Cutranslator

What is garrón in South Africa?

Exact match

garron

is potjiekos cut in South Africa

Ask for: potjiekos cut

About this cut

Cross-cut sections of the rear leg bone with surrounding meat. Extremely tough and collagen-rich — produces deeply flavored broth when braised. Classic osso buco cut. One of the most universal braising cuts worldwide.

shank primal · Rear leg, below the knee joint

In South Africa

potjiekos cut

Say this at the butcher

Potjiekos mix, met been, vir die Sondag

'With bone, for the Sunday' — bone-in mandatory for Potjiekos

What is this cut?·Global guide

How to order steak doneness

ArgentinaSouth Africa

rareJugosoRare4855°C
medium rareA puntoMedium rare5560°C
mediumCocidoMedium6065°C
well doneBien cocidoWell done70100°C

South African Braai culture defaults to Medium for premium cuts (Eye Fillet, Sirloin, Rump). The Class A grading system supports this — younger grain-fed cattle produce tender results at Medium-Rare. Boerewors and lamb chops typically cooked Medium-Well. The Yellow Fat preference means SA Braai practitioners are MORE comfortable with longer cooking than US grilling tradition because the rendering fat is the flavor goal.

Doneness terminology varies by country and restaurant. When unsure, describe what you want (e.g., “warm red center”).

Detailed explanation

“garrón” in Argentina maps to canonical hind shank (shank: Rear leg, below the knee joint). In South Africa, look for labels such as potjiekos cut. Cross-cut sections of the rear leg bone with surrounding meat. Extremely tough and collagen-rich — produces deeply flavored broth when braised. Classic osso buco cut. One of the most universal braising cuts worldwide.

Related cuts

Compare with similar cuts

Other countries & routes

Same canonical cut, different destination markets (deduped URLs).

People also ask about this cut

What is garrón in South Africa?
garrón maps to Hind Shank (hind shank) in this ontology; in South Africa, look for labels such as potjiekos cut.

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What is garrón called in South Africa?
In South Africa, garrón corresponds to Hind Shank; common retail wording includes potjiekos cut.

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Where does garrón come from on the cow?
garrón refers to hind shank on the shank primal (Rear leg, below the knee joint).

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Show 7 more questions
What primal is garrón from?
garrón is tied to the shank primal as Hind Shank (hind shank).

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Is garrón the same as ribeye?
No—garrón maps to hind shank (Hind Shank), while ribeye is a separate canonical rib primal cut.

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Is garrón the same as Fore Shank?
No—garrón is hind shank; Fore Shank is foreshank, a different canonical cut.

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How is garrón different from Oxtail?
hind shank (Hind Shank) differs from oxtail by primal and muscle: compare the two hub pages in this site.

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What is the canonical beef cut for garrón?
garrón resolves to Hind Shank (hind shank) in the Cutranslator ontology.

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What should I ask for at a South Africa butcher?
Ask for potjiekos cut and mention Hind Shank if needed—the mapped retail names above match hind shank.

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Why might garrón be less common in South Africa?
garrón is a Argentina retail term; South Africa shops may use different names for the same hind shank muscle.

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How this information is generated

This information is for educational purposes only and may vary by region or butcher practices.