Cooking

Cuts of meat.

Where each cut sits on the animal and how it's best cooked — beef, pork, lamb and chicken.

Tap any row to copy the value in the first column.

Beef

CutWhere it's fromCuts & cooking
ChuckShoulder & neckChuck steak, pot roast, mince — braise, slow-cook
RibUpper back (ribs 6–12)Ribeye, prime rib, short rib — grill, roast
Short loinMid-backT-bone, porterhouse, strip steak, filet — grill, fry
SirloinHip / rear backSirloin steak, tri-tip — grill, roast
RoundRear leg & rumpRump roast, eye of round, topside — roast, braise
BrisketLower chestBrisket — smoke, slow braise
PlateLower front bellySkirt steak, short ribs — grill, braise
FlankLower rear bellyFlank steak — marinate, grill, slice thin
ShankLegsOsso buco, soup — long braise

Pork

CutWhere it's fromCuts & cooking
Shoulder (butt & picnic)Front shoulderPulled pork, roast — braise, smoke
LoinBackPork chops, tenderloin, baby back ribs — grill, roast
BellyUndersideBacon, pork belly, spare ribs — cure, roast, braise
Leg / hamRear legHam, gammon, roast — cure, roast
Hock & trotterLower leg & footStock, terrine — braise

Lamb

CutWhere it's fromCuts & cooking
ShoulderFront shoulderStew, slow roast — braise, roast
Rack / ribUpper backRack of lamb, cutlets — roast, grill
LoinMid-backLoin chops, saddle — grill, roast
LegRear legLeg of lamb, steaks — roast
BreastUndersideRolled breast — slow roast, braise
ShankLegsBraised shank — long braise

Chicken

CutWhere it's fromCuts & cooking
BreastFront / chestWhite meat — grill, fry, roast (don't overcook)
ThighUpper legDark meat — braise, roast, grill (forgiving)
DrumstickLower legDark meat — fry, roast, bake
WingWingFry, grill, bake
Whole / carcassWhole birdRoast whole; bones for stock

Why location decides the cooking method

The single most useful rule in cooking meat: hard-working muscles need low and slow, lazy muscles need hot and fast. Cuts from the shoulder, leg and chest — chuck, shank, brisket, shoulder — do a lot of work, so they're full of connective tissue that only melts into tenderness with long, moist cooking like braising, stewing and smoking. Cuts from along the back (loin, rib) barely move, so they're naturally tender and suit quick, high-heat methods like grilling and frying. Match the method to where the cut sat on the animal and a cheap cut turns out better than an expensive one cooked wrong. Then check it's done with the internal temperature chart.

FAQ

Which cuts of beef are best for slow cooking?
Hard-working cuts with lots of connective tissue: chuck, brisket, short rib and shank. Low, slow, moist heat breaks the collagen down into gelatine and makes them tender. Lean cuts like fillet dry out if slow-cooked.
What is the most tender cut of beef?
The tenderloin (filet mignon), from the short loin, because that muscle does almost no work. It's very tender but mild; a ribeye balances tenderness with more flavour.

More cooking references