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Jaccard 200348R, 48 Blade Durable Meat Tenderizer with Stainless Steel Razor Sharp Needle, Cooking Gadget for Tenderizing Chicken, Beef, Pork, Veal, BBQ, Red

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$17.78

$ 8 .99 $8.99

In Stock
  • Jaccard Meat Tenderizer: The tenderizer is made from the highest quality materials and is built for performance and durability.
  • Better Marinade Absorption: The beef tenderizer provides a pathway for marinades to be absorbed deeper into the meat; It allows heat to penetrate the meat evenly across varying thickness to prevent under / over cooking.
  • Beef Tenderizer: Reduces cooking time by up to 40%, resulting in juicier and flavorful meat (as the cooking heat has less time to dry out the meat).
  • Razor Sharp Blades: The meat tenderizer has razor sharp double edge knives that effortlessly cut through the connective tissue in meat that can cause it to be tough.
  • 48 Blade Meat Tenderizer: Ideal for enhancing any type of meat, not just tough or inexpensive meats, including but not limited to beef, pork, veal, chicken, turkey, venison and fowl.


"Jaccard 48 Blade Color Coded Meat Tenderizer - Red - Beef. The original multi-blade, hand-held super meat tenderizer that does much more than just tenderize. HACCP color-coded tenderizers are created to help eliminate cross contamination and other food related hazards in the kitchen. The meat tenderizer has razor sharp double edge knives that effortlessly cut through the connective tissue in meat that can cause it to be tough. The tenderizer is ideal for enhancing any type of meat, not just tough or inexpensive meats, including but not limited to beef, pork, veal, chicken, turkey, venison, fowl, etc."


