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Costco Brisket quality
MrA46221
Posts: 95
I love me some fat on a brisket and tend to be light handed on my trimming. But 4lbs of it…. Comments
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Over several years I have noticed that the butchering of the Costco packers has gone south, For a while it was even worse than now. Give the search function a look but many (self included) have expressed this to Costco.
Now I can find a solid Costco "prime" brisket that is going to support organizations or neighbours (nod) that is better than a couple of years ago.
But I get where you are coming from as I have been there. BTW- have not checked the local Costco for brisket in a good 3+ months. FWIW-
Time to see what I can find.Louisville; Rolling smoke in the neighbourhood. Life is too short for light/lite beer! Seems I'm livin in a transitional period. CHEETO (aka Agent Orange) makes Nixon look like a saint. -
It was cheaper than pork belly this week! Just an old man rant. Still gonna eat the heck out of it and smile.
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I am a known Costco beef hater on here but I am fortunate to have options (Wagyu at $7.99 at the grocery store). That said, I was in Costco this week and half the briskets had 2lbs of neck meat on them (a sign of garbage trim and a way to get the weight up with useless stew meat).Keepin' It Weird in The ATX FBTX
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I can’t comment about brisket specifically but other pieces of beef (ribeye, tenderloin) are typically top notch here in the GWN.The Cen-Tex Smoker said:I am a known Costco beef hater on here but I am fortunate to have options (Wagyu at $7.99 at the grocery store). That said, I was in Costco this week and half the briskets had 2lbs of neck meat on them (a sign of garbage trim and a way to get the weight up with useless stew meat).____________________Entrepreneurs are simply those who understand that there is little difference between obstacle and opportunity and are able to turn both to their advantage. •Niccolo Machiavelli -
For those wondering:
this is brisket:
This is brisket with neck meat (extremely common with “cheap” commodity briskets like costco and others)
That whole flap is garbage meat and should be cut off and made into sausage or trashed. Almost every brisket I saw in Costco had a huge chunk of this neck meat.Keepin' It Weird in The ATX FBTX -
This is more accurate of what a well trimmed packer trim should look like

Keepin' It Weird in The ATX FBTX -
So… neck meat is kind of like the neck pour of a bottle of bourbon?"I've made a note never to piss you two off." - Stike
"The truth is, these are not very bright guys, and things got out of hand." - Deep Throat -
Only less douchyJohnInCarolina said:So… neck meat is kind of like the neck pour of a bottle of bourbon?Keepin' It Weird in The ATX FBTX -
Liking because I can’t use an agree button.paqman said:
I can’t comment about brisket specifically but other pieces of beef (ribeye, tenderloin) are typically top notch here in the GWN.The Cen-Tex Smoker said:I am a known Costco beef hater on here but I am fortunate to have options (Wagyu at $7.99 at the grocery store). That said, I was in Costco this week and half the briskets had 2lbs of neck meat on them (a sign of garbage trim and a way to get the weight up with useless stew meat).Always been happy thus far. -
I bought a Costco brisket about a month ago and it’s in the freezer awaiting for when I have the time and courage to try my first brisket cook this summer. Thanks for the tip in the neck meat so I’ll know to trim that offPlainfield, IL
XL BGE -
@lousubcapRagingIrishman said:I bought a Costco brisket about a month ago and it’s in the freezer awaiting for when I have the time and courage to try my first brisket cook this summer. Thanks for the tip in the neck meat so I’ll know to trim that off
send this man your trove of brisket info. We are always glad to help.Keepin' It Weird in The ATX FBTX -
Thanks for info. Next time I’m shopping will take this info with me.The Cen-Tex Smoker said:For those wondering:
this is brisket:
This is brisket with neck meat (extremely common with “cheap” commodity briskets like costco and others)
That whole flap is garbage meat and should be cut off and made into sausage or trashed. Almost every brisket I saw in Costco had a huge chunk of this neck meat. -
Message sent.The Cen-Tex Smoker said:
@lousubcapRagingIrishman said:I bought a Costco brisket about a month ago and it’s in the freezer awaiting for when I have the time and courage to try my first brisket cook this summer. Thanks for the tip in the neck meat so I’ll know to trim that off
send this man your trove of brisket info. We are always glad to help.Louisville; Rolling smoke in the neighbourhood. Life is too short for light/lite beer! Seems I'm livin in a transitional period. CHEETO (aka Agent Orange) makes Nixon look like a saint. -
I purchased a 8.5 pound brisket flat a few days ago from Costco in Louisville. They had full packers but the flats looked better to me. Smoked it yesterday and it was awesome. It was only "choice" as they didn't have any prime in stock.Steve
X/L BGE
Louisville, Kentucky -
As long as we can use it , I’m ok with it…Short of ordering from SRF , Costco is what we have…. I usually get 17 pound range, with aggressive trim I’ll get 3+- pounds of sausage anothe pound of tallow , if I’m doing chopped brisket, I really don’t trim much
That’s a solid brisket @The Cen-Tex Smoker !Visalia, Ca @lkapigian -
Internet pics ha ha. Not minelkapigian said:As long as we can use it , I’m ok with it…Short of ordering from SRF , Costco is what we have…. I usually get 17 pound range, with aggressive trim I’ll get 3+- pounds of sausage anothe pound of tallow , if I’m doing chopped brisket, I really don’t trim much
That’s a solid brisket @The Cen-Tex Smoker !Keepin' It Weird in The ATX FBTX -
Last week went to Costco ready to do my first full packer prime brisket. After rereading Caps emails and the Franklin video on what to do/expect I passed. The four they had to pick from were subpar so I went for ribs. The flats thinned out fast and the other end was a sloppy knuckle. Thought I might be crazy because allegedly Costco packers were the standard— this was helpful counterintelligence. Thanks for sharing.
