How To Cook The Perfect Steak

How To Cook The Perfect Steak

How To Cook The Perfect Steak – It took me a long time to figure out how to cook the perfect steak, consistently well, every time.
I’ve served up many overcooked, chewy steaks in our early dating days! For something that seems so simple, there are lots of variables, which can be confusing!

Now I’ve got great steak cooking under my belt, I’ve come up a no-fail, step-by-step plan, covering each of those variables, so you can be confident in the kitchen to cook beautiful, juicy steak.

📋 What do we need?

  • Let’s start with the steak of course. I recommend a good quality thick (2-2.5cm cm thick) ribeye or sirloin steak with some fat running through it.
    • Ribeye tends to have a chunk of fat in the middle and some smaller veins of fat (see image above).
    • Sirloin just tends to just have the smaller veins of fat.
    • We’re going to concentrate on those cuts, but I’ve also got a note on cooking fillet steak in the notes section of the recipe card.
  • DON’T be scared of seeing fat on your steak – some of the fat renders down to help ensure a juicy steak. We also crisp up that fat when it’s in the pan. Fat is GOOD!
  • What you do need to look out for is gristle – these are streaks of chewy/rubbery cartillage, that aren’t broken down during cooking. You sometimes find gristle as little wriggle lines of of-white in the steak. A little bit (that you can cut out when eating) is fine, but any more than that makes it a far less enjoyable steak.
  • For cooking the steak, we also need a high smoke point oil (such as sunflower oil), plenty of salt and freshly ground black pepper, a little butter, and if you want to to add some extra flavour, a few cloves of garlic and some fresh thyme or rosemary sprigs.

🔪 How to cook steak

For a 2.5cm thick ribeye or sirloin, cooking to a MEDIUM level of doneness (more info further down the posts for different levels of doneness):

  1. After taking the steak out of the fridge to bring it too room temperature, we coat the steak in oil on both sides, then add plenty of salt and pepper on both sides of the steak too.
  2. Add the steak to a very hot pan – preferably cast iron.
  3. Cook for 4 minutes, turning EVRY MINUTE.
  4. During the last minute of cooking, add butter to the pan, plus a few lightly crushed, peeled garlic cloves and a couple of sprigs of thyme or rosemary. Baste the the steak with the butter during the last minute of cooking.
  5. Take out of the pan and leave to rest for at least 4-5 minutes before serving.
  6. If you like, you can serve with a delicious steak sauce (some ideas below), or top with some garlic butter.

👩‍🍳PRO TIPS For the Perfect Steak

Type of pan:
Use a heavy-based frying pan (such as a cast iron) or a griddle pan. The retain the heat well, so the pan won’t go too cold when you add the steak to the pan. Cast iron pan also evenly distribute the heat, so you’re less likely to get hot spots, leading to uneven cooking.

Overcrowding:
Cook no more than 2 steaks at a time. If the pan is over-crowded, the heat will be reduced, meaning any liquid that comes out of the steaks won’t be able to evaporate quickly enough, and they’ll end up boiling instead of frying. That means no beautiful char, and therefore a lot less flavour.

Read More : Grillhousecafesanmarcos.com

How To Cook The Perfect Steak

Oil the steak:
Oil the steak, not the pan – this is so you get a nice even covering on the steak. You don’t have to worry about the oil not being hot when it goes on the steak. Our pan is going to be so hot, the oil will heat up instantly. Use a flavourless oil with a high smoke point – such as sunflower oil.

Season well:
As well as the oil, we want to season the steak generously with salt and freshly ground pepper.
Some people say that seasoning with pepper before cooking will cause the pepper to become bitter, but I have never found that.
The key is to use freshly ground black pepper that’s a little bit coarse. Don’t use fine pepper powder – that is more likely to burn.
You can make the pepper very coarse if you prefer it that way (just bash the pepper in bag with a rolling pin). Personally, I use a pepper grinder, so it’s just a little bit coarse.
You may think you’re adding too much pepper to the steak, but the flavour of the pepper ‘cooks in’ to the steak as you’re frying it, so it won’t be overwhelmingly peppery.

Steak thickness:
I tend to look for steak that is around 2cm-2.5cm thick. Any thicker than that and you will have to adjust the cooking timings, and are at risk over overcooking the outside of the steak, whilst the middle remains undercooked.

Don’t go straight from the fridge!
Cooking a steak right from the fridge is a BIG no no.
We’re cooking the steak for a short amount of time to get that perfect outside char. We really don’t want the steak to still be cold in the middle when we get to the char stage.

