| Without meaning to be critical, but just to expand the conversation a bit, what does the word "beef" mean in your comment? Let's broaden the scope, and consider lean and fatty versions of say "grass fed beef" vs. "industrial beef". The word "fatty" here is just a placeholder for "less than 85% lean" ("lean" is problematical, as is "fatty", too). (How those map to "tough" and "tender" is related but of course the skill of the cook now matters too). I would rank flavor and texture of those 4 choices this way: freshly slaughtered as grassfed fatty > industrial fatty > grassfed lean > industrial lean. Now add in "aged for several weeks" or how about a carefully managed 4 weeks (not that hard). The ranking changes slightly, but for all 4 the result is remarkably superior in flavor. I've recently eaten on a sailing school boat in the Golfo de California slices of a trashier tuna than bluefin caught about 30 minutes before, and it was outstanding. Almost all US grocery stores will sell you a right proper many day aged raw tuna, and they suck. Of course it's correct that you can go to that market in JP and get a counter example. |
I would also mention in Chinese cuisine, fresh lean beef (flank) is preferred for stirfry, fatty beef is preferred for boiling (hot pot).
American culture: aged is key to the complex flavours.
For fish, Japanese sushi often uses aged fish, while steamed fish should be as fresh as possible.