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I'll be honest, I'm willing to give a lot of leeway to a home chef trying to cook a steak without a grill, but that almost looks boiled. And while it's true there's always a compromise involved in trying to get a decent crust on a steak without cooking it much past my preference of rare, especially for a thinner steak, that looks like it's between medium-well and well done.
My favorite is sous vide, but without it, I like the reverse sear, where you take it to the temperature for just past rare on a meat thermometer, then finish on cast iron with a sear on as high a temperature as you can get without filling the house with clouds of smoke (enough to set off fire alarms is okay though).Max the Meat Guy recently posted a YT video explaining how to try to get a decent crust in a home kitchen. Be forewarned that if you follow his instructions you are going to set the smoke alarms off though. I disable them before cooking steak. If you don't, don't let the oil smoke at all.
That's because he baked it. Baked steak looks like that if you don't then sear it at all. Also it looks more like medium in one half, and leans into medium-well for the other half. That indeed is a consequence of it being a thin cut.I'll be honest, I'm willing to give a lot of leeway to a home chef trying to cook a steak without a grill, but that almost looks boiled.
Parsley is a trash herb anyway. The heat you need for a good sear will burn fresh herbs so if you want to introduce those flavors to a steak you're better off doing them in a marinade or reduction sauce. For the reduction after you finish searing your steak using whatever method you take it out of the pan without turning down the heat and pour a liquid like balsamic vinegar or red wine into the pan. Deglaze by scraping off all the good crunchy steak bits stuck to the bottom of a pan with a wooden spoon. Add your herbs and maybe sugar depending on your tastes then bring to a boil. Let it simmer until it's reduced. Now you have delicious sauce to pour over your completed steak.I cooked parsley with steak and it didn't add too much tbh, next time I'll try rosemary or thyme.
That sounds like a phenomenal idea.All this steak talk has me craving steak Mirabeau, which I haven’t made in many years. If you’re into umami, you’ll enjoy this one.
After searing your steak in a pan, fry drained, finely chopped anchovies in the pan juices until they have melted into a gloriously salty concentrate. Deglaze with red wine and reduce. It’s a perfect partner for the steak.
Please consider only buying steaks with a thickness of one and a quarter inches or greater. You'll always have the capability to create a great sear with the option of giving it just a bit of oven time if it's still too rare for your liking. You've gotten some wonderful advice for making a sauce reduction in your cast iron once the steak is out, if cast iron is your chosen method. Red wine is always a fine choice for deglazing beef for a western style dish. I recommend a cheap merlot or cabernet; you can find them pretty much everywhere. Please don't use white wine with beef; save the chardonnay and moscato for chicken, pork and seafood.back to th drawing board fuck man.
Relevant username, kosher salt has been key in getting a good crust with my steaks in cast iron. Liberally applied to all surfaces, left for at least 30 minutes but ideally overnight. You want full coverage but not enough where many grains are still clearly present when you rub it in. Very important to do the thin sides of the steak for a minute or so first.Max the Meat Guy recently posted a YT video explaining how to try to get a decent crust in a home kitchen. Be forewarned that if you follow his instructions you are going to set the smoke alarms off though. I disable them before cooking steak. If you don't, don't let the oil smoke at all.
I see this advice a lot of places and frankly feel it lead me wrong. I might've just been too literal in reading it as "give 'er all you've got" as far as heat goes. My stove goes up to 8 and I've found just under 4 is pretty solid for getting a good crust and not smoking out the kitchen. I'll do 2:00/1:30 or 2:30/2:00 per-side depending on thickness, the shorter interval being whichever side is down when it goes into the oven at 425F for 3-4 minutes to finish (for thickest tenderloins I can acquire).rip the fucker in a hot as hell iron pan
If you're really serious about high smoke point, try grapeseed oil. I generally find it too expensive though. Peanut oil is fine if you aren't feeding allergyfags.You also don't need a grill to do a decent sear; rip the fucker in a hot as hell iron pan with a good oil or fat that resists smoking and you can get one done.
Is it worth bothering to make sauce with supermarket tomatoes? I wouldn't mind giving marinara sauce a shot, but I'm never happy with the tomatoes I get from the store. The recipe I'm looking at also says canned tomatoes work but like, why bother at that point?It's now the time where they just fall off the vine and the remainder of his tomatoes either get ploughed under or go to me.
I may be repeating myself here, but sesame oil is one of the most underrated pantry staples. The way that fenugreek instantly brings the aromatic quality to Indian food that every good dish needs, sesame oil does the same work for any broadly East Asian food. Cheap, cheerful, and transformative.I also finally got around to trying green beans with sesame oil, as @AnOminous suggested in the recipe thread. Really good.
No. They're literally evil.Is it worth bothering to make sauce with supermarket tomatoes?
I use canned tomatoes during winter/spring, and they work beautifully. I usually go for Mutti tomatoes. They are already peeled, so you save some time, too.Is it worth bothering to make sauce with supermarket tomatoes? I wouldn't mind giving marinara sauce a shot, but I'm never happy with the tomatoes I get from the store. The recipe I'm looking at also says canned tomatoes work but like, why bother at that point?
Also, sorry for double posting but I’m thinking you might be able to make some of those little breakfast muffin cup egg bites with the turkey sausage. Just put some scrambled eggs in muffin tins, add in the sausage and whatever you like, and then bake in the oven for a little while till they turn out how you like them. I had some the other day and they were really good. Just an idea.Is it worth bothering to make sauce with supermarket tomatoes? I wouldn't mind giving marinara sauce a shot, but I'm never happy with the tomatoes I get from the store. The recipe I'm looking at also says canned tomatoes work but like, why bother at that point?
My baked apples stuffed with turkey sausage came out... Well... They seemed to come out as intended but I learned I'm very disgusted by turkey sausage. Not sure what I'm going to do with the remaining half pound. Maybe just cook it in a pan and eat with lots of hot sauce? I think I'd be happier giving this recipe another shot with maybe ground Italian sausage?
I poached some peaches again and they came out amazing. This time I substituted half the water with a cheap Moscato, added a bit of lemon juice and infused the poaching liquid with lemon zest. I cooked the peaches longer than last time which caused the red around the removed pit to come off into the syrup and turn it a beautiful pink color. So I had the idea to run the liquid through my coffee filter to make sure the final dish looked really nice. The coffee filter was a wake up call that it's time to invest more into my kitchen tools.
I also finally got around to trying green beans with sesame oil, as @AnOminous suggested in the recipe thread. Really good.
The only important thing is they should be plum/Roma. Generally stuff marketed as "San Marzano" is pretty good but it's questionable how much of that is genuine as they charge a premium for it, but that's almost always good for sauce.I use canned tomatoes during winter/spring, and they work beautifully. I usually go for Mutti tomatoes. They are already peeled, so you save some time, too.