Type of steak:
My recommendation in most cases is to go for ribeye or sirloin steak. Look for a steak with thin veins of fat running through it. This fat will render down during cooking, resulting in a tender, juicy steak.
Try to avoid steak that has a big vein of gristle through it. No one wants to bite into that.
Also, don’t be afraid if the steak has a lovely fat strip of fat on that outside. That fat will give the steak more flavour during cooking. You don’t have to eat it (but I always nibble on a little, because it’s rather tasty).
You can of course use other cuts of steak if you prefer, but they often need different cooking times and sometimes need finishing in the oven.
I have some info below (notes section of the recipe card) on cooking fillet steak – but that one can be trickier, as it’s a lot thicker and leaner than ribeye or sirloin.
Other types of steak include rump, T-bone, flat iron, Denver, skirt and flank. Let me know if you want to info on how to cook any of these cuts in the comments below.

Even cooking:
Rather than cook one side until it’s perfectly browned (which can take a few minutes), then cook the other side for less time (so the steak isn’t overcooked), turn the steak every minute. This will help to ensure even cooking and char on both sides.

Rest the steak:
A good rule of thumb is to rest the steak for at least as long as you cooked it. This will allow the fibres to relax, and you’re steak will be juicier and more tender for it.
Rest on a slightly warm plate or wooden board.

Cooking times (for a 2cm-2.5cm thick Sirloin or Ribeye)

(Turning the steak every minute)

  • Rare: 3 minutes total
  • Medium Rare: 4 minutes total
  • Medium Well: 5-6 minutes total
  • Well done: 8 minutes total

 

How to Cook a Steak Like a Pro

How to Cook a Steak Like a Pro

How to Cook a Steak Like a Pro – A perfectly cooked steak doesn’t just happen. Chefs take years to learn the ins and outs of determining the right cut to use, how to season it, how long to cook it, and loads of other tricks to make sure each steak comes out perfectly, every time. Here’s what you need to know to cook the best steak at home.

Choose the right steak

“Finding the best product you can get your hands on is always the hardest part of cooking a great steak,” says Ryan Prentiss, former executive chef at Detroit’s Prime + Proper steakhouse. He starts by looking for a well-marbled steak. “Fat is flavor, so look for beef that is plump, bright red, and has the most marbling,” he says. “Marbling is the intramuscular fat present in high-quality beef that gives it a ‘marbled’ appearance. Grain-fed or grain-finished beef will have more marbling than a grass-fed beef.”

Next, consider an aged steak. “If you’re lucky enough to find a butcher that has dry-aged beef, I highly recommend trying anything aged from 15 to 30 days until you become acquainted with the flavor,” Prentiss says.

Joe Cervantez, executive chef at Pier 6 in San Leon, Texas, agrees, noting that steaks are best eaten at 23 to 28 days of aging. “Most steaks from the grocery store are aged 14 days,” he says. If you’re up for trying your hand at dry-aging, you can do it at home. Cervantez suggests that if you have access to a vacuum sealer, pack the meat in an airtight seal until it hits at least 23 days.

Then, pick the cut. Chef Dan Sharp of The Meatball Shop in New York City believes certain types of steak are better suited for grilling. He recommends a skirt steak for a hot grill, whereas a New York strip or rib eye steak is best for a cast-iron pan over a burner. For pan cooking, Sharp recommends a 3/4- to 1-inch steak because “the thickness gives you time to get a nice crust on the outside without overcooking the inside,” he says.

Embrace the family-size steak when cooking for a crowd

“Don’t be afraid to go with one large steak, like a 32-ounce rib-eye or a one-kilo porterhouse, for a group as opposed to multiple individual steaks,” says Prentiss. “One large steak is easier to manage and monitor on a grill than multiple smaller ones, and armed with a good thermometer, any cook can nail a perfect medium-rare every time.” Because of the inherent internal variation of cooking times within a steak, Prentiss says, you can accommodate diners who prefer medium rare and medium well with just one piece of meat.

Temper your steaks before cooking

Prentiss advises taking your steak out from the fridge about an hour before you cook it, and setting it on a roasting rack over a baking sheet to drain off the marinade or other liquid. (This is also the best time to season it with salt, ideally medium-grain sea salt, he says. More on that below.)

Sharp prefers to season his steaks a couple of hours in advance, and agrees about letting them come to room temperature before cooking. There’s an exception to this rule, however: “If [the steak] is on the thinner side,” he says, “starting it cold will give a buffer from overcooking the center.”