Signalshifter
2025-09-06 18:02:01
I first saw this Jaccard tenderizer used in Alton Brown's TV show Good Eats, Episode: "Cubing Around" You can view it at the FoodTV website. He made Chicken Fried Steak I recently watched a rerun of this show and decided I had to have one of these tenderizers naturally Amazon had it. Amazon did their usual fantastic job of getting it to me.I have a thing about bottom round steaks, they taste good, never mind the fact they can be used for shoe soles. They also happen to be the steak of choice for chicken fried steak. For some reason the best tasting bottom round steaks are to be found in a rump roast, these can often be used as roofing shingles. I have long developed methods to deal with this, use unsalted meat tenderizer, or marinate in an English Chutney which has Papayas as an ingredient. I then used a fork in both cases to get the magical Papaya juice into the innards of the steak. The active ingredient in meat tenderizers comes from the Papaya. I purchased my usual bottom rounds with that scrumptious triangle of fat on the edge. I first anointed this potential piece of shoe leather with the unsalted meat tenderizer and then went to work with the Jaccard just as in the above TV show I made several passes across the steak. At first the steak fought back it was "tough" (sorry) to push in the blades, but on the second pass the steak capitulated. When I was done I still had an intact steak you could see the little holes cut in by the blades but it was not even close to the macerated cub/minute steaks you see at the supermarket. I prepared the Chicken fried steaks as I usually do, again see the above Good Eats episode, as an example. I used a white country gravy in which floated course cracked Madagascar Black Pepper this was poured over the Yukon Gold potatoes and steak. Oh My!!!! the Chicken Fried steak was fantastic. I not going to tell you I could cut it with a fork, a few more passes with the Jaccard would have seen to that. But it was just about the best preparation of a bottom round steak I have ever accomplished, and I have actually used small sledge hammers to beat these bottom rounds into submission. Thanks to the Jaccard's 48 blades the meat tenderizer penetrated well, much better than the forks I have used in the past. It cut easily, the chewing experience was marvelous, and the taste fantastic.There has been some observations about cleaning the Jaccard, and I can see what they mean, but it is designed to easily come apart for cleaning. In fact I just took mine apart and as with any professional grade kitchen tool it breaks down into individual parts that are easy to clean, three blade sets, the blades are replaceable, and according to the Jaccard website have a life time replacement warranty. with it apart the 3 16 blade cutters and the cutting guide are easy to clean with hot soapy water and a brush, or plunked in a dishwasher. The reassembly was not too bad considering here are no instructions as you might expect the springs where the toughest to get to stay in place. Once I figured out to place the blades into the guide, place the springs into their positions add the spacers, the place the the upper half, with the holes, down on top, position the blades with a chop stick in the center screw hole,insert and tighten the screw down and then the two screws on either side, done. A pain the first time, better the second, and so on.Thank you Alton Brown for showing me the Jaccard, And a caution to crooks trying to break and enter to steal my Jaccard, I live in Wyoming we are one of the evil "Steak" culture states PeTA hates. If you try and steal a man's tools to do a good steak you will be a hunted man. This is something a Wyoming Cowboy will not stand for, and as Droopy Dog would say "It's The Law of The West".You haven't ordered one yet?
JKM
2025-06-09 13:42:40
Jaccard is without a doubt a name dropper for a meat tenderizer. People just say I jaccarded my meat. Since I usually buy prime steaks, I do not use it as much as a tenderizer as I do to prepare the steak for vacuum marinading. This is after salt and pepper overnight marinading. Steaks will NOT marinade via vacuum unless you “Jaccard” them first to allow the marinade to penetrate into the meat under vacuum. Then simply proceed on with a wonderful reverse seared smoked steak on the pellet grill. Just be careful not to over do with the Jaccard as it is very easy to do so because of the multiple “knives”. Obviously, it is quality built, and for this reason it is worth the cost over other cheaper models.
Tink&Tom
2025-05-31 14:26:00
works as advertised. easy to use, easy to clean, great built quality, durable, must have in kitchen.
Sandor Clegane
2025-05-19 18:14:07
Maybe you were like me in the past, pounding your meat (stop giggling) with one of those hammer-style meat tenderizers. Eventually you see the light, and realize that there are better ways to make food more tender. ESPECIALLY beef, when it comes to making tiny cuts to connective tissue. And man, is this thing terrific.I love skirt steak, it's the ideal meat for fajitas (basically how fajitas got their name, from the cut used). Though even after removing the membrane some butchers leave on, you can still have some overly-chewy beef when you're done cooking it. I use the right marinades, try to use some papaya when I can, but even the ingredient in papaya that softens meat can work TOO well and make it mushy. Well, no more headaches with this blade tenderizer. I give the meat a run on each side, so very tender when I give it a kosher salt rub first and then marinade later.Is there anything I would change about this tenderizer?Well, two things could be different, at least as far as the outcome. You do have to put a good bit of pressure on tougher cuts of meat, and in doing so, the plastic part can certainly press down on the meat. So if you want to thin your meat a bit (veal for Italian), perfect. But be careful, you could make an otherwise thick-cut steak a bit thinner than you wanted. Also, you can overdo it on some things, particularly poultry. Overtenderized some chicken breasts, after keeping them in a salt brine for maybe 30 minutes, they were a bit raggedy looking. So you don't want to turn your chicken breasts into sponge cake. Basically you'll learn just how much you can use it on beef or poultry to find the sweet spot for more tender vs overly tender (like a chicken fried steak you can cut with a spoon).Terrific investment. Really has changed the way I prep food I'm going to smoke and grill. Most recently used it on a gorgeous beef tenderloin I smoked and slow-cooked, turned out amazing. I'd recommend it, definitely.
Colleen Aylward
2025-05-16 14:04:28
A very handy tool that just takes a bit of elbow grease. It works great on steaks of all kinds and even roasts and chicken that need to be "seasoned" before cooking. The reason I give it a 4-star instead of 5 is because it's a pain to clean. I was using boiling water, thinking that would clean it, but the metal blades are so close together, that it's tough to reach both sides of them... Also if you put it in the dishwasher, it will then show "rust" marks. It's impossible to get them truly clean unless you unscrew all 3 screws and get at the insides that way, which is a bit dangerous.
Guillermo pacheco
2025-03-24 10:52:19
Esta tal cual lo espereba espero y por se hecho en china no de la duración que espero los materiales son de gran calidad muy recomendable.
Robert A. Thorpe
2025-03-12 17:42:07
Works great with top notch results on all types and all cuts. A little tricky to clean with the blades being so sharp but once you figure it out, it’s Ok.
LinFer
2025-01-16 18:03:50
Excelente calidad, super recomendables.
Gaby Martínez
2025-01-12 10:48:47
Muy buena calidad y precio bajo me gustó mucho
Leonard Cole
2024-12-03 16:08:59
I’m a food industry specialist and I’ve used the industrial Jaccard for large scale meat processing. This hand held is just as effective in giving a great texture to beef, pork and chicken.I recommend it.
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