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To be clear, a poorly trimmed packer does not mean the brisket itself is bad. This is just a tactic that packers use to pad the price of the brisket and most people don’t know that is not even part of the brisket. They can leave 2-3lbs of neck meat on a brisket and sell it for $3-$4 lb wholesale when it would be well under $1 if trimmed and sold as ground beef. That $3.99 Costco brisket is really more like $5-$6 when you take all the excess trim (2-3lbs more than a normal brisket trim) into accountbbracey21 said:
Thanks for info. Next time I’m shopping will take this info with me.The Cen-Tex Smoker said:For those wondering:
this is brisket:
This is brisket with neck meat (extremely common with “cheap” commodity briskets like costco and others)
That whole flap is garbage meat and should be cut off and made into sausage or trashed. Almost every brisket I saw in Costco had a huge chunk of this neck meat.Keepin' It Weird in The ATX FBTX -
Thanks for the lesson!The Cen-Tex Smoker said:This is more accurate of what a well trimmed packer trim should look like
Northern Colorado Egghead since 2012.
XL BGE and a KBQ.
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It’s a hustle but still delicious.
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Be careful with steaks from Costco. Most locations "Blade Tenderize" (jaccard) their steaks (even their USDA Prime steaks). Jaccarding can push surface contamination deep into the meat. If you look at the fine print on the Costco steak labels they recommend cooking these steaks to 165 degrees. Who wants to cook a USDA Prime steak beyond well done?paqman said:
I can’t comment about brisket specifically but other pieces of beef (ribeye, tenderloin) are typically top notch here in the GWN.The Cen-Tex Smoker said:I am a known Costco beef hater on here but I am fortunate to have options (Wagyu at $7.99 at the grocery store). That said, I was in Costco this week and half the briskets had 2lbs of neck meat on them (a sign of garbage trim and a way to get the weight up with useless stew meat).Lititz, PA – XL BGE
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I have never cooked a Costco steak for this reason.abpgwolf said:
Be careful with steaks from Costco. Most locations "Blade Tenderize" (jaccard) their steaks (even their USDA Prime steaks). Jaccarding can push surface contamination deep into the meat. If you look at the fine print on the Costco steak labels they recommend cooking these steaks to 165 degrees. Who wants to cook a USDA Prime steak beyond well done?paqman said:
I can’t comment about brisket specifically but other pieces of beef (ribeye, tenderloin) are typically top notch here in the GWN.The Cen-Tex Smoker said:I am a known Costco beef hater on here but I am fortunate to have options (Wagyu at $7.99 at the grocery store). That said, I was in Costco this week and half the briskets had 2lbs of neck meat on them (a sign of garbage trim and a way to get the weight up with useless stew meat).Keepin' It Weird in The ATX FBTX -
abpgwolf said:
Be careful with steaks from Costco. Most locations "Blade Tenderize" (jaccard) their steaks (even their USDA Prime steaks). Jaccarding can push surface contamination deep into the meat. If you look at the fine print on the Costco steak labels they recommend cooking these steaks to 165 degrees. Who wants to cook a USDA Prime steak beyond well done?paqman said:
I can’t comment about brisket specifically but other pieces of beef (ribeye, tenderloin) are typically top notch here in the GWN.The Cen-Tex Smoker said:I am a known Costco beef hater on here but I am fortunate to have options (Wagyu at $7.99 at the grocery store). That said, I was in Costco this week and half the briskets had 2lbs of neck meat on them (a sign of garbage trim and a way to get the weight up with useless stew meat).Beyond the safety concerns, it is my belief that a "good" steak should not need a bunch of holes poked in it to be tender, it should be able to stand on its own. Additionally, when flipping during cooking my understanding was to use tongs, not anything that will pierce the surface such as a fork. This is to prevent juices from escaping. Seems the Costco method would really magnify that.Bottom line is there are many quality steak options in my area, so Costco steak offerings get bypassed.LBGE, LBGE-PTR, 22" Weber, Coleman 413GGreat Plains, USA -
It's all those news stories one sees daily about people getting ill/dying from the hundreds of thousands of Costco steaks sold each year that keeps me from buying them.Oh wait...
