Butcher Slang 101: How to Talk Like a Professional Meat Chopper

You don't have to be a deer in the headlights at the butcher counter. Here are key words and nicknames to help your initiation into the carnivore's club.

By

For much of America’s culinary history, the humble butcher was rarely seen, and heard from even less. This was blue-collar work for stocky men—historically speaking, always men—with Popeye forearms and blood-splattered aprons, keeping quietly to themselves behind a glass case or in a back room out of sight while loudly hacking apart a cow’s hindquarters.

These days, of course, butchers have become the new rock stars—they are name brands of both sexes charging big bucks for public demonstrations while writing acclaimed books. Forget the dumpy Sam the Butcher from The Brady Bunch; now, it's not uncommon for this generation to appear on reality shows or take part in glitzy magazine photo shoots (all the better to show off those “meat muscles”). Of course, the celebrated rise of the butcher also means more face time with their often well-heeled clientele—have you seen the cost of beef these days?—in order to make the sale. 

Unfortunately, most of us are still shy about ordering from these meat choppers, unsure of how to navigate the unfamiliar vocabulary that they seem to toss around so casually. What exactly is that cut called? Prime or strip? Chump or chuck? Is Boston butt really what it implies? A "six-inch boner" refers to a knife? 

It would be easy to think these butchers are, ahem, butchering the language to make things more confusing and fleece us at the register. But shorthand and other nicknames can be crucial when working with pounds and pounds of animal flesh. At their core, butchers are professors of anatomy (albeit ones with a great sense of humor), so to help understand their unique vernacular, we reached out to a handful of pros for help:

 

  • Heather Sanford, butcher at The Piggery (Ithaca, NY)
  • Greg Brockman, lead butcher at Foragers Market in (New York, NY)
  • Craig Jackson, butcher at Harts Local Grocer (Rochester, NY)
  • Larry McMillan, CEO of Critchfield Meats (Lexington, KY)
Latest News