t-bone steak
Noun: A t-bone steak is a specific cut of beef steak taken from the short loin of a cow. It is characterized by a T-shaped bone (specifically a lumbar vertebra) that runs through the meat, separating two distinct muscles: the larger strip steak (or New York strip) on one side and a smaller portion of the tenderloin (or filet mignon) on the other.
The term is used to identify and order this particular cut of meat, typically in contexts related to cooking, dining, and butchery. - It is a countable noun (e.g., a t-bone steak, two t-bone steaks). - It is often associated with grilling or broiling.
- Noun:
- For our anniversary dinner, we grilled two juicy t-bone steaks.
- The menu features a 16-ounce t-bone steak served with roasted potatoes.
- A true t-bone steak must contain a piece of the tenderloin.
- "T-bone" as shorthand: In informal contexts, "T-bone" can be used alone to refer to this cut.
- I'll have the T-bone, medium-rare.
- The presence of the tenderloin portion is a key distinction from a porterhouse steak, which is a larger cut from the same section containing a larger portion of tenderloin.
- Porterhouse steak: A larger cut from the same short loin section, containing a bigger portion of tenderloin than a standard t-bone steak.
- Strip steak / New York strip: The larger muscle on one side of the T-bone.
- Tenderloin / Filet mignon: The smaller, very tender muscle on the other side of the T-bone.
- T-bone (informal/noun)
- Club steak (This is a similar, related cut but typically contains no tenderloin, only the strip muscle and the bone. It is not a perfect synonym.)
There are no common idioms or phrasal verbs specifically for "t-bone steak." However, the term "to T-bone" is a completely separate verb in automotive contexts, meaning to collide with the side of another vehicle, forming a "T" shape. This is a homograph and not related to the steak.
- small steak from the thin end of the short loin containing a T-shaped bone and small piece of tenderloin