Anybody having reservations about eating a Costco steak should keep in mind that using sous vide offers a very simple solution - pasteurization.“Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away.” ― Philip K. Diçk -
I'm glad I read your comment before going to Costco today.Be careful with steaks from Costco. Most locations "Blade Tenderize" (jaccard) their steaks (even their USDA Prime steaks). Jaccarding can push surface contamination deep into the meat. If you look at the fine print on the Costco steak labels they recommend cooking these steaks to 165 degrees. Who wants to cook a USDA Prime steak beyond well done?
The only part of the label I have ever looked at is price per pound, weight and packaged date. I was shocked to read today that every cut of beef I purchase from Costco is blade tenderized.
Thank-you.Large Egg, PGS A40 gasser. -
Some of the best steaks I have ever cooked have come from Costco. Sam's steaks are also good most of the time.
Northern Colorado Egghead since 2012.
XL BGE and a KBQ.
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They don’t blade tenderize the neck meat.THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION TO THIS MATTER
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Agree with this. And as someone pointed out earlier, I don't know that anyone is aware of a case of illness related to Costco beef. With that said, we're fortunate to have HEB and a high quality local butcher shop within a mile of our house so I don't buy much Costco beef any more. A good friend does and serves it to us at his house (cooked on his L BGE) all the time and we enjoy it.QDude said:Some of the best steaks I have ever cooked have come from Costco. Sam's steaks are also good most of the time.XXL BGE, Karebecue, Klose BYC, Chargiller Akorn Kamado, Weber Smokey Mountain, Grand Turbo gasser, Weber Smoky Joe, and the wheelbarrow that my grandfather used to cook steaks from his cattle
San Antonio, TX
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Don’t you get your steaks out of the back of a trunk in a parking lot or something?The Cen-Tex Smoker said:
I have never cooked a Costco steak for this reason.abpgwolf said:
Be careful with steaks from Costco. Most locations "Blade Tenderize" (jaccard) their steaks (even their USDA Prime steaks). Jaccarding can push surface contamination deep into the meat. If you look at the fine print on the Costco steak labels they recommend cooking these steaks to 165 degrees. Who wants to cook a USDA Prime steak beyond well done?paqman said:
I can’t comment about brisket specifically but other pieces of beef (ribeye, tenderloin) are typically top notch here in the GWN.The Cen-Tex Smoker said:I am a known Costco beef hater on here but I am fortunate to have options (Wagyu at $7.99 at the grocery store). That said, I was in Costco this week and half the briskets had 2lbs of neck meat on them (a sign of garbage trim and a way to get the weight up with useless stew meat).
"I've made a note never to piss you two off." - Stike
"The truth is, these are not very bright guys, and things got out of hand." - Deep Throat -
All labels have the warning but not all cuts are blade tenderized. It may vary from store to store but ours doesn’t tenderize the Canadian AAA ribeyes.abpgwolf said:
Be careful with steaks from Costco. Most locations "Blade Tenderize" (jaccard) their steaks (even their USDA Prime steaks). Jaccarding can push surface contamination deep into the meat. If you look at the fine print on the Costco steak labels they recommend cooking these steaks to 165 degrees. Who wants to cook a USDA Prime steak beyond well done?paqman said:
I can’t comment about brisket specifically but other pieces of beef (ribeye, tenderloin) are typically top notch here in the GWN.The Cen-Tex Smoker said:I am a known Costco beef hater on here but I am fortunate to have options (Wagyu at $7.99 at the grocery store). That said, I was in Costco this week and half the briskets had 2lbs of neck meat on them (a sign of garbage trim and a way to get the weight up with useless stew meat).____________________Entrepreneurs are simply those who understand that there is little difference between obstacle and opportunity and are able to turn both to their advantage. •Niccolo Machiavelli
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