Free: Contests & Raffles.
Problem with round steaks is the grain in each of the muscle groups goes in different directions. Best thing to do starts with butchering the animal. Rather than having someone saw straight through the hind quarter to produce "round" steaks, cut all the muscle groups out, filet off all the fascia and gristle. Cut steaks across the grain. If the steak is a good size, it gets packaged as "hind" steaks for me (large, medium, and small). The ones too small to be called steaks are called stew meat though they are just as tender as the "steaks" so I never really purposely stew them unless I want a stew. Everything else gets cooked the same way I do the backstraps. If you are stuck with round steaks, previous posts are correct in that the only way to get a reasonable meal out of it is to beat the hell out of it with a meat tenderizer.This is the hind quarter of my elk. No "round" steaks in the mix.