I'm definitely a charcoal man, but the gas was really used in an odd way here imo. Most suprising part was that it wasn't even seared on the flame but instead the flat top, also it didn't get the epic music which of course adds the most flavor
Ya I feel like the gas grill was intentionally misused here… sure would hate to add too much flavor and ruin the experiment! I think we all knew how it was going to go. I primarily cook with charcoal but I’ve had some seriously good steaks off a gasser!
I have never cooked a steak like Guga did on the gas... It didn't look right at all. I usually just get the gas as hot as possible and go medium rare. You get char and such good flavour.
I’m charcoal man myself. But I don’t think the gasser steak got a fair shake without being flame grilled. Also side dish looked amazing will definitely be trying that one. Thanks guys.
I was thinking the same, should've seared first on the gas then let it cook indirectly. It won't beat charcoal but will be better than the skillet sear
Yea, different sear methods is not going to produce the best results. If the smoked steak was seared on charcoal, it would have been much better. For me, I normally sous vide then charcoal sear.
For real I he might as well have gone with a cast iron on an electric stove with that one. Gotta get those grill markets for extra flavor which he couldnt...
There were a lot of differences outside of the method being tested that could have messed with the results. E.g. the first 2 were reverse sear and the 3rd wasn't. The 1st was seared on the flattop and the 2nd was with the torch. I experience fairly different results when I switch between those things.
Yeah, I was thinking for a true gas grill steak, he should've seared on the gas grill, just turn it up to high. Most people probably don't have a flat top.
Reverse seating for the gas grill is just over engineering a steak. You can throw that steak on high for 3 minutes on each side and it will be a perfect medium rare with a nice charred crust. Maybe not as good as the charcoal one, but definitely much better than this one was.
I think the best way is to smoke over charcoal(like with a Kamado Joe) and then either sear it on charcoal or sear it on cast iron with butter/garlic/rosemary
Guga should do an experiment: 1 - properly grilled steak in the Gas Grill with open flame, sear first rest it away from direct heat till get to temperature, dont need to be fancy, do it like it should be done if you're using a gas grill; 2 - convert a gas grill to Lava Rocks, its as easy as it can be... ceramic bricks dont do the same effect, Lava Rocks need a couple of cycles to get rid of any off taste, also washing them first will reduce any off flavor too, after that it will be 90% what you get from charcoal, its impressive; 3 - just regular charcoal; Season and treat the steaks the very same way, no different searing methods... just sear on the grills, direct heat for all of them, the dripping is what makes the churrasco flavor, if you use the gas grill without lettign the drips do the flavoring job you're doing it wrone, or like Uncle Roger woudl say, you fucked up! Get a few more people on a blind test and I think people will be amazed with the results... I would say Guga should do the blind test as well.
Feel the gas grill got a bit done dirty. Should've turned the heat up for that nice flare up for the sear on the fats just like on charcoal instead of using flat top. Many people are really quick to dismiss gas grilling just because it might not have that same flavor or smoke flavoring that charcoal gives, but gas grilling definitely can give a good cook when done justice.
I didn’t understand why the gas grill steak it wasn’t cooked on open flame either. I personally don’t know one person who grills steaks outdoors, on a gas grill, on a flat top instead of the flame.
Came to comments just to tell this. Myself a charcoal lover, but newer seen anyone grill a steak like this on gas grill. Normally underneath the flames with the smoke/flavor shields giving of some smoke.
@@rondorthecruel124 either way the flavor of the charcoal can't be beat. And honestly he probably did that so the gas doesn't affect the flavor. The burning of propane does give off a gassy flavor
Why not finish off the gas grill on the grill itself? There was no need to use the flat top. Also, if you cook the steak less during the reverse sear, it won't get overcooked and the crust will be better than the flamethrower
Yeah, I dunno what this experiment is supposed to be, it's clearly not comparing the gas vs charcoal cooking methods. It's just steaks cooked completely differently at every step of the process. Feels more like a covert ad for the grill than anything else
I have had charcoal steaks that had a dirty char taste but haven't cooked on one even once to give it a fair shake. I've done a ton of Propane grill and electric smoker pellet grill steaks (with direct flame sear options) with great success. One of the best steaks of my life was on a $120 abused Walmart propane grill with no upkeep so maybe Gordon Ramsay is right when he says "The flame is the flavor." Even though he does a ton of cast iron steaks. (Which I also enjoy basted in butter, garlic and thyme.)
