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Nice juicy steak recipes

I've got these 2 nice chuncks of beef fillete, which I will cook tonight. What's your favorite way of turning beef fillete into a nice juicy steak?


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Well, there's a nice argentinean saying, that the best sauce for the meat is its blood.

I tend to agree with that, so you won't hear any recommendations on cream, pepper or wine sauces from me (although they are sometimes nice when you put the meat in the oven).

However, if you own a good carbon grill, you should put the steaks with the grill close to the fire, for a few minutes on each side, and then elevate the net a bit and let it cook to the desired level. The first stage is mainly to seal the steak from the outside, and keep all the juice inside.

A true argentinean asado consists of sealing the meat at the beginning, and then a slow 2-3 hours cooking on a low fire (but that's for large whole cuts - if you have already bought little chunks you need a shorter cooking time).

Even if you're planning on using a frying pan (a plancha as we call it) in your home kitchen, you can put some garlic and olive oil on it first (so that the steaks won't stick to it), put the steaks for a couple of minutes on high fire, and then lower the heat and let it cook some more.

Don't flip them more than once. be patient and it'll be worthwhile.


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Daer Yaniv

Well the way I like to make nice piece of meat at home goes like this:

 

- Rub the 2 nice chunks of beef you have with sea salt (rough salt) and some crashed fresh paper, both sides of the meat.

- Hit a heavy pan with nice amount of butter, something like 50 grams. Let the butter to melt and wait until it becomes brown.

-  Now is the time, place the steaks in the pan, give each side 1 minute just to “close” the meat from the out side, so the juice will stay inside the meat.

- The fun part, take a ladle fill it half way with a good old cognac, hit it above the direct fire of the stove (be careful) now tilt the ladle a bit to the fire and let it burn. Now pour the fire and the cognac on the meat, yes there is going to be nice flame for 2 seconds, its good.

- Continue cooking to the temperature you like, personally for fillet I wouldn’t go over medium rare, since the meat has little fat and it is very tender, and u don’t want to lose the juiciness of the meat.

Take out the meat, and now we are adding to the pan some heavy cream. Stir well with the rest of the liquids that are in the pan, add some more fresh crashed paper. Kip stirring until the sauce become thick.  

Place the steaks on a nice plate and pure the sauce on the meat.

Good wine and enjoy.


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Rejected slogan #235:

Yedda - a brain the size of a planet.

gkamin, AsafGuy, thank you both! Both suggestions are causing me to salivate. AsafGuy's method sounds a bit more practical (though somewhat heavy on the getting-even-fatter side!)


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Have you tried "sous vide" cooking?  It leaves the meat as close to raw as you can safely get, which preserves a lot of flavors that get destroyed through heat.

Aside from that, I'm pretty much in the "meat is good as is" camp, at least with steaks.  A little garlic rub, maybe some coarse salt, then onto the grill where my goal is to sear the outside while leaving the inside scandalously close to raw.

 


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I'm a huge fan of grilling a steak on a nice grill. I personally recommend any of the Weber Genesis grills however they are quite costly (I have the E-320).  Anyways, season your beef up sear each side and cook thinner steaks on high, and thicker steaks on medium.  For more instructions, check out this article on how to cook a steak.


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