Rockin' D On The Ridge, Inc
Family Stock-up Bundle
Family Stock-up Bundle
- 20 lbs ground beef
- 1 4-5 lb Arm Roast
- 3 1" 2 packs Ribeyes
- 4 1" Chuck Steaks
- 2 1" Sirloin Steaks
- 2 2 packs New York Strip Sandwich Steaks
- 2 packages tenderized round steak
- 2 Hanger Steaks
- 4 lb Short ribs
- 1 lb Stew meat
- 3 4 packs Burger patties
- 1 dozen eggs
- 1 4 pack snack sticks
Fire up your grill all summer long with this premium Family Stock-up Bundle. We've packed everything you need for backyard barbecues, weeknight dinners, and entertaining guests. Inside you'll find 20 lbs of versatile ground beef perfect for burgers and tacos, tender ribeyes and New York strips for show-stopping steaks, juicy short ribs for low-and-slow smoking, and an arm roast ideal for feeding a crowd. We've also included chuck steaks, sirloin, hanger steaks, and tenderized round steak to keep your grill rotation fresh and exciting. Round out your cookouts with pre-formed burger patties, stew meat for hearty sides, and a dozen farm-fresh eggs for breakfast grilling. This bundle delivers premium quality cuts at exceptional value—the smart choice for families who love to grill. Stock up now and grill confidently all season.
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FAQ
How much meat can I expect to get?
The average ready-to-butcher Angus cow weighs 1,150 pounds. This can vary a lot, depending on breed, finishing and management of the producer marketing the animal.
Once the animal is butchered and hide, head and internal organs removed, it usually weighs about 62 percent of the live weight. This is called the hanging weight. On that 1,150 pound animal that would be about 713 pounds.
Most producers figure the quarter/half/whole price based on the hanging weight.
After the beef hangs and ages for two to three weeks, which tenderizes and develops flavor in the meat (and also shrinks a little as some of the water evaporates) the carcass is broken down further, and excess bone, connective tissue and fat is removed.
About 21 percent of the hanging weight is removed in this process, leaving about 563 pounds of edible meat from a whole animal.
So, if you pay (for example) $3.25 a pound, figured on hanging weight, the actual price per pound will be about $4.35, if it processes according to the averages. Most custom meat processors charge from $.90 to $1.20 per pound, hanging weight, to process, so you’ll be looking at about $5.12 total, per pound for processed beef.
Keep in mind that includes all steaks, hamburger, roasts, ribs, etc.
How much of that will be hamburger?
How much hamburger you get depends somewhat on how you order it. Hamburger comes from the parts of the animal that are too tough or difficult to cook, or are too small to cook as steaks or roasts. If you don’t cook roasts or flat iron steaks, for example, you can ask to have those ground. If you don’t ask for any special cuts, on average, about 38 percent of the edible portion of the animal will be ground into hamburger. So on our average 637-pound animal, you’d expect about 242 pounds of hamburger.
Can I buy just hamburger?
Maybe. Some people may be selling animals that are older and less tender than a typical butcher animal, and may be most suitable for hamburger, rather than cutting into steaks and roasts. In that case, unless they’re labeled for resale, those animals would need to be sold by the half or quarter as well.
What is “hanging weight”?
Hanging weight is how much the carcass weighs after it’s skinned and the head and internal organs are removed. This is usually about 62 percent of the live weight of the animal, and what most private beef sellers base their per-pound cost on.
The butcher shop wants “cutting orders.” What does that mean?
“Cutting orders” are how you want your meat cut and packaged. This includes how much fat you want in your burger (standard is usually 85% lean), how thick you want your steaks, how much hamburger you want in a package (usually 1-2 pounds) how many steaks per package, whether you want round steaks tenderized, cubed or left alone, what size you want the roasts, whether you want the ribeye as steaks or roasts. There are a lot of questions, and many processors have a “cut sheet” they ask the customer to fill out in person, or over the phone. You can also decide if you want the organ meats, like the liver, heart and tongue, plus soup bones, ox tail and tallow (extra fat they trim off).