The Manual

Why A5 cooks differently

A5's intramuscular fat melts at room temperature. That changes everything about heat, time, and portion.

A Crowd Cow Field Guide

The fat is the point

USDA Prime might score 8–10% intramuscular fat. A5 Japanese Wagyu sits between 30–40%. That fat is what gives A5 its candle-like sheen on the plate — and it's also what makes every cooking instinct you've built on Choice and Prime push you in the wrong direction.

Three consequences worth internalizing before the pan ever heats up:

1. The fat renders cold

Wagyu's monounsaturated fat profile means a meaningful portion of the marbling is liquid before you've even seasoned the steak. Push it past medium-rare and you're not improving texture — you're emptying the steak. The doneness target on A5 is closer to rare than to a Prime ribeye.

2. The portion is smaller

A 16 oz Choice ribeye reads as a generous dinner. 16 oz of A5 reads as a stomach ache. Plan 1.5–2 oz of finished steak per person, served as a course or alongside something that resets the palate (radish, citrus, a pickle).

3. Time matters more than temperature

Because the fat renders so fast, A5 doesn't tolerate the long sear that builds crust on a thicker domestic steak. 60 seconds per side on a screaming-hot cast iron is the upper bound — longer and the texture turns waxy.

What to do with it

  • Slice steaks 1–1.5 inches thick max. Anything thicker, you're cooking the inside before the outside has crusted.
  • Don't oil the pan. Wagyu renders enough fat to fry itself.
  • Salt at the table, not before. A5 doesn't need to be drawn out.
  • Rest 5 minutes — less than you would for a domestic steak. The internal temperature carryover is dramatic.

New to A5? Read Understanding Wagyu Grading to see why the marbling score actually matters.

Related topics: wagyu fundamentals