Q&A for How to Tenderize Beef

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  • Question
    Can you tenderize meat after it is cooked?
    Vanna Tran
    Experienced Cook
    Vanna Tran is a home cook who started cooking with her mother at a very young age. She has catered events and hosted pop-up dinners in the San Francisco Bay Area for over 5 years.
    Experienced Cook
    Expert Answer
    If you find that your meat is still tough after cooking, consider serving your dish with very thin cuts of the meat. While you can't tenderize it once it's cooked, cutting into small pieces will make it easier to chew.
  • Question
    How do you cook beef so it's tender?
    Vanna Tran
    Experienced Cook
    Vanna Tran is a home cook who started cooking with her mother at a very young age. She has catered events and hosted pop-up dinners in the San Francisco Bay Area for over 5 years.
    Experienced Cook
    Expert Answer
    That totally depends on what cut of beef you're cooking. Something with a lot of connective tissue and collagen, like short ribs or oxtail, need to cook low and slow in a braising liquid for several hours. However, something with very little collagen, like a strip steak, might only need 10-12 minutes on a hot grill to achieve a tender medium rare.
  • Question
    Can I put seasoning on the meat before using the mallet?
    Community Answer
    You can, but most of the seasoning will probably go flying off the meat, so it's best to tenderize first.
  • Question
    Do I rinse vinegar off my meat when tenderizing it?
    Community Answer
    Absolutely, or else you will have a vinegar taste throughout the meat, no matter how long you cook it.
  • Question
    How can I tenderize overcooked meat?
    Community Answer
    Cutting it against the grain will make it a little easier to chew.
  • Question
    Should I use a mallet before I freeze the meat or after it is thawed?
    Community Answer
    It depends on how tender you want it to be. If you are going to freeze the meat for a meal later, or if you just want it to be tender, then use the mallet before you freeze it, and then after you are done tenderizing it, then freeze it. I always label mine (Tenderized, not tenderized) stuff like that. Then, when i take it out and it thaws, just lightly tenderize it again (lightly) and then season it and cook it.
  • Question
    Does boiling meat tenderize it?
    Community Answer
    Actually boiling meat can make it quite tough. Braising, wherein the meat is cooked over low heat with a little water or broth in a crockpot or dutch oven over a few hours is a good way to tenderize a tougher cut of meat.
  • Question
    Can I tenderize steak without a mallet?
    Community Answer
    Yes, you can. Just be sure to take proper precautions.
  • Question
    How do I tenderize beef if I don't have a mallet?
    Community Answer
    You can use a marinade or wet rub. Acid in vinegar or citrus breaks down the tougher elements of meat, as does salt.
  • Question
    I have tried using baking soda to tenderize, but the meat tasted terrible. What am I doing wrong?
    Community Answer
    It sounds like you're using too much baking soda. When using baking soda, either rinse the beef afterwards or use less baking soda and do it with tenderlizer. You could also use Maggi sauce with the baking soda.
  • Question
    Can pork be tendered in the same way as steak?
    Community Answer
    Absolutely. Muscle is muscle, and can be mechanically tenderized in the same manner.
  • Question
    How long should each side be broiled, and should it be on high or low?
    Community Answer
    Usually broiling is done on high. It's a personal preference how long to broil it on each side and also will depend on the thickness of the meat. Be careful because broiling doesn't take long at all. Stay with it and don't get distracted.
  • Question
    What causes meat cuts or pieces to roll up and form a roundish shape during cooking instead of remaining flat, the way they were before cooking?
    Community Answer
    Between the muscle and the fat is a thin membrane, often referred to as "silver skin" (most visible on the back of a slab of ribs, for example). That membrane contracts more, and more rapidly, than the muscle fiber, and so "squeezes" the meat during cooking, causing it to curl. Simple solution: cut through the membrane around the edge of the meat, as if cutting a rubber band into sections. You don't need to cut into the muscle fiber itself (but you probably will); just the membrane, every three or four inches. Then cook as usual.
  • Question
    How do I tenderize a standing rib roast?
    Kevin Reilly
    Community Answer
    Generally, if the rib roast has nice marbling of fat, no tenderizing should be required. Cooked right, you should be able to cut it with a fork.
  • Question
    Can I freeze beef after I marinate to use it another day?
    Community Answer
    It is not advisable to freeze marinated meat, as the liquids in the marinte can interact in an adverse way with the meat as everything freezes and defrosts.
  • Question
    Does pounded meat need to be refrigerated before cooking? I want to place peppers, etc., on the meat, roll it up, and wrap it in bacon. Would it be best to refrigerate the meat before stuffing it?
    Community Answer
    It is best to refrigirate the meat after rolling it up, so it's easier to work with, and after you refrigerate it, it will retain its shape.
  • Question
    When I don't have time to tenderize for hours, what can I do instead?
    Community Answer
    Pound it with a meat tenderizer or a rolling pin.
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