Use the right kind of salt — and lots of it

Choosing between the myriad types of salt can be confusing, but these chefs have definite opinions on what to use and when. “True sea salt is always the way to go when seasoning a steak,” Prentiss says. “We use Jacobsen’s kosher salt from Portland, Oregon. The grains are medium-sized and their pleasant minerality lends itself perfectly to grilled beef. Any true fleur de sel or sel gris-type sea salt will work well for good beef. Avoid table salt, iodized salt, or fine-grain sea salts as they have more weight to volume than larger grain salts, and you can easily over-season with them. Just think medium grain, true sea salt.”

Cervantez is a fan of kosher salt, which is virtually identical to sea salt. He advocates also seasoning steaks with pepper, and recommends combining pepper with salt in equal quantities.

When you do season your steak, go a little overboard. “Always overseason your steaks a bit,” says Christian Ragano, executive chef at Cindy’s rooftop restaurant at the Chicago Athletic Association. “When you think it’s enough, add a little more. A lot of salt and pepper falls off during the cooking process and doesn’t always penetrate the meat.”

Dinesh Jayawardena, regional executive chef for Radisson Hotel Group Americas, concurs, noting that salt is, “the most important ingredient you could ever add to a steak. Now is not the time to be shy about seasoning,” he says. “Do this before you let the steaks rest so the seasoning has time to work its way deep into the meat.”

How to Cook a Steak Like a Pro

Take steps to ensure a good crust

Before placing your steak on the grill, make sure there is no moisture on the surface of the meat. “Pat down your meat,” says Cervantez. “Dry meat forms the best crust.”

Juan Carlos Gonzalez, former executive chef of SoBou in New Orleans, likes to add a bit of olive oil as well, which he says helps achieve a better sear or griddle marks. If you do decide to add some fat, stick with olive oil, not butter, says Angelo Auriana, executive chef at Factory Place Hospitality. “There is no real need for butter when cooking a steak because it already has plenty of fat and flavor in the meat itself,” he says. (That is, of course, assuming you have a solid starting product.)

Set up your grill with hardwood (and skip the lighter fluid)

The best way to go, however, is hardwood or hardwood lump charcoal. “Natural solid fuels add the most flavor to steaks, complementing their natural flavors instead of overpowering them,” says Prentiss. “At P+P we [used] seasoned oak logs and a hardwood lump charcoal made from mesquite. This yields a consistent fire with minimal smoke that burns around 800°F.

“Always avoid lighter fluid if possible, and while convenient, charcoal briquettes can add an unpleasant kerosene flavor to grilled meats and should be avoided,” he continues. “If a wood/natural lump charcoal fire is unavailable or too inconvenient, propane grills will ultimately yield a better steak than charcoal briquettes and lighter fluid.”

Start with a super hot grill

“Be sure to let your charcoal fully catch and heat up before attempting to grill on it, about 20 to 30 minutes,” says Prentiss. “Your fire should have a bed of red-hot coals, [with] high, even heat across the grill, and minimal flames and smoke.”

“A hot cooking surface is extremely important to caramelize the outside of the steak and secure in the flavor,” says Jayawardena. “This method will give you a steak that is crispy on the outside, yet moist and tender inside.”

Use a meat thermometer — even if you’re a pro

That’s right — Ragano asserts this is one of the most important things to remember. “Temping a steak by hand can be tricky,” he says. “It takes a ton of practice and a ton of experience. Thomas Keller once said, ‘You have to cook a steak a thousand times just to suck at it.'”

Here are cooking temperature guidelines to keep in mind:

  • Rare (red center): 125°F to 130°F
  • Medium-rare (warm, dark pink center): 130°F to 135°F
  • Medium (warm, pink center): 140°F to 145°F
  • Medium-well (hot, slightly pink center): 150°F to 155°F
  • Well done (brown all the way through): 160°F to 165°F

Don’t have a meat thermometer on hand? Chef Ted Hopson recommends using metal cake testers. “People are always looking for secrets on how to get the perfect steak doneness,” he says. “Metal cake testers are the best tool you can use for this. Insert the metal tester into the steak, leave it for five seconds, then pull it out and touch it to your lips or inner wrist. The internal temp of the steak will tell you how done it is. If it’s cold, your steak is rare; if it’s just warm, medium-rare; slightly hot, medium, etc. No more pushing on it to test it — what happens when you hit a muscle knot? Plus, cake testers are less than a dollar and you can get them in baking sections or on Amazon.”

