Prime Beef Tom Lord Hard Throughout
How to Make the Most Tender, Flavorful Steak Recipe
If you are a steak-lover, I hope that the title of this post + luscious photo is enticing enough for you to read though the entire article. Because I promise you that it's worth it. Even if you don't eat steak, this is a must-read…as you can impress the hell outta your carnivorean friends (and sometimes, when you're a vegetarian in a herd of carnivores…it would just be nice to have that extra, "dude….you didn't know that about steak???!" in your pocket.)
My entire family (including the 2 yr old kid) just adores any type of steak recipe…you could probably classify us as professional steak-eaters. In fact, it is my husband's life-long quest to hone his grilling technique so that our steaks at home turn out charred crusty on the outside and perfectly medium-rare on the inside. With grill marks for show, of course. Seriously, we are too cheap to eat out and would rather cook a nice steak recipe at home. For the past 4 months, we have been experimenting with how to get full, juicy, beefy flavor of a ribeye with butter-knife tenderness of a filet mignon without feel like getting ripped off buying Prime cuts. And after 4 months of eating steak 2x a week, I think we've figured it out. So, my friends, I am offering you a very juicy secret, one that will turn an ordinary "Choice" cut of steak into a gucci "Prime" cut (And yes, I know what "Choice" and "Prime" means – it's the marbling. The salting doesn't affect fat content – I'm using those terms as a figure of speech and something people can relate to)
Do you know the joy of buying Choice and eating Prime? It's like buying a Hyundai and getting a free mail-in rebate for a BMW upgrade!!!
The Steak Secret: salt your steaks 1 hour before cooking for every inch of thickness.
Here's two nice pieces of regular 'ol supermarket steak. They're about 1.25 inches thick, so I'll let them salt for about 1.25 hours.
Season liberally with kosher salt on both sides with kosher or sea salt. If you are used to using regular table salt, this may look like a ton of salt, but just remember that kosher and sea salt flakes are 2-3x the size of table salt.
And then just let it sit on your counter.
After 15 minutes, it will look like this — you can see how the meat's water is starting to come up to the surface — and that some of the salt is still on the surface of the steak.
After 30 minutes, you'll see more water:
After almost an hour:
And now 1.25 hours – see all that water? You can also see that there's still salt on the surface of the steak.
The next step is to discard the water, rinse the steak really well to rid of all the salt. Pat very dry. Very very dry with clean paper towels so that absolutely no moisture is left on the steak.
Then it's time to cook.
Before y'all throw a hissy fit, just hear me out. I first learned of this technique from Judy Rodgers' The Zuni Cafe Cookbook: A Compendium of Recipes and Cooking Lessons from San Francisco's Beloved Restaurant. Judy massively salts her chicken before roasting, and I've adapted the practice to steaks. Thanks to a couple of other books (McGee's On Food and Cooking and Alton Brown's I'm Just Here For the Food), and a few fellow bloggers, I have an explanation of how it works.
Oh, and if the drawings look like a 3rd grader did it, too bad….YOU try drawing with a laptop touch-pad and a glass of bourbon on the rocks.
How Salting Works
All of you who season JUST before grilling – this is what you are really doing to the meat. Did you know that? All the water comes to the surface and if you don't pat super-dry, you're basically STEAMING the meat. Plus, your salt just sits on the surface of the steak, leaving the interior tasteless.
Now – note that only a little of the salt gets to go back into the meat. Don't worry – you aren't going to be eating all that salt!
Bourbon does that to me too.
I can hear it now..BUT!!! What of all the water that stayed on the surface of the meat? Aren't you drawing all the moisture out of the meat? Will it taste like a salt lick? (*%!*%!@#!#!!! I DON'T UNDERSTAND THIS STEAK RECIPE!!!
Pull your pants back on and keep reading…
Verification on Technique
Cook's Illustrated January 08 issue (and you can also find it on their paid portion of their website. Just search for "Improving Cheap Roast Beef") They salt a 4lb roast beef (big, fat, thick meat) and they are using 4 tsp kosher salt – therefore their steak recipe recommends salting for 18-24 hrs. It's all related: thickness of meat : amount of salt : time.
Salting Steak Recipe Key Points
- Use kosher or sea salt, not table salt <– that is important. It will not work well with tiny tiny grains of table salt. Plus, table salt tastes like shit.
- Use steaks 1″ or thicker.
- Follow my timetable (below)
- If you are Harold McGee, a member of Alton Brown's research team or Mr. Burke my high school chem teacher…..and think I'm full of B.S…. please let me know. But guys, none of this was in your books. I had to formulate, extrapolate, hypotholate and guesstulate based on your stuff. Highly mental activity.
- I know this sounds awfully like salt-curing, which dries out meat (like beef jerky). But with salt curing, you use A LOT more salt and leave it salting for A LOOOOOONG time. We're talking about a little tiny nap here – not weeks – just enough to break down the proteins and flavor the steak throughout.
- Again, don't worry about all that salt. Just enough of it gets absorbed into the meat. Most of it gets washed down the drain when you rinse off. Really.
- I know you're going to ask…so I'll answer it for you. Why not brine? You could if you really want water-logged diluted-tasting crappy steak.
I understand that this method will cause chaos, confusion and controversy in your household. But I encourage you to experiment: try adding spices, crushed garlic and rosemary sprigs to the salt, which will then act like Christina Aguilera dragging its entourage of flavors with it into the meat. If confusion in the household becomes unbearable, just whack'em with the hunk of salted steak..
How to make cheaper Choice steak even more tender and flavorful
Salting the steak is a "dry brine" technique that tenderizes the steak and makes it more flavorful. If you are using fine sea salt, cut the amount of salt in half.
Course Main Course
Cuisine American
PER STEAK
- 2 teaspoons kosher salt or sea salt
- 1 piece steak
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Sprinkle 1 teaspoon of kosher salt PER side of steak
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Let salt: 1 hour per 1" thickness of steak. For example, if steak is 1/2" thick, then let salt for 30 minutes.
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Rinse all salt off. Pat very dry with paper towel.
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Season steak with pepper or other seasoning (do not add any additional salt)
Let us know how it was!
Another use for herb butter?
Notice the consistency in ingredients (first photo and the one below): perfect steak always go so well with homemade shoestring fries or homemade potato chips. The green stuff is just to give color to the plate. Unless it has garlic-herb butter slathered all over it too.
Other steak recipes you might enjoy:
How to dry age steaks at home with Drybag method
Watch me talk about Kobe Beef Burgers on CBS
Artisan Steak Tasting – taste test of 6 steaks from small artisan ranchers
Skirt Steak Tacos Recipe & Parking Adventures of La Tacqueria
No Knead Bread – so easy a caveman 4-yr old can do it
Negative Calorie Chocolate Cake
Garlic Truffle Shoestring Fries
Tropical Island Salmon: cooking fish low 'n slow creates the most dreamy, silky fish
Source: https://steamykitchen.com/163-how-to-turn-cheap-choice-steaks-into-gucci-prime-steaks.html
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