I always joke that I like my steak just past the point where a veterinarian could save it....
My mother likes her steak to moo when she puts her fork into it. :thumbsup:
I always joke that I like my steak just past the point where a veterinarian could save it....
I have problems finding good steak, Wife is really picky!:licking:I believe that if you want to flavor your steak, you might as well be eating ground beef.I get my grill hot and throw on 1" thick rib-eye steaks until they sear on one side and then flip them to the other side. When my thermometer says the center is 140 F to 150 F, I take them off the grill. I let everyone salt and pepper to taste or ruin the meat with steak sauce. I cook/eat steak because I want to taste the beef and not some flavoring out of a bottle. In my estimation, good cuts of beef cooked properly can't be improved on with flavorings.:licking:
So they would have you believe they invented the fridge to get the carcass frozen before they invented a means of cooking it.
I'll have to check out Legends. It a bit of a drive, but wife & I like to check out the sights and events all over.
As for tri-tip, I've had some really really good and one that was not good at all. However, I've only found it in california. Where do you get it in Texas? I'm surprised any one in Texas even knows it exists.
And as for steak, the grade of meat is important. The grades are in order of best to not-as-good: Prime, choice, select and utility. A lot of grocery stores sell "select" and maybe "choice" from time to time. I prefer getting "prime" from a specialty meat shop if/when I can afford it. It makes all the difference in the world.
Here's my method...
Gas grill. Charcoal's nice but takes too much advance planning; I'm not that well prepared!
Set all burners to HI and let BBQ achieve equilibrium. Should be over 500 degrees F.
I prefer NY Strip steaks. Should be at room temperature. Preferably never frozen, but if frozen must be fully thawed and at room temp.
Take the orders from your guests, ranging from medium to rare. If anybody wants theirs cooked more than medium well, give them a hotdog.
With BBQ cracking hot, put all the steaks on the grill, lined up in the same orientation. After 2 minutes, flip them all 180 degrees left, and turn down the temp to MED.
After 2 more minutes, take off the rare steaks and put them on a clean plate.
In 2-3 minutes, flip the ones on the grill 180 and rotate 90 so grill marks form little squares. Put the rare steaks back on the grill, flipped and rotated.
In about 2 minutes, flip and rotate everything 180 and 90.
Finish until each one is the right firmness for what your guests ordered. Should be abetween 1 and 3 more minutes, max.
A chef taught me a trick to check "doneness". I have heard some others do this too. Let me see if I can describe it. ...
With your left hand, close your thumb and index finger so they touch at the tips, like you're making the "OK" sign. Now with your right index finger, press the fleshy part of your left hand between the thumb and index finger knuckles. Feel how soft it is. That's how a very rare steak feels.
Now touch the thumb to the pinky finger. See how much the flesh firmed up? That's how a medium well steak feels. The longest finger gives you rare, ring finger gives you medium.
Remove each one when it has hit the correct "doneness", and let stand 3-4 minutes before serving.
I'm going to add this to the mix ---- there is a BIG difference in Grazed (Grass Fed) Beef and the Feed Lot stuff you find in a grocery store. The Grazed and maybe minimally finished with grain is much better tasting and MUCH better for you !
NY Strip at room temp then Seared on both sides and only rare to medium rare -- Sea Salt and Fresh Ground Black Pepper. NO Steak Sauce !