Don’t flip your steak more than once

“Keep away from overturning your steak,” says Eric Schlicht, chef at Ocean Resort Casino’s American Cut in Atlantic City, New Jersey. “Let the Maillard reaction do its thing.” Maillard reaction is the name of the chemical reaction between amino acids and sugars that yields browned and caramelized food.

Ideally, Prentiss says, you should turn the steak once on each side to get those crosshatch grill marks, and then only flip it once.

Let the steak rest

“Cooking the steak to 10 degrees below your desired temp and then resting it allows for the collagen in the meat to thicken the juices as it cools slightly,” says Prentiss. “This creates a way juicier steak than just cooking straight to temp.”

Sharp agrees. “Let it rest. This is crucial,” he says. “Just because the steak is out of the pan doesn’t mean it stopped cooking. Keep it in a warm place — you don’t want a cold steak — and rest it for about as long as you cooked it.”

Gonzalez suggests allowing the steak to rest for half the cooking time before serving. So if your steak takes 10 minutes to cook, let it rest for five. This is a good time to put out sauces you want to serve with your steak, and make sure your sides and table are ready.

If you’re not able to keep the steak warm while it rests, or you want to eat it quite hot, Prentiss advises returning the steak to the grill after it’s rested and bringing it up to the internal temperature of your preference before eating. Then, give it a final pinch of salt before you serve. “With larger steaks it’s always a good idea to finish with some large flake or finishing salt once it’s sliced,” says Prentiss. Then, it’s time to eat.

How To Cook Steak On The Stovetop

How To Cook Steak On The Stovetop

How To Cook Steak On The Stovetop – I love the kind of dinner you can create without relying on a recipe. Truth be told, good cooking is more about mastering techniques than following recipes, and the best dishes are often the simplest to whip up. A perfectly cooked steak is a prime example. With just a handful of ingredients and a single pan, you can prepare a steak that rivals one you’d enjoy at a high-end steakhouse.

The secret lies in mastering the art of pan-searing. This classic technique involves cooking the surface of your food undisturbed in a piping hot pan until a crisp, golden-brown, and flavorful crust forms. It’s the key to building flavor and texture in a dish, while also preventing sticking and giving your meal a restaurant-quality appearance. Pan-searing is hands-down the best way to cook a steak (it works wonders for salmon and scallops, too), and it also happens to be the easiest.

 

WHAT YOU’LL NEED TO COOK STEAK ON THE STOVETOP

When it comes to beef, the best candidates for pan-searing are boneless, quick-cooking cuts between one and one-and-a-half inches thick, such as NY Strip, rib eye or filet mignon. (For larger or slow-cooking cuts, like beef tenderloin with red wine sauce or beef stew with carrots and potatoes, pan-searing is usually the first step, and then you finish the cooking in the oven.)

HOW TO COOK STEAK ON THE STOVETOP

To begin, pat the steak dry with paper towels. (Any moisture on the exterior of the steak must first evaporate before the meat begins to brown.)

Season the steaks generously on both sides with salt and pepper; the seasoning will stick to the surface and help create a delicious crust.

Read More : Grillhousecafesanmarcos.com

How To Cook Steak On The Stovetop

Turn on your exhaust fan and heat a heavy pan over medium-high heat until it’s VERY hot. The best pans for pan-searing are stainless steel or cast-iron since they can withstand high temperatures.

Add the oil to the pan. You’ll know it’s hot enough when it begins to shimmer and move fluidly around the pan.

Carefully set the steak in the pan, releasing it away from you so the oil doesn’t splatter in your direction. It should sizzle. (Use a pan that is large enough that it’s not such a tight fit or the pan will cool down and your food will steam instead of sear.)

Leave it alone! Avoid the temptation to peek or fiddle or flip repeatedly. The steaks need a few minutes undisturbed to develop a brown crust. (Don’t worry about sticking; the steaks will release easily when they are ready to flip.)

Flip the steaks when they release easily and the bottom is a deep-brown color (usually about 3 minutes).

Leave it alone! Avoid the temptation to peek or fiddle or flip repeatedly. The steaks need a few minutes undisturbed to develop a brown crust. (Don’t worry about sticking; the steaks will release easily when they are ready to flip.)

Flip the steaks when they release easily and the bottom is a deep-brown color (usually about 3 minutes).

If you are serving the steaks unsliced, transfer them to plates and serve hot. If you plan to slice the steaks, transfer them to a cutting board and let rest, covered with aluminum foil, for 5 to 10 minutes; then slice thinly against the grain. (Resting allows the juices to redistribute from the outside of the steaks; if you slice them too soon, the juices will pour out of them.)