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People Are Only Just Realizing That The Red Juice In Rare Steak Isn’t Blood

People are just learning that the red juice in rare steak isn’t blood.

Everyone has their favorite way of serving up steak: rare, medium, or well done.

But before it’s garnished up on a plate, it can look pretty unappetizing while still in the shops or butchers.

You may have noticed a red liquid oozing out of the steak and presumed it was blood, well you’d be wrong.

People are just finding out that the red juice in a rare steak isn’t blood. Credit: Alamy
People are reacting on social media after discovering what the pinkish-red liquid is.

“I was today years old when I learned that the red liquid in rare steak isn’t blood,” one X (formerly Twitter) user writes.

Another adds: “I did not know that!”

A third person says: “That’s worse, I don’t even know what that is.”

“This is upsetting,” somebody else comments.

So, what exactly is the pinkish-red liquid oozing out of the steak? Let’s start at the beginning…

Virtually all blood is drained out during the slaughtering process. Credit: Alamy
During the slaughtering process, virtually all of the blood is drained out, resulting in very little blood, even with the freshest steaks.

So when you see a steak all packaged up on display with the bloodlike liquid, you’re actually looking at purge.As explained by Bearded Butchers: “All meat is around 75% water that is held in the cells of the muscle tissue. Frozen and then thawed meat will often have purge in the package.

“When water becomes ice, it forms crystals. The ice crystals cut the meat cells, and when the meat defrosts, water and myoglobin leak out.”

Many cuts of steak labeled as fresh in-store have been frozen or partially frozen during transportation or storage…

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