
This is what I call top sirloin. All my life, wherever I've lived, this is what I've called top sirloin. I buy one and cut it into three pieces. One for each of us, and one for the freezer--a future stir fry or something.
But I am at odds with Haggens Market, the upscale supermarket (locally owned) chain in my area. What they call top sirloin is a kidney-bean shaped piece of meat about half the area of the above. Far less than you'd achieve by cutting off the fat cap and the two pieces that naturally separate from the main body of this piece. The kidney bean shaped piece they cut into two steaks and sell two to a pack. Then there's a larger whole cut they call Petite Sirloin, which looks about as tender as top round. Blech.
This pisses me off. I want what I'm used to--I love that cut. Costco sells it that way so it's still available to me here, but the heated argument I had with the Haggens butcher last week was really something. He acted like I was nuts to suggest that there was anything else in the world besides what they call top sirloin, and just plain pissy to not be happy with the petite sirloin.
Then this morning, I watched a show on PBS hosted by Daisy Martinez who made a very interesting rare steak adobo that I'd love to try. She said she was using sirloin. But I know my meat, and I'm here to tell you that the two steaks she had in front of her were what we on the west coast call a New York or New York Strip cut and which I thought east coasters may refer to as Delmonicos.
That pisses me off, too. East Coasters: is the Delmonico instead the cut I know as Spencer or Rib Eye, and my New York your sirloin, or is everybody ganging up on me?
