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Post Info TOPIC: Dealing with fatty ribeyes.


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Dealing with fatty ribeyes.


Dealing with the  big end of the rib for ribeye steaks, has always been a challenge. I keep praying as I go cut down  the ribeye for steaks that that fat kernel stays small.  But, we all  know  that that  only  happens when you're  lucky.  I've  been taking the last  6 inches or so of the fatty end and opening  it up, rolling it out and removing  most of the internal  fat. Rolling it back up like a  pinwheel,  tie it up at inch and a half intervals  and cutting. We call them glory holes, but I'm not  real comfortable calling them that. Anybody  have merchandising thoughts  on this..



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RE: Dealing with fatty ribeyes.


machine wrote:

Dealing with the  big end of the rib for ribeye steaks, has always been a challenge. I keep praying as I go cut down  the ribeye for steaks that that fat kernel stays small.  But, we all  know  that that  only  happens when you're  lucky.  I've  been taking the last  6 inches or so of the fatty end and opening  it up, rolling it out and removing  most of the internal  fat. Rolling it back up like a  pinwheel,  tie it up at inch and a half intervals  and cutting. We call them glory holes, but I'm not  real comfortable calling them that. Anybody  have merchandising thoughts  on this..


 Unless it's unusually very large, we always leave it in. Someone will buy it. 

How about putting out standing rib roasts from only the large end, cutting them just large enough to hide the large piece of fat?



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RE: Dealing with fatty ribeyes.


Yeah, I do that, but we rarely merchandise rib roasts. Usually advertise boneless ribeye steaks.

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RE: Dealing with fatty ribeyes.


I used to cut the circle of meat out of that fat and call it Filet Mignon and charge $1 more for it. They sold nicely. I don't consider it misleading as I never said they came from the tenderloin.

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RE: Dealing with fatty ribeyes.


fdarn wrote:

I used to cut the circle of meat out of that fat and call it Filet Mignon and charge $1 more for it. They sold nicely. I don't consider it misleading as I never said they came from the tenderloin.


 

Interesting idea. Never thought of that. I guess it's the same as calling anything chateaubraind or London Broil. 


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RE: Dealing with fatty ribeyes.


I always just open it up and V the fat and curled it back tight



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RE: Dealing with fatty ribeyes.


a good meatwrapper will put the label over the fat..

seriously, I do what leon said, v out the fat ...

rib eyes are now 8-12.00lb and most women will look at that fat and not want to buy it ......

some stores will label for "end cut rib-eyes" or "large end" for 1.00 less per lb

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RE: Dealing with fatty ribeyes.


The old time cutter that owned the store that I was apprenticed to made us peel the rind off for Rib London Broil and cut the eye for thin Prime Rib Cutlets....

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RE: Dealing with fatty ribeyes.


I don't know if you have a full service case or if you wrap and price it for a self service case.

One thing I did besides the filet mignon thing is I would call the nice half Delmonico Steaks and price it about 8.99 (10 years ago) and the fatty end I would call Rib Eye Steaks and price them 7.99. Keep them separate as if they are two different steaks.

However if you can't do that because of policy and if you wrap and price them what you can try doing is mixing them up. Tray them up 2 to a tray. Put the fatty one on the side where the price goes so that the price label covers the fat. Put the nice one on the other side where it will be most visible.

I did a variation of all of these things, but I found my Filet Mignon worked the best and I would price it at 9.99 or 10.99. It looks just like a Tenderloin steak and it is plenty tender. I never had any complaints about it. The rest of the meat that is left after you carve that out can be used for kabobs, or stew.

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RE: Dealing with fatty ribeyes.


Thanks for you guys taking the time to reply. I'm gonna probably use a mixture of all those ideas.

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RE: Dealing with fatty ribeyes.


I would not alter the natural shape. Use the big end for family packs and twin packs. Make them a little thinner. At one store, we even reduced the end cuts of rib-eyes and other steaks by $1.00 per pound. No matter what, you will not get full retail out of all of them. They are my favorite steak. If you suggest them and get people to buy them, they will return for more. Fat equals flavor! The other end is more like a strip loin steak. I prefer the big end for eating. Happy Cutting!

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RE: Dealing with fatty ribeyes.


Speaking about ribeyes, I got a case of Excel Selects in the other day and opened it up and pulled out one out to cut it up. Cut the plastic off of it and it was in 2 pieces. 1 part was ribeye and the other part was strip loin. Never seen this before. Looked at the rest of what was in the case and they were all cut in half and sealed up. Label on the box didn't say anything about it. ???

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Dealing with fatty ribeyes.


irish squirrel wrote:

Speaking about ribeyes, I got a case of Excel Selects in the other day and opened it up and pulled out one out to cut it up. Cut the plastic off of it and it was in 2 pieces. 1 part was ribeye and the other part was strip loin. Never seen this before. Looked at the rest of what was in the case and they were all cut in half and sealed up. Label on the box didn't say anything about it. ???


 Those packing plant folks are getting sloppier and sloppier aren't they?

I have found strip loins in rib eye cases before and vis versa but never cut in half. I wonder what is up with that.  



-- Edited by fdarn on Sunday 19th of April 2015 10:47:06 AM

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RE: Dealing with fatty ribeyes.


Split Ribs and Strips are for smaller stores that support cutting whole pieces without incurring shrink.Also good for putting out as is in bulk section.

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RE: Dealing with fatty ribeyes.


kbraker510 wrote:

Split Ribs and Strips are for smaller stores that support cutting whole pieces without incurring shrink.Also good for putting out as is in bulk section.


 But this was different, I think. The ones Irish squirrel was talking about were two different half items in the same package. Not one half wrapped item in one package. Could you sell them in bulk that way? It would not be good for a small store that needed only strip steaks at a particular moment, but had to open half a rib eye at the same time too. 



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RE: Dealing with fatty ribeyes.


Someone screwed up. lol

We get all kinds of stuff like that. I've got BI Chuck for a Chuck Roll, a whole box of Blades off of a clod in a pectoral box, whole cases of sirloin caps anything. They're probably working them like dogs at the packing plants.

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