The Wall Street Journal - 22.02.2020 - 23.02.2020

(Axel Boer) #1

THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. **** Saturday/Sunday, February 22 - 23, 2020 |D9


EATING & DRINKING


ply in 2016.
Today, Ms. Thomason pre-
sides over locations in Brew-
erytown and South Philadel-
phia, with a business model
rooted in a firm commitment
to animal welfare and sup-
porting livestock farmers. She
tackles the issue of small
farms’ inability to book slots
at slaughterhouses due to low
volume by representing a
whole network of farmers.
“That brings me to the
slaughterhouse 52 weeks a
year. They accommodate me
and also cut to order because
with this network, I am a

high-volume customer.”
She also acts as an inter-
mediary between the farmers
and chefs to get the various
cuts of a whole animal sold
to restaurants. To cultivate a
market for the meat that she
commits to buy, she main-
tains and educates a cus-
tomer base through whole-
sale and retail sales, a meat
CSA, butchering classes and
pop-up dinners.
Ms. Thomason’s meat and
mindset won over renowned
chef/restaurateur Marc Vetri,
who became her business
partner in 2018. Mr. Vetri

had just exited a partnership
with Urban Outfitters. “I saw
everything going from small
business to large,” he said.
“Instead of the local hard-
ware store, there’s Lowe’s. In-
stead of the basic grocery
store, there’s Whole Foods. I
wanted to do something that
instead supported small busi-
ness.” One of Ms. Thomason’s
first clients, Mr. Vetri values
the sustainability and low-
waste efficiency of working
with primal and subprimal
parts in his restaurants.
It’s no different for home
cooks: Purchasing subprimal

parts and butchering them
down into select cuts yourself
saves money and reduces
food waste, too. Ms. Thoma-
son’s step-by-step instruc-
tions (above) on how to
butcher a chuck roll will leave
you with steaks, a pot roast,
short ribs, stew meat and
stock scraps—not to mention
a feeling of supreme satisfac-
tion and the admiration of
your dinner guests.

Find Mr. Vetri‘s slow-cooked,
stewy, comforting recipe for
short ribs atwsj.com/news/
life-arts/food-cooking-drink.

Let’s Get


Primal


Going DIY and breaking down a big hunk
of beef into individual cuts is highly
satisfying as well as terrifically thrifty

JOE McKENDRY

CUTTING CLASS


F. MARTIN RAMIN/THE WALL STREET JOURNAL


What You’ll Need
1 boneless whole chuck roll, under-
blade attached, 10-12 pounds
Cotton twine
Victorinox boning knife, 6-inches,
semi-flexible

1 Place chuck roll flat-side down. Find
seam that connects eye (the raised,
rounded part on top) and underblade
flap. Pull at a corner of seam and roll
eye off, severing connective tissue with
knife tip to separate eye and flap.

2 Start with the eye. From the more
tapered end, cut two chuck eye
steaks, each about 1 inch thick, slic-
ing in one swift motion.

3 With twine, tie a tight knot around
middle of eye roll. Continue tying off in
1-inch increments from center to ends,
forming a log-shape pot roast. Test for
tightness—you shouldn’t be able to fit
a finger under the string.

4 Now, turn to the underblade flap.
Remove silverskin (the sheer silvery
membrane) from flap on both sides
by inserting knife under skin and
pulling away. Trim fat. Reserve silver-
skin and fat for stock.

5 Cut underblade flap in half. Then,
slice each half into 1^1 / 2 -inch by 3-inch
portions (about^1 / 2 pound each) to
render boneless short ribs. Cube re-
maining trim into 1-inch pieces for
stew.

HOW TO BUTCHER A BEEF CHUCK ROLL INTO MULTIPLE MEALS


oped friendships with some
livestock farmers. They often
confided in her about their
mounting challenges with
processing, marketing and
selling their meat. “I thought,
No one is taking care of these
guys. Maybe if I learned how
to butcher, I could help fix
this broken system.”
Inspired, she embarked on
a new career, starting by
working on a small farm in
central Pennsylvania to fully
understand the farmers’
needs. After a season of rais-
ing livestock, she landed an
apprenticeship at the Local
Butcher Shop in Berkeley, Ca-
lif. Upon completion, however,
she was disap-
pointed to find
there were no staff
positions avail-
able—until a freak
accident occurred:
The shop’s propri-
etor accidentally
stabbed himself in
the bladder while
preparing an order.
Ms. Thomason was
tapped to join the
staff and after a
year there, and
then two years as
head butcher and
manager of Kens-
ington Quarters in
Philadelphia, she
opened Primal Sup-

