By Dylan Clay
The term “packer cut” brisket simply means a whole, untrimmed brisket.
The People who prepare your meat for retail sale are technically Butchers but in the industry they’re called “Meat Packers.”
The job of a Meat Packer is to do things like:
Essentially, these people quite literally, prepare animal’s – like cows – for retail sale.
While both of these terms do refer to a whole brisket – ie. a brisket that has both the flat and point musculature still attached – they are not the same thing.
A Packer’s brisket is as is – meaning it hasn’t been trimmed, shaped, or altered, at all.
Here’s the meat side of the brisket above, right out of the packaging:
Some “whole” briskets can be trimmed for retail sale.
This is common when purchasing brisket online and in some grocery stores.
Here’s the same brisket above, trimmed – this would still be considered a whole brisket:
You’ll see phrasing and labeling like:
I personally can’t source good brisket locally.
Meaning, I buy almost all my briskets online and the above wording is important.
Buying a packer brisket allows you to have more control over the trimming.
Here’s the fat side of the packer brisket above:
Here’s the fat side after trimming:
Not everyone likes paying for fat that they can’t use and not everyone renders their own beef tallow or makes their own sausage or hamburger.
Buying a pre-trimmed whole brisket affects price as they have to pay for the labor.
To illustrate, we’ll use the pricing from Wild Fork Foods (as of 6/6/2024) to demonstrate:
Grade of Brisket | Price per Lb |
---|---|
USDA Prime Beef Brisket | $4.98/lb |
USDA Choice Beef Whole Brisket | $3.98/lb |
USDA Choice Whole Brisket Trimmed | $5.98/lb |
So in the above table, the first 2 briskets are packer briskets, even though they’re labeled differently.
The prime brisket is described as a “Packer’s” in the description where-as the choice is listed as “whole.”
In this instance, the price per pound is higher because the meat is graded higher.
Wild Fork Foods also sells a “trimmed” version of their whole Choice brisket – the one they use for their pictures shows the deckle off and some of the exterior fat cap trimmed.
This trimming caused the price per pound to increase by $2/lb.