First — Breathe. You Did the Right Thing.
Opening a half-cow delivery for the first time can feel overwhelming. You’ve got packages stacked everywhere, labels you don’t recognize, and a slightly terrified look on your face. This is normal. Here’s how to handle it.
Step 1: Inventory Before You Freeze
Before anything goes in the freezer, spread everything on your kitchen counter or table and group it by cut type. You’ll generally have:
- Steaks — ribeye, strip, T-bone, sirloin, sometimes flank or skirt
- Roasts — chuck, arm, rump, bottom round, eye of round
- Ground beef — usually the largest category by volume
- Short ribs / specialty — short ribs, brisket, sometimes stew meat
- Extras — soup bones, liver (if requested), heart
Take a photo of everything grouped together. You’ll refer to it later when you can’t remember what you have.
Step 2: Organize Your Freezer in Zones
Don’t just throw it all in together. Organize by zone so you can find things without digging:
- Front/top: Ground beef and anything you’ll use weekly
- Middle: Steaks — things you’ll pull for special meals
- Back/bottom: Roasts, brisket, short ribs — your long-cook cuts
- Far corner: Soup bones and extras
Step 3: Plan Around What You Have
Most half-cow owners use ground beef 3–4 times a week and save roasts and steaks for weekends. That’s a perfectly reasonable approach. A simple rotation looks like:
- Weeknights (4–5x/week): Ground beef — tacos, burgers, bolognese, skillet dishes
- Sunday afternoon: A chuck roast or brisket in the slow cooker
- Friday or Saturday: Steaks — something worth sitting down for
How Long Will It Last?
Properly vacuum-sealed beef keeps 12–18 months in a 0°F freezer. Most families eat through a half cow in 6–9 months without trying. Don’t stress about using it fast — you have time.
Pro Tip: The Sunday Dump
Once a week, pull a roast or braise from the freezer on Sunday morning and put it in the fridge to thaw slowly. By Sunday afternoon or Monday, it’s ready to cook. Never feel caught without a plan for dinner again.