Working -- Cristino Tapia
HE IS
Red-blooded and meat-loving, to the core
BONES AND BOVINES
Cristino Tapia offered to bring out one-fourth of a cow last week. He
went through the kitchen of Celestino’s Quality Meats in Costa Mesa and
emerged, suddenly, alongside an enormous leg that was connected to an
automated ceiling rail for easy transport.
Patting to different sections of the leg, he pointed out where we get
our top sirloins, our rib-eyes, our porterhouses and our T-bones.
Graphic as it sounds, this is Tapia’s job.
While most of us don’t readily remember which part of the cow
originally carried our steak, it’s Tapia’s duty to get it off the
200-pound bulk and into Celestino’s many windows of meat trays.
“We know everything there is to know about butchery,” the 25-year-old
said.
UN-VEGETARIAN
When it comes to meat, Tapia does it all.
He chops salmon into fillets, chicken into breasts and prepares pork
chops. He also helps with the grinding, processing part of meatpacking.
His work area is walled with different sized knives.
When asked if Tapia actually eats a whole lot of meat, he laughed.
“You’ve got to eat beef in order to work around here,” the Huntington
Beach resident said.
JERKY SECRETS
Tapia has been working in butchery for more than four years. He
started in the back kitchen deboning chicken breasts, marinating them and
piercing them on kabob skewers.
Through the years, he worked his way up to handling every kind of meat
Celestino’s has. Tapia says he likes dealing with customers who come in
excited about recipes and who leave grateful that he has helped them
gather ingredients.
The butcher is also one of the minds behind one of Celestino’s
greatest draws: their jerky.
The flavors are teriyaki, hot Texas, old-fashioned and turkey jerky.
Tapia and his co-workers slice up meat, marinate the strips and then
place them in convection ovens that dry them in about three hours.
Among regular patrons, they’re all the rave.
“It’s fun to work here,” he said. “We just like what we do.”
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