Flat Iron vs Skin — What's the Difference?
Quick Answer
Side-by-side
| flat iron | skin | |
|---|---|---|
| Primal | chuck | offal |
| Muscle / location | Infraspinatus muscle, top blade of the shoulder clod | Outer hide — whole-body surface |
| Character | The second most tender muscle on the entire animal, after the tenderloin. A flat, rectangular steak extracted from the top blade by splitting it along the central connective tissue. Uniform thickness makes it ideal for grilling. Also known as butler's steak in the UK. | Beef hide/skin, sold cleaned and processed. Boiled to a gelatinous softness (ponmo/kpomo in Nigeria) or dried then rehydrated (cham in Arunachal, un in Manipur). Very high collagen; adds sticky body to stews. Culturally significant as a protein extender and a prized cut in West and Northeast African and Indian traditions. |
Key differences
- Different primals: chuck vs offal.
- Texture and slicing: compare fibrous, grain-heavy cuts vs more tender steak-style muscles based on each cut’s description.
- Retail naming diverges by country—always map through a canonical cut when translating menus or labels.
When to use each
Flat Iron
Pick Flat Iron when you want its specific marbling/texture profile: The second most tender muscle on the entire animal, after the tenderloin. A flat, rectangular steak extracted from the top blade by splitting it along the central connective tissue. Uniform thickness makes it ideal for grilling. Also known as butler's steak in the UK.
Skin
Pick Skin when its primal/muscle traits fit the dish: Beef hide/skin, sold cleaned and processed. Boiled to a gelatinous softness (ponmo/kpomo in Nigeria) or dried then rehydrated (cham in Arunachal, un in Manipur). Very high collagen; adds sticky body to stews. Culturally significant as a protein extender and a prized cut in West and Northeast African and Indian traditions.
Flat Iron and Skin are different canonical muscles/primals: Flat Iron is chuck (Infraspinatus muscle, top blade of the shoulder clod); Skin is offal (Outer hide — whole-body surface).
Choose based on tenderness, marbling, grain direction, and how you plan to cook (sear vs braise vs slice thin).
Read the full guides: flat iron (what-is) · skin (what-is) · flat iron hub · skin hub