T-Bone Steak - Akaushi Wagyu - American West Wagyu
Individual Cut
Loin Primal · Available in Whole & Half Shares

T-Bone Steak

Also known as Porterhouse (larger cut) · Bone-in

Two premium steaks on a single bone. The New York strip on one side, the filet mignon on the other. The T-bone is the most dramatic steak in any share, and in Akaushi Wagyu, both sides of the bone carry marbling that commodity prime cannot match.

Marbling 4/5
Tender
Rich
Beefy
Fat Content
T-Bone Steak — American West Wagyu
Find a Cut
Butcher Specs
Avg Weight16 - 24 oz
Thickness1.25" - 1.5"
Bone OptionBone-in
PackagingVacuum-sealed
Your Share Yield
Whole Share~6-8 steaks
Half Share~3-4 steaks
Carcass %~17% (Loin)
Anatomy
PrimalLoin
LocationBehind the rib, along the spine
MuscleLongissimus dorsi + Psoas major
Perfect For

When to Reach for the T-Bone Steak

Grill Master Night Special Occasion Father's Day Impressing Guests Summer Cookout
How to Cook It

Three Ways to Perfection

Akaushi t-bone steak is forgiving thanks to its marbling. These are our recommended methods.

Method 01
Grill Over Coals
Build a two-zone fire. Position the filet side away from direct heat. Sear the strip side 4 minutes, flip, and cook until the filet side reaches 125°F internal.
Direct 600°F+ (strip side) → Indirect (filet side) → Internal 130°F
The filet cooks faster than the strip. Angle the bone toward the heat to protect the tender side.
Method 02
Reverse Sear
Oven at 250°F until internal reaches 115°F. Rest 5 minutes, then sear in a ripping hot cast iron, 90 seconds per side.
Oven 250°F → Sear 500°F+ → Internal 130°F
The reverse sear gives the most even cook edge-to-edge, critical when two muscles share one bone.
Method 03
Broiler Finish
Bring to room temp. Season heavily. Broil 6 inches from the element, 5 minutes per side. Rest 10 minutes.
Broiler high → 5 min per side → Rest 10 min
Watch the filet side. It will reach temperature before the strip.

Two Steaks, One Bone, Zero Compromise

The T-bone presents a choice that defines your share. If you choose T-bones, you get the strip and the filet together in every steak. If you separate them, you get boneless strips and individual filet medallions. Neither is wrong. The T-bone is theatrical, impressive, and cooks beautifully on the grill. The bone conducts heat differently than the meat, creating two slightly different textures on the same plate.

In Akaushi, the strip side develops a rich, beefy crust while the filet side stays butter-soft and rare. The bone itself adds flavor as the marrow renders into the surrounding meat. It is a steak that demands attention and rewards it completely.

The T-bone is not just a steak. It is a statement. Two cuts, one bone, and in Akaushi, both sides are extraordinary.

Tbone Steak — American West Wagyu
Pair It With

Cuts That Complement

Build a complete meal or a tasting experience by pairing the t-bone steak with these cuts from your share.

From the Same Primal

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The loin is highlighted below. Hover over any section to explore its cuts.

Rump Cap Sirloin Tenderloin Top Sirloin Round Chuck Rib Neck Brisket Front Shank Plate Flank Rear Shank
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14 Sections · 33 Cuts

The T-Bone Steak Is Waiting

Every whole and half share includes t-bone steak. Reserve yours and choose exactly how you want it prepared.

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