Buying chicken is pretty simple (it’s a small animal!), but once you get into critters with hooves, the process becomes significantly more complex. Pork is elaborate enough, with dozens of different cuts, but beef is when it’s easiest to get into head-scratching territory.
Even after you’ve settled on a cut, there are many grades to consider and, if you’re going gourmet, breeds to think of — plus how they’re raised, processed, and aged. There’s usually more at stake when buying steak. Whether you’re celebrating or trying to impress, it’s an expensive piece of meat you really don’t want to mess up. So how can shoppers ensure they’re off to the best start?
We asked executive chefs of restaurants and steak houses, and even cattle ranchers to share the first thing you should ask your butcher when you’re buying steak — and they all had the exact same answer.
Ranchers and Chefs Agree: Ask Where the Meat Comes From
Literally. Turns out, sourcing is even more important than beef grading to all of these experts. Every expert we talked to agreed: The best way to start is by asking where the meat came from.
“Sourcing local ensures fresher products, better traceability, and more consistent quality,” explains Marcus Joseph, executive sous chef of supplier-focused Ashland at Loews Hotel Atlanta.
The logic is simple, too: A shorter journey from pasture to plate also means fewer hands touching the meat. As Jeb Aldrich, executive chef at Cataloochee Ranch, acknowledges, “Finding local beef can be challenging, but it’s definitely worth searching for.” For Brent Ross, executive chef of McKendrick’s Steak House, avoiding that “variability” is one of the best ways to ensure the consistent quality a serious steak house requires.
According to Alex Scher, founder of Stone Mountain Cattle, a ranch supplying high-end restaurants, “A butcher who can answer that confidently is a butcher worth trusting.” Plus, it’s the perfect icebreaker that naturally leads into all the other details you’ll want to know before you buy. “Everything else — the cut, the grade, the aging — flows downstream from that one answer,” he adds.
What Sourcing Says About Your Meat
Knowing where your steak came from also clues you into how it will taste. Some ranches, for instance, exclusively offer pasture-raised, grass-fed, or grass-finished beef.
As Ross explains, the difference between grain-fed and grass-fed comes down to flavor and fat. Once you understand the animal’s diet, it’s much easier to pick a steak that actually matches your palate.
“Grass-fed meats also align with more natural and sustainable farming practices,” Joseph says. Scher agrees, noting that regenerative agriculture is about more than just the environment — it actually produces a fundamentally better eating experience. As he puts it, everything from the soil health to the animal’s stress levels eventually “ends up on the plate.”
As Sebastian Vargas, co-founder and executive chef of Michelin-recognized restaurant group, Grassfed Culture Hospitality, sums it up: “Its diet, how it was raised, and how it was ultimately slaughtered — those factors define everything. They shape the texture, the color, the flavor, the quality of the fat, even the anatomy of the animal itself.”
Got a tip for buying the best-quality meat at the grocery store? Tell us about it in the comments below.
