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Umm.... Did you see the post above yours?
Yes, I did read it and saw no mention of resting the meat... in fact it says to wait for grilling until everyone is ready to eat, so I think that negates any resting time at all.
Well, I thought you meant the "prior to cooking" rest. I assumed we all knew about the "post cooking" rest. Sorry.Bob
Oh, ok. Gotcha. I didn't know 'tempering' was before, 'resting' was after.Thanks,Bob
First of all, good steak requires that you start out with "good steak". The FDA has 3 distinct cuts that are usually sold by local butcher shops. The are "choice", "select", and "prime". Of
The next thing is temperature. Emeril has convinced everyone to cook steaks on the highest heat possible, but they always look burnt and I certainly don't want one like that. It is
Seasoning is also done way over the top. I do not recommend salt at all, during the cooking process. It sucks the jucies up out of the meat and dries it out. If you want to season it,
OK first we need grass fed not corn fed organic prime steak. Rib eye, NY strip, Fillet whatever you perfer. Allow to come to room temp. Salt and pepper to taste. Rub with Olive oil [ lightly] . Forget the barbie. get out that cast iron pan. Heat until the pan smokes. place steak i pan and cook for 3minutes per side [ 1 1/2" th] then place in oven set at 450 degrees. for 4 to 8 minutes for rare to med well. Let stand for 10 minutes tented with aluminum foil. Brush with clarified butter. DIG IN.
I dry age them for 3-4 days in my fridge. I take them out about 1/2 hour before grilling and add Montreal Steak seasoning. I grill them on my Primo Ceramic grill over direct heat (about 600 degrees) for about 3 minutes per side. I then move them over to the indirect side and shut all the vents down and let them cook another 3-4 minutes
No meat please...eeew
That would be big long slices of eggplant, seasoned with olive oil, salt, pepper, paprika and a little cayenne. Place on the grill high heat until grill marks appear, turn over. No meat please...eeew
TI don't use much salt anywhere. Hypertension runs in my family, so I became used to not using much salt when I was a kid.However, I find that a little bit of salt on a steak right before you put it on the grill seems to give you a better char. It would be difficult to "suck out" all the juices from a steak unless you cooked it in a bed of salt or something, but a light dusting does seem promote a better char or crust or whatever you want to call it.I think that the temperature you cook at and the cut of meat are what influence how juicy the cooked steak is.