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How To Cook An Amazing Steak At Home!

Think you have to go out to a restaurant to get an amazing steak dinner? If you answered yes, I am going to try and convince you otherwise! I think it would surprise a lot of people to know that making a fancy and delicious steak dinner at home is actually fast, easy and delicious than one would think!

Here are the basics you need to know:

What kind of steak should I buy?

This can be almost overwhelming when you enter a grocery store or butchers shop! You want a great steak but don’t want to spend a ton of money on a steak that you are afraid you might burn or mess up somehow! I get it, it’s scary and an expensive item to experiment with. However, if you follow a few guidelines you will not mess anything up and have a yummy dinner!

What I look for when picking a steak.

Notice the fat distribution also known as marbling that is through out the red part of the meat in this strip steak.
Extra thick top sirloin steak.

What is the best way to cook a steak?

There are many ways to cook a steak that will have it turn out delicious but I would argue that cooking a steak in a cast iron pan is the best way to get a great sear and juicy interior on a steak. This is because the cast iron pan will hold the heat evenly and gets really hot, which means it can provide the perfect sear on your steak.

What do you need to season a steak with?

There are many steak seasoning options but I believe all you really need are two ingredients and those are salt and pepper. My method of cooking steak also has an optional addition of rosemary and garlic but they are used in a subtle way and not directly on the steak.

How can I tell and feel the done-ness of a steak?

I call this the finger press test. Using your dominate hand press your finger against your non-dominate hand while it is relaxed. Press on the following areas of the hand to feel what each cook on a steak feels like. The picture below will tell you where to press. This is the best way I can show you how to tell if your steak is to your desired done-ness.

Finger press test. Press with the opposing hand onto these areas of your other relaxed hand to get a sense of what each cook feel like. What each cook on a steak will feel like.

I learned this from a Gordon Ramsey cooking video a few years ago and find it’s a good way to get to know the textures of a steak’s done-ness. I think meat thermometers are great but they usually require piercing the meat and I would advise against that to keep all of the juices inside of the steak.

Cook names, temperatures and finger press test:

Rare (picture below) – ~120 F. If using a meat thermometer. If you relax your hand and feel the fleshy area just below the thumb towards the center of the inside of the hand, that squishy feeling is what a rare steak will feel like.

Medium Rare (picture below) – ~125 F. This feels like the area just above the fleshy part and on the inside of the hand just below the first knuckle of the thumb. It feels slightly more firm than the area just below.

Medium (picture below) – ~135 F. Move the finger just above the area for the medium rare point and this is what medium will feel like. Just slightly firmer.

Medium well (picture below) – ~145 F. Move your finger slightly higher to towards the outside bone of the thumb but not quite to the bone. This is actually the recommended temperature by the USDA though many, myself included would consider this on the verge of being too done and overcooked.

Well done – ~160 F. This will feel like pressing on the outside of the first knuckle of the thumb. It will be very firm and I wouldn’t recommend this temperature because it will be dry, chewy and lacking in flavor.

How to cook a steak 101:

Enjoy! Learn from each time you cook a steak and you will be a master in no time!

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