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Brisket vs Tendon — What's the Difference?

Quick Answer

Brisket (brisket) and Tendon (beef tendon) are not the same cut: Brisket is brisket primal (Breast / lower chest, between the forelegs); Tendon is offal primal (Connective tissue at joints — particularly the hock/lower leg).

Canonical entities: Brisket · Tendon

Side-by-side

briskettendon
Primalbrisketoffal
Muscle / locationBreast / lower chest, between the forelegsConnective tissue at joints — particularly the hock/lower leg
CharacterFrom the breast and lower chest. Two sub-sections: the flat (lean, uniform) and the point/deckle (fattier, more marbled). The most iconic cut for American BBQ smoking. Also used for braising, corned beef, and pastrami.Collagen-rich connective tissue extracted from the leg joints, particularly the Achilles tendon area. Extremely gelatinous when slow-cooked; provides body and sticky texture to braises and soups. Prized in Korean, Vietnamese, and South Asian cuisine for its chew and the richness it adds to broth.

Key differences

When to use each

Brisket

Pick Brisket when you want its specific marbling/texture profile: From the breast and lower chest. Two sub-sections: the flat (lean, uniform) and the point/deckle (fattier, more marbled). The most iconic cut for American BBQ smoking. Also used for braising, corned beef, and pastrami.

Tendon

Pick Tendon when its primal/muscle traits fit the dish: Collagen-rich connective tissue extracted from the leg joints, particularly the Achilles tendon area. Extremely gelatinous when slow-cooked; provides body and sticky texture to braises and soups. Prized in Korean, Vietnamese, and South Asian cuisine for its chew and the richness it adds to broth.

Brisket and Tendon are different canonical muscles/primals: Brisket is brisket (Breast / lower chest, between the forelegs); Tendon is offal (Connective tissue at joints — particularly the hock/lower leg).

Choose based on tenderness, marbling, grain direction, and how you plan to cook (sear vs braise vs slice thin).

Read the full guides: brisket (what-is) · tendon (what-is) · brisket hub · tendon hub

People also ask about this cut

Are Brisket and Tendon the same cut?
No—Brisket is brisket primal (Breast / lower chest, between the forelegs); Tendon is offal primal (Connective tissue at joints — particularly the hock/lower leg).

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What is the difference between Brisket and Tendon?
brisket vs beef tendon: different muscles; use the comparison table on this page.

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Which is better for grilling, Brisket or Tendon?
Depends on thickness and marbling; Brisket is From the breast and lower chest. Two sub-sections: the flat (lean, uniform) and … while Tendon is Collagen-rich connective tissue extracted from the leg joints, particularly the …

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Where does Brisket come from vs Tendon?
Brisket: brisket (Breast / lower chest, between the forelegs). Tendon: offal (Connective tissue at joints — particularly the hock/lower leg).

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Can I substitute Brisket for Tendon?
They are not interchangeable cuts—expect different texture unless a recipe explicitly allows a swap.

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How this information is generated

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