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Steak

A steak is a thick cut of meat generally sliced across the muscle fibers, sometimes including a bone. It is normally grilled or fried. Steak can be diced, cooked in sauce, such as in steak and kidney pie, or minced and formed into patties, such as hamburgers.

This article is about different types of steak. For beef steaks, see beefsteak. For fish steaks, see fish steak. For other uses, see Steak (disambiguation).

Steaks are cut from animals including cattle, bison, buffalo, camel, goat, horse, kangaroo,[1][2] sheep, ostrich, pigs, turkey, and deer, as well as various types of fish, especially salmon and large fish such as swordfish, shark, and marlin. For some meats, such as pork, lamb and mutton, chevon, and veal, these cuts are often referred to as chops. Some cured meat, such as gammon, is commonly served as steak.


Grilled portobello mushroom may be called mushroom steak, and similarly for other vegetarian dishes.[3] Imitation steak is a food product that is formed into a steak shape from various pieces of meat. Grilled fruits such as watermelon have been used as vegetarian steak alternatives.


Exceptions, in which the meat is sliced parallel to the fibers, include the skirt steak cut from the plate, the flank steak cut from the abdominal muscles, and the silverfinger steak cut from the loin and including three rib bones. In a larger sense, fish steaks, ground meat steaks, pork steak, and many more varieties of steak are known.


In the United States, steak cut from cattle is also called "beefsteak".

Etymology

The word steak originates from the mid-15th century Scandinavian word steik, or stickna' in the Middle English dialect, along with the Old Norse word steikja.[4] The Oxford English Dictionary's first reference is to "a thick slice of meat cut for roasting or grilling or frying, sometimes used in a pie or pudding; especially a piece cut from the hind-quarters of the animal." Subsequent parts of the entry, however, refer to "steak fish", which referred to "cod of a size suitable for cutting into steaks", and also "steak-raid", which was a custom among Scottish Highlanders of giving some cattle being driven through a gentleman's land to the owner.[5] An early written usage of the word "stekys" comes from a 15th-century cookbook, and makes reference to both beef or venison steaks.[6]

A sheep ranch (Estancia) in Argentina

A sheep ranch (Estancia) in Argentina

Cattle grazing in England

Cattle grazing in England

Livestock for meat to be used as steak cuts may be raised on a farm or ranch. The meat from various wild game may also be used for steak cuts.

Béarnaise sauce

Café de Paris sauce

such as parsley butter (to create Entrecôte à la Bretonne), garlic butter or snail butter

Compound butters

a rich brown sauce in French cuisine used in the preparation of Tournedos Rossini

Demi-glace

Mustard

Horseradish cream

Fresh

Rosemary

Pepper

Peppercorn sauce

Sauce Nivernaise

[37]

Sautéed mushrooms

White wine, to create Tournedos au vin blanc

a traditional commercial condiment

Worcestershire sauce

Inspected beef carcasses tagged by the USDA

Inspected beef carcasses tagged by the USDA

High grade sliced Matsusaka wagyu beef (rib section meat)

High grade sliced Matsusaka wagyu beef (rib section meat)

Matsusaka sirloin steak

Matsusaka sirloin steak

List of beef dishes

Meat on the bone

Fussell, Betty Harper (2008). . Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. ISBN 978-0151012022.

Raising Steaks: The Life and Times of American Beef