42oz Tomahawk steak £15 at Morrisons
42oz Tomahawk steak £15 at Morrisons
Author
Discussion

Gaz3376

Original Poster:

131 posts

135 months

Tuesday 14th June 2016
quotequote all
http://www.standard.co.uk/lifestyle/foodanddrink/h...

Quality might be questionable i guess, but im willing to give it a go.

Type R Tom

4,284 posts

175 months

Tuesday 14th June 2016
quotequote all
Gaz3376 said:
http://www.standard.co.uk/lifestyle/foodanddrink/h...

Quality might be questionable i guess, but im willing to give it a go.
Think I might pick one up at the weekend. Might sous vide it or maybe reverse sear.

soad

34,443 posts

202 months

Tuesday 14th June 2016
quotequote all
Find a decent butcher.

Pferdestarke

7,192 posts

213 months

Wednesday 15th June 2016
quotequote all
What a futile attempt at cashing in on a daft trend. So basically it's a single bone in beef rib renamed to appeal to carnivorous and clueless "blokes".

How that bit of bone adds any succulence or flavour is beyond me.

Still, if my boys bought me one I'd do it proud.

rb5er

11,657 posts

198 months

Thursday 16th June 2016
quotequote all
Sold out by 9am this Morning. Damn I want one.

rb5er

11,657 posts

198 months

Thursday 16th June 2016
quotequote all
Pferdestarke said:
What a futile attempt at cashing in on a daft trend. So basically it's a single bone in beef rib renamed to appeal to carnivorous and clueless "blokes".

How that bit of bone adds any succulence or flavour is beyond me.

Still, if my boys bought me one I'd do it proud.
Its not "renamed". The term tomahawk steak has been around for years and any meat on the bone adds flavour. Whether or not this Morrisons o e iscany good is yet to be determined.

rupert the dog

1,433 posts

243 months

Friday 17th June 2016
quotequote all
Type R Tom said:
Think I might pick one up at the weekend. Might sous vide it or maybe reverse sear.
Reverse sear??

Pferdestarke

7,192 posts

213 months

Friday 17th June 2016
quotequote all
rb5er said:
Its not "renamed". The term tomahawk steak has been around for years and any meat on the bone adds flavour. Whether or not this Morrisons o e iscany good is yet to be determined.
Fair enough on the name, but tell me how that bone adds flavour to the meat?

Rosscow

9,604 posts

189 months

Friday 17th June 2016
quotequote all
Pferdestarke said:
rb5er said:
Its not "renamed". The term tomahawk steak has been around for years and any meat on the bone adds flavour. Whether or not this Morrisons o e iscany good is yet to be determined.
Fair enough on the name, but tell me how that bone adds flavour to the meat?
Everyone knows that any meat on the bone is tastier than meat not on the bone!

Pferdestarke

7,192 posts

213 months

Friday 17th June 2016
quotequote all
Rosscow said:
Everyone knows that any meat on the bone is tastier than meat not on the bone!
There's a lot of inaccurate information taken as gospel about food and especially meat. Bloody steak for example. Sealing as another.

Again, how does that bit of bone in a rib of beef make it tastier/better/more succulent than if I were to remove it and cook without?

Read what MeatHead has to say about bones here: http://amazingribs.com/tips_and_technique/mythbust...

shakotan

10,862 posts

222 months

Friday 17th June 2016
quotequote all
rupert the dog said:
Type R Tom said:
Think I might pick one up at the weekend. Might sous vide it or maybe reverse sear.
Reverse sear??
Yes, reverse sear.

21TonyK

13,124 posts

235 months

Friday 17th June 2016
quotequote all
Don't think I'd have a bag or bath big enough for one on a long bone. Can't see it being a bad thing but it will probably be about 700g meat for £16?

Novelty but not especially good value or anything.

rb5er

11,657 posts

198 months

Friday 17th June 2016
quotequote all
Indeed novelty more than anything as its a huge bone but for the novelty I bought 2 of them this Morning for a steak-off with friends tomorrow.

Edited by rb5er on Friday 17th June 20:41

oddman

3,984 posts

278 months

Friday 17th June 2016
quotequote all
I'm a fan of Morrisons meat. It's good quality and they treat their suppliers well.

A friend raises pigs for them and you don't often hear farmers praising supermarkets. Their premium beef is good - better than other supermarket offerings and high street butchers

This review agrees

http://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2015/nov/0...

Type R Tom

4,284 posts

175 months

Friday 17th June 2016
quotequote all
I think morrisons meat is the best for choice for a supermarket, nowhere else can you get cheeks and trotters for a start.

shakotan

10,862 posts

222 months

Friday 17th June 2016
quotequote all
Well, none in stock at my branch, but I did come away with a 330g rib eye the size of my hand.


castex

5,142 posts

299 months

Friday 17th June 2016
quotequote all
Bone-in always tastes better. I know this because I have eaten my way through the research. Yum!
Arsed about what some random geezer says on the internet.

ajprice

32,609 posts

222 months

Friday 17th June 2016
quotequote all
Hmmm hehe


zygalski

7,759 posts

171 months

Saturday 18th June 2016
quotequote all
Type R Tom said:
Gaz3376 said:
http://www.standard.co.uk/lifestyle/foodanddrink/h...

Quality might be questionable i guess, but im willing to give it a go.
Might sous vide it or maybe reverse sear.
Rococo-blanching at 41 degrees for 3 weeks would be a better option.

Djtemeka

1,976 posts

218 months

Saturday 18th June 2016
quotequote all
42oz is nothing!

Go to Roehampton in sw London to a Saffa shop called StMarkus meats. You can buy a Texan steak of 2.5-3.5kg.

That's 88-125oz! biggrin