I


N THE VOCABULARY
of butchery, primal
cuts are the big ones
separated first from
the whole animal.
Some primals can be further
broken down into subprimal
cuts. A cow, for example, has
eight primal cuts: chuck, rib,
loin, round, flank, short plate,
brisket and shank. The chuck
alone yields a variety of sub-
primals, including the chuck
roll—itself a bonanza of sec-
ondary cuts and source of
multiple meals.
Philadelphia butcher shop
Primal Supply Meats purveys
primal, subprimal
and custom cuts
to some of the
city’s best restau-
rants and sustain-
ability-minded
meat eaters. A
knack for prob-
lem-solving drove
founder Heather
Thomason, a for-
mer dancer and
graphic designer,
into the butchery
field.
As a conscien-
tious home cook,
she spent so
much time at the
farmers’ market
that she devel-

BYKATHLEENSQUIRES

Pro Tips
1.When you’re at
the butcher, ask
for a boneless
whole chuck roll,
underblade at-
tached, about
10-12 pounds.
2.Shop for 100%
grass-fed or
grass-finished
beef, which con-
tains more nutri-
ents than grain-
fed beef.
3.Keep a towel
nearby to wipe
the knife handle if
it gets slippery.

Boozy Julius
Serves 2

In a blender, combine
2/3 cup frozen or-
ange-juice concen-
tratewith4 ounces
white rum or blanco
tequila,3/4 cup
cream sodaand 2
ounceslime juice.Add
1 cup ice. Blend on
high until smooth. Di-
vide between 2 tall
glasses. Top each
with asplash of
cream soda, stir and
garnish with anor-
ange slice.

Orange Julius Hits the Bar


This grown-up version takes the edge off winter (and aging)


DRINKEASY


FEBRUARY MAY BEthe shortest month, but
it sure doesn’t feel that way. Call it ennui sea-
son: those weary weeks of midwinter when the
holiday glow has long since receded, but spring
green is still nowhere in sight. The only cure is
distraction—preferably in the form of a flight to
Cabo, but I’ve found that in the absence of such
a windfall, some liquid sunshine will suffice.
Which is why I recently found myself
pawing through my freezer and consid-
ering a long-forgotten tube of frozen
orange-juice concentrate. After an af-
ternoon skating with my son, reliving
the roller-rink glories of my youth,
the cocktail hour had arrived. Looking
at that icy can, a lightbulb switched on.
Why not concoct a boozy Orange Julius,
that slushy, Creamsicle-flavored delight of my
suburban childhood?
A cursory search provided me a recipe blue-
print and filled in the basic history: The drink
was invented in the 1920s by a Southern Cali-
fornia O.J. salesman named Julius Freed, and
his franchise soon spread across the country.
By my roller-skating heyday in the 1980s, Or-
ange Julius was a shopping-mall staple.
Recreating its charms at home didn’t seem
too challenging. I’d just need something creamy,

something boozy and orange juice, of course.
Ordinarily, I’m a fresh-squeezed sort of gal, but
that can of concentrate seemed more in the
spirit of the food court, so I scooped a cupful
into my blender. Now for the strong stuff.
Vodka is always a good blank slate, but after a
little thought, I opted for white rum instead,
reasoning that its subtle vanilla sweetness
might amplify the Creamsicle effect. (I’ve
since tried it with blanco tequila and
can confirm that it, too, gets the job
done nicely.)
Mr. Freed’s recipe and most copy-
cats seem to finish off with a glug of
milk (or powdered creamer) and a
heaping spoonful or two of sugar, but I
worried about the effects of what would
essentially be a supercharged milkshake on my
middle-aged system. I decided to swap in old-
fashioned cream soda plus a cupful of ice, then
blended the mixture to a frothy fizz. When the
first sip proved a little too sweet, I added a cou-
ple ounces of fresh lime juice.
Poured into a tall glass, finished with a
splash more cream soda and garnished with an
orange slice, it wasn’t a beach chair in Baja, but
it was just the bright, cheery balm I’d hoped it
might be.—Sarah Karnasiewicz

THECOVEATLANTISBAHAMAS.COM | 1877.COVEVIP

STAY AT THE COVE • PLAY AT ATLANTIS


PARADISE ISLAND BAHAMAS
Free download pdf