Cutranslator

What is pointe de filet in New Zealand?

⚠️ Mapping confidence is limited—verify the exact subprimal with your butcher. Match confidence is below 75%—treat as indicative, not definitive.
Approximate

pointe de filet

The closest New Zealand equivalent is tri tip

Ask for: tri tip

About this cut

A triangular cut from the bottom sirloin (tensor fasciae latae muscle). Popularized by Santa Maria-style California BBQ. Lean with a pronounced grain that changes direction. Best grilled whole to medium-rare and sliced against the grain.

sirloin primal · Bottom sirloin, triangular muscle at the base of the sirloin near the flank

In New Zealand

tri tip

What is this cut?·Global guide

How to order steak doneness

BelgiumNew Zealand

rareSaignantRare4855°C
medium rareÀ pointMedium rare5560°C
mediumÀ point cuitMedium6065°C
well doneBien cuitWell done70100°C

NZ dining defaults to Medium for grass-fed cuts like Sirloin and Rump because grass-fed beef toughens at higher temperatures more rapidly than grain-fed. Lower cooking temperatures (Medium-Rare to Medium) preserve juiciness in NZ beef. Eye Fillet is typically served Medium-Rare. Important note for US visitors: NZ grass-fed beef should be cooked at LOWER temperatures than equivalent USDA cuts to compensate for the leaner profile.

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

Detailed explanation

“pointe de filet” in Belgium maps to canonical tri tip (sirloin: Bottom sirloin, triangular muscle at the base of the sirloin near the flank). In New Zealand, look for labels such as tri tip. A triangular cut from the bottom sirloin (tensor fasciae latae muscle). Popularized by Santa Maria-style California BBQ. Lean with a pronounced grain that changes direction. Best grilled whole to medium-rare and sliced against the grain.

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 pointe de filet in New Zealand?
pointe de filet maps to Tri Tip (tri-tip) in this ontology; in New Zealand, look for labels such as tri tip.

Translate it in another country

What is pointe de filet called in New Zealand?
In New Zealand, pointe de filet corresponds to Tri Tip; common retail wording includes tri tip.

Translate it in another country

Where does pointe de filet come from on the cow?
pointe de filet refers to tri-tip on the sirloin primal (Bottom sirloin, triangular muscle at the base of the sirloin near the flank).

Translate it in another country

Show 7 more questions
What primal is pointe de filet from?
pointe de filet is tied to the sirloin primal as Tri Tip (tri-tip).

Translate it in another country

Is pointe de filet the same as ribeye?
No—pointe de filet maps to tri-tip (Tri Tip), while ribeye is a separate canonical rib primal cut.

Translate it in another country

Is pointe de filet the same as Top Sirloin?
No—pointe de filet is tri-tip; Top Sirloin is top sirloin, a different canonical cut.

Translate it in another country

How is pointe de filet different from Sirloin Flap?
tri-tip (Tri Tip) differs from sirloin flap by primal and muscle: compare the two hub pages in this site.

Translate it in another country

What is the canonical beef cut for pointe de filet?
pointe de filet resolves to Tri Tip (tri-tip) in the Cutranslator ontology.

Translate it in another country

What should I ask for at a New Zealand butcher?
Ask for tri tip and mention Tri Tip if needed—the mapped retail names above match tri-tip.

Translate it in another country

Why might pointe de filet be less common in New Zealand?
pointe de filet is a Belgium retail term; New Zealand shops may use different names for the same tri-tip muscle.

Translate it in another country

Explore more cuts

How this information is generated

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