Source:
https://www.podbean.com/eau/pb-wiipj-1ade04d

Dr. Beckett compares grilling and steak grading to sports card grading, noting that both rely on labels and subjective “eye appeal” but can still disappoint. He explains how chefs and buyers judge ingredients by sight, how steaks are graded (prime/choice) yet may not taste like their grade, and how it’s hard to “return the evidence” after eating. Comparing a cheaper USDA prime New York strip from Tom Thumb versus his usual Central Market purchase, he felt the steak tasted about a full grade lower despite looking similar. Beckett discusses trust in grading within limits, consistency, batch rhythm, pricing differences by venue, and parallels to card alteration and the need for truthful labeling, concluding that grading matters but isn’t perfect and that collectors gravitate to trusted graders.
 
00:44 Foodie Grilling Mindset
00:57 Steak Grading Meets Cards
01:58 Sending Back Mistakes
02:48 Bargain Prime Experiment
06:23 Subjective Value and Trust
08:53 How Graders Get Rhythms
10:12 Mint to Black Label Steaks
10:50 Alterations and Disclosure