Cutranslator

What is sinta in South Korea?

Exact match

sinta

is chaekkeut in South Korea

Ask for: chaekkeut

About this cut

Leaner than ribeye; the classic strip steak muscle running along the short loin.

loin primal · longissimus dorsi (short loin)

In South Korea

chaekkeut

What is this cut?·Global guide

How to order steak doneness

IsraelSouth Korea

rareריירRe-eo4855°C
medium rareמדיום ריירMi-di-eom re-eo5560°C
mediumמדיוםMi-di-eom6065°C
well doneוול דאןWel-deon70100°C

Korean BBQ is cooked at the table by diners to their preference, so doneness terminology is primarily for steakhouse contexts. Phonetic English borrows are standard. For raw beef (Yukhoe, 육회), different terminology applies. Korean home cooking traditionally prefers Wel-deon for safety and texture.

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

Detailed explanation

“sinta” in Israel maps to canonical striploin (loin: longissimus dorsi (short loin)). In South Korea, look for labels such as chaekkeut. Leaner than ribeye; the classic strip steak muscle running along the short loin.

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 sinta in South Korea?
sinta maps to Striploin (striploin (strip steak)) in this ontology; in South Korea, look for labels such as chaekkeut.

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What is sinta called in South Korea?
In South Korea, sinta corresponds to Striploin; common retail wording includes chaekkeut.

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Where does sinta come from on the cow?
sinta refers to striploin (strip steak) on the loin primal (longissimus dorsi (short loin)).

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Show 7 more questions
What primal is sinta from?
sinta is tied to the loin primal as Striploin (striploin (strip steak)).

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Is sinta the same as ribeye?
No—sinta maps to striploin (strip steak) (Striploin), while ribeye is a separate canonical rib primal cut.

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How is sinta different from Tenderloin?
striploin (strip steak) (Striploin) differs from beef tenderloin by primal and muscle: compare the two hub pages in this site.

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What is the canonical beef cut for sinta?
sinta resolves to Striploin (striploin (strip steak)) in the Cutranslator ontology.

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What should I ask for at a South Korea butcher?
Ask for chaekkeut and mention Striploin if needed—the mapped retail names above match striploin (strip steak).

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Why might sinta be less common in South Korea?
sinta is a Israel retail term; South Korea shops may use different names for the same striploin (strip steak) muscle.

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Where can I read a full definition of sinta?
Open the glossary page for sinta (/what-is/sinta) and the Striploin hub for country-by-country names.

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How this information is generated

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