66, 68 we started taking the ribs off.
Yes I also used to sell these, and then we'd have an english cut pot roast as well then leave the rest of the neck for stew, or maybe a rolled boneless chuck roast
yah I cut lots of them at my previous job 3 yrs ago. We put out the blade rst, boned all the centers (or 7bones) for boneless rst and put out B.I. english where the round bone got too big, usually 2 off each arm. God I miss those days.....NOT! lol Really it's all good.
The English cut has moved around a lot, when I first started it was the first 2 to 3 inch roast off the shoulder, then it was cut away from the bone leaving it boneless and the rest used as a shank soup bone
Cowboy I don't go back as far as you but close lol I cut shoulders like that also. I think you may be right about the years because I think A&P change off it around late 60's in Atlanta
Chuck 7-Bone is my eldest sister's favorite cut of beef.
Mine is cross-cut fore shanks. Must be an Italian-American thing because cross-cut lamb shanks are one of the few things I'll take home from work.... that and chuck eyes (which confusedly we do not sell)
yup, that was the stab'n'slab way to cut them; 3 slices off the arm, then the big knuckle for soup bone and the rest of the shoulder for 2 english cut roasts. Take the ribs off first for long or short ribs or leave them on the slices. Dad worked in the 40's for A&P and that's how they taught him, and likewise me until I worked for Big M, IGA, and so on. Don't know anyone using swing beef any more, I was raised on that breaking down fores and hinds! Great American/Victory used a combination in the 70's and 80's. GA introduced me to full muscle-boning processing and it vastly improved our margins. We'd merchandise everything to the max.
And today I don't see much at all that they are doing any different. I did sirloin tips different; many stores here in the south sell the split as 'petite sirloin steaks'. We'd remove the silver side and make sandwich steaks out of them and sell the rest as sirloin tip steaks, 2 to a 4.
And today I don't see much at all that they are doing any different. I did sirloin tips different; many stores here in the south sell the split as 'petite sirloin steaks'. We'd remove the silver side and make sandwich steaks out of them and sell the rest as sirloin tip steaks, 2 to a 4.
That's how I do tips also, sandwich stks and tip stk the rest. Sure don't make it easy to get much out of IBP's peeled nubs oops I mean knuckles after they get done stealing the ball tip off them.