The Different Grades of Beef and What They Mean
People âknowâ meat comes from animals, but sometimes itâs easy to forget just how complex those animals are. A cowâs diet, living conditions, and lifespan can all have an effect on how steaks, roasts, or any other cut reacts to heat, and one way you can predict the outcome is by understanding the different USDA beef grades.
If you are a meat eater, you have most likely seen the little USDA shield stickers that, in addition to letting us all know that the USDA looked at this meat, tell us what grade of meat we are dealing with. There are actually eight (8!) different grades of beef, though supermarket shoppers are unlikely to encounter the bottom five gradesâstandard, commercial, utility, cutter, and canner. Grading is a service that is provided by the USDA and paid for by the producer or processor, and the applicable grade is given after an inspector examines a hanging carcass that is cut between the 12th and 13th rib, which makes it easy for them to see the ribeye. The age of the animal and color of the meat is also taken into consideration. According to Meatscience.org, âAny cattle that are graded Prime, Choice or Select are going to be young cattle who have not reached full maturity.â
Prime
This is the fancy boy meat with the most marbling and the most flavor. These cows are young and well-fed, and their meat is tender and well-marbled. These cows are not the most common, however. According to Weber, they only make up â4 ½ to 5 percent of the entire graded cattle,â which is actually a pretty big increase âfrom just a few years ago when it was only about 2 percent.â Most of this meat goes to restaurants and hotels, but you can find it at butcher shops or fancier grocery stores from time to time. The intramuscular fat (marbling) means steaks with a prime rating remain juicy and flavorful even when exposed to dry heat, so snap âem up if you see them (especially if they are at all discounted).

Choice
This is the most common grade of beef. âChoiceâ cows make up about 65% of all graded beef cattle. Their meat is decently marbled (though not as marbled as âPrimeâ), and itâs what youâre most likely to encounter at the grocery store. Choice steaks can be really great, but it is worth noting that âchoiceâ is a range, and that some steaks with this grade may be more marbled than others. Meatscience.org has some good visuals for each of the grades, but itâs always a good idea to look at the meat youâre buying and pick the one with the most intramuscular fat running through the meat. The more marbling a piece of meat has, the more likely it is to do well in dry heat. (If you think your steak is on the low end of âchoice,â you can always use a moist cooking method like braising or sous-vide cooking.)
Select
This is most likely the lowest grade of USDA beef youâll find in the grocery store. Some chains use this grade of beef as their house brand. Select meat is very consistent and quite lean, with very little marbling. Select steaks arenât as tender or flavorful as their prime and choice counterparts, so slap on a marinade if you intend to use a dry cooking method, and try not to cook them very long. If youâre making a stew, braise, or any other dish that utilizes a liquid-heavy cooking method, select cuts will work just fine.
The Bottom Five
Then there are standard, commercial, utility, cutter, and canner, the grades that lack the qualities that make steak desirable. âStandardâ meat is âpractically devoidâ of marbling, but it is possible that you might encounter it at the grocery store, marketed as something like a âmanagerâs specialâ or at a cheap buffet.
After that, youâre left with meat that comes from âoldâ cowsâaccording to The Takeout, this means cows that are older than 42 months. Age affects marbling, tenderness, and color, which makes meat with these grades poor candidates for steaks. (The USDA has a handy chart that shows how age affects grading.) Meat from these old cows can still be marbled to various degreesâmoderate-slightly abundant marbling is rated as âcommercial,â small-moderate marbling is âutility,â slight marbling is âcutter,â and meat from elderly cows that is devoid of marbling is rated âcanner.â These lower grades cuts are usually not sold as whole pieces of meat, but are either ground (for ground beef, obviously), or processed into products that donât really require intramuscular fat to be edible (like jerky, hot dogs, sausages, and bologna).
What about Wagyu?
Wagyu beef comes from four very specific breeds of Japanese cows, and its grading is completely separate from the USDA system. Wagyu grading is handled by the Japanese Meat Grading Association (JMGA), and is graded on a scale from 1-12, with â12" being the absolute best and â1" being the worst. According to the Chicago Steak Companyâs Steak University, âthe JMGA gives a score for Wagyu beef based on its fat color, meat color, rib eye shape, size of ribeye area, and IMF%, which refers to its marbling.â Most Wagyu beef would fall into the âprimeâ USDA grading, thanks to its usually impressive amount of marbling.
Updated at 4:00pm EST on 4/13/21 to include info about the lower grades of meat.
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