Friday, April 13, 2007

The Red Meat Cheat Sheet

Article By: Jeffery Lindenmuth Print Email

What’s in those delicious 3 ounces of lean beef, on average?

51% of your daily value of protein*
Important for building muscles, organs and bones

38% of your daily value of zinc*
Helps maintain your immune system and heal wounds

37% of your daily value of Vitamin B12*
Produces red blood cells and helps maintain your nervous system

14% of your daily value of iron*
Especially important for red blood cell production and carrying oxygen to blood cells and tissues, such as your muscles

* Based on a 2,000 calorie diet. You Got Game?

Aside from the novelty of throwing a nice moose steak on the barbie, game meats—both wild and farm-raised—are generally lower in fat than traditional beef. Based on 3 oz. servings, just the meat (not the bread or fixings).

Meat POINTS values
Bison (Buffalo) 3
Venison Steak 3
Elk Tenderloin 2.5
Sometimes, a big salad and another breast of chicken just won't cut it. Sometimes, you need meat. Red meat. A sirloin strip or filet mignon. These tips will tell you everything you ever wanted to know about beef—and then some.

Start with portion size.
You want a 3-ounce serving of red meat, about the size of a deck of cards. Yes, that's way smaller than the 12- and 16-ounce slabs the local steakhouse serves. Which is why their regular patrons can't see their feet.

See the fat, lose the fat.
If you can't trim away the excess fat with your knife, it's the wrong cut for you. That means choosing top sirloin steak over ribeye, or any meat that's described as "marbled" (which is a euphemism for, "the fat's mixed inside the meat"). For example, 3 ounces of filet mignon has 7 POINTS values but if you can cut away a lot of visible fat, that drops to 4 POINTS values.

The De-greasing of America
Beef is about 20 percent leaner than it was in the early 1990s, according to the National Cattlemen's Association.

How lean is "lean?"
Beef can only legally be called "lean" if it has less than 10 grams of total fat, 4.5 grams or less of saturated fat, and less than 95 milligrams of cholesterol per 3-ounce serving.

Kinder Cuts
There are more than two dozen kinds of beef that qualify as lean or extra lean according to labeling definitions by the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA). Lean cuts to look for at the market or a restaurant are listed at the top of the page. All are 3-ounce servings.

Glazed and Confused
Tell the waiter you want your steak without butter glazing. Line chefs pour butter on it right before serving to give it that glistening look of still-sizzling meat.

Supporting Roles
Ordering side dishes in restaurants are dicey because most restaurants saute their vegetables in oil or butter. To save POINTS values, your best bets are a large baked potato without butter for 3 POINTS values and steamed vegetables with a POINTS value of 0.

2 Comments:

At 11:34 AM, Blogger Megan said...

What great ideas! I never knew that about the butter on the steak! Ewww!

Whoa! I just had an "ah-ha moment". No wonder my steaks, cooked at home don't look as pretty as they do while eating out! But still taste good!

 
At 5:42 PM, Blogger Snowman said...

You know, the best steak sauce I've found was a flavored butter.

 

Post a Comment

<< Home