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What is T-bone Steak? Location, Muscles and More

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By Dylan Clay
December 20, 2024

The t-bone steak comes from the front of the short loin.

This side is used because the tenderloin muscle is smaller.

short loin t-bone side

Depending on the size of the cow and how the Butcher decides to cut:

There are roughly 10-20 t-bone steaks per cow (assuming 0.75 – 1.25 inch thick steaks).

Why is it Called a “T-bone”?

The shape of the bone is a “T.”

The T itself:

  • The center bone is a transverse process of the vertebra.
  • The top of the T is half the vertebral foramen.

That may be hard to understand, so here are those parts visually:

what it's called a t-bone steak

If we zoom back even more (assume you’re staring at the cow from the back):

tenderloin muscle

What Muscles Make Up the T-bone Steak?

There are 2 muscles:

  • the strip loin
  • the tenderloin

The strip loin is the larger muscle.

This is pictured in dotted yellow line below:

new york strip on t-bone
the longissimus dorsi muscle

The tenderloin is the smaller muscle on the other side of the bone.

This is pictured in dotted yellow line below:

tenderloin on t-bone steak
The tenderloin is comprised of three muscles: psoas majorpsoas minor, and iliacus

The above steak was sold to me as a T-bone steak BUT, since the tenderloin was wider than 1.25″, it’s technically a porterhouse.

Anything smaller than 1.25″ is a t-bone.

For example:

t-bone loin muscle size

Quite literally a single bite.

Often these steaks are de-boned and the muscles themselves are made into retail cuts like:

  • NY strip steaks
  • Tenderloin medallion steaks
  • Whole tenderloin
  • Whole strip loin

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