|
Post by BBQ Butcher on Jun 8, 2005 16:08:56 GMT -5
"Dry Aging: Beef that is dry-aged is allowed to hang unwrapped for a period of time under controlled humidity, temperature, and airflow in a professional grade refrigerator. The meat loses a large quantity of moisture, which concentrates the flavor, reduces the original weight by nearly a fifth, and tenderizes the meat. Only the best cuts of beef graded Prime or Choice are aged in this manner, so the cost can be quite high.
Wet Aging: Wet aging is similar to dry aging except that the beef is wrapped while it ages in order to prevent the loss of moisture. It is aged in controlled conditions in a professional refrigerator. Because there is no loss of moisture, the flavor does not become as concentrated as with dry aging."
Note: "Aged beef should not be confused with old beef, which refers to beef that has come to the end of its shelf life."
A green or brown steak is NOT aged...IT's OLD! Proper aging is done with whole primal cuts, not individual steaks.
|
|