Originally posted by Trick Pony
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Cooking the perfect steak
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Originally posted by bcoop View PostWhen you cook a good steak (aka prime), you don't need to do anything but salt and pepper it, and add a dollup of butter the second it comes off the grill.
LOL one time I had some folks over and cooked some nice filets. They were cooked perfectly and juicy and tender. One of my guests proceeded to eat it with ketchup because I didn't have any A1 (I don't use steak sauce).
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I salt and pepper and drop it on the pan and sear it for like 45 seconds, then flip to sear the other side... as soon as I flip it, I poke a few holes with a fork and lay a little pat of butter on it, then after 45 seconds and do the same on the newly seared side.
I let it go for another 1-2min per side depending on thickness for a nice medium rare steak.
the butter burns a little and puts a better char texture on it for my taste
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Originally posted by mstng86 View PostThats a good point on the prime vs choice cut.
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Call me a purist, but I think the most important thing is a good charcoal fire with hickory or mesquite chunks. No gas.
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Originally posted by bcoop View PostWhen you cook a good steak (aka prime), you don't need to do anything but salt and pepper it, and add a dollup of butter the second it comes off the grill. When you brush the butter on there prior to, it defeats the purpose IMO, because it melts off the second it hits the grill.
You can do a lot of other things, like encrust it in garlic, etc, but really - those are reserved for lesser quality steaks, to help improve flavor. With a prime cut, there is no need to do any of that. When I eat a prime steak, I want to taste the meat, not marinade or seasoning. The same applies for the pineapple juice or soda method that mstang mentioned. I'm not knocking it, because it has it's place, but it's place is on a $3/lb choice cut, not a prime cut. Just my opinion though, and I'm a hack that doesn't know squat about cooking. Oscar toppers, blue cheese and carmelized onions are great and all, I just wouldn't do it with a quality steak.
Stevo
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When you cook a good steak (aka prime), you don't need to do anything but salt and pepper it, and add a dollup of butter the second it comes off the grill. When you brush the butter on there prior to, it defeats the purpose IMO, because it melts off the second it hits the grill.
You can do a lot of other things, like encrust it in garlic, etc, but really - those are reserved for lesser quality steaks, to help improve flavor. With a prime cut, there is no need to do any of that. When I eat a prime steak, I want to taste the meat, not marinade or seasoning. The same applies for the pineapple juice or soda method that mstang mentioned. I'm not knocking it, because it has it's place, but it's place is on a $3/lb choice cut, not a prime cut. Just my opinion though, and I'm a hack that doesn't know squat about cooking. Oscar toppers, blue cheese and carmelized onions are great and all, I just wouldn't do it with a quality steak.
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Marinade it in pineapple juice. This is the only thing I would marinade a steak in though.
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Cooking the perfect steak
Gentlemen,
My local HEB started carrying USDA prime steaks and I have purchased a couple of them to cook up later in the week. Anyone have any special tricks they use to good a good steak?
My usual method is to let the steaks get to room temperature, melt some butter down and brush it on each side of the steak, and then rub in some cracked pepper. I cook them medium rare and chow down, but I dont know if this would be ideal for a "good" steak. I kind of want to do something fancy, like maybe some crumbled blue cheese or something like they do at a few restaurants I have been to. Any suggestions?
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