This experiment isn’t fair to the gas grill as you didn’t cook it first on high heat causing fat flare ups like with the charcoal steak, charcoal will still be better but the gas can be better if you cook it on high causing fat flare ups
@@triparadox.c Cooking it that way will end up having your steak overdone 60% of the way in by the time it reaches the correct internal temperature. You absolutely never sear it at a super high temperature when finishing the cook on the grill afterwards. Doing a super high sear on a grill like that is when you finish the steak off cooking in an oven, the fast high sear seals in the juices for when it goes in the oven. That is the absolute only time you do that, unless you're trying to over cook it to medium well/well.
I found a way many years ago to elevate the flavor when grilling steaks & chops on propane gas grills. Most of the flavor charcoal gives beyond the wood smoke is from the fat & meat juices falling onto hot coals creating both smoke & aerosols (a fine super small droplet size particles). I upped my game after finding ceramic pyramid shaped char rocks. When laid out side by side on the rack covering the burners I got both much higher temps (and IR output) and instant "poof" when drippings hit the "rocks". Last time I saw them may have been at a Walmart.
He seared it using more surface area than it would have had on the grill. He gave it a better sear than it would have gotten on the grill. Giving it an advantage it shouldn't have had. And you're still mad.
I use grapeseed oil sometimes and use my cast iron, medium heat without going too high on the temps. Keeps the smoke pretty low til the butter and herbs come into play
@@kvngamo205 This! I thought avocado oil was just some marketing hype but it's so useful. It's high smoke point allows me to cook multiple steaks at higher temperatures to get that nice sear without worrying about the oil burning or the temperature dropping too low.
He actually has a third channel now that does shorts with all his side dishes. Its a little slow to catch up right now but they are going back through old videos and uploading them by popular demand
Guga I watch your videos and I will say you are the real deal. You never leave details out. And I know everything you show is just about right everytime. Thanks!
Smoked all day! I smoke my steaks on a chimney stack with apple wood and mesquite charcoal for about 40-50 minutes depending on thickness. Temp around 220 and never fails to impress me how amazing it is
It's all about the smoker! I reverse sear on my pellet grill all the time. It's easy to just set the temperature on the smoker, put the steak in, and wait until it hits that internal 125. No babysitting is required.
Had to upvote. Smoking is definitely the best whenever you want to cook steaks for multiple people. Since you don't have to be perfect on your timing, you can smoke all the steaks at once, set a timer & do something else. Smoking is like a cheat code to make great tasting steaks with very little effort.
Guga, my man... I always love your videos, but this experiment wasn't fair to the gas grill. I'm a charcoal guy, but when you use gas, you use it the same way you do charcoal. Do that reverse sear on it, and let the fat drip down on the flames and plates below to let the fat smoke hit it just like it would on charcoal, and you will get a different result than what you got here. It won't be quite the same as charcoal, but it will be a LOT better than what you did on this video. I promise.
Here’s what I do. Every few months I go in a steak run. I smoke the steaks in my Backwoods smoker as low as possible to an internet temperature of 125. I immediately vacuum seal the steaks individually then deep freeze them. Whenever I want a steak, I sous vide it frozen, then sear on a gas’s grill. Smoke and charcoal flavor, perfectly cooked, and seared with a flame. Delicious and perfect every time! 😋
I made a simple little smoker pan for my gas grill out of a small aluminum pan, fits right in between the heat shields it works well. I definitely prefer steaks cooked on my green egg, they turn out 10 out of 10. Hardwood lump is simply the best. Still have my ole classic weber kettle even though I don't use it often.
i love guga showing his personality and humor more and more on camera, it just makes me so happy watching his videos lately! edit: all i see npc's in this thread. very disappointed. i just wanted to give a positive message to guga and everyone in the thread shoots it down. thank you people who agree but as for the rest, you need a shape up. guga is a human too and a great one at that. angel has something called free will and can do whatever he wants. if he isn't healthy that's up to him.
@@TonnoNinja yeah i agree. Been watching for years now and I used to like the videos more. Feels like every video now is the same almost and even the phrases are the same every time.
Best way to sear on a gas grill without a searing insert is to just put the steak fat cap down and create flare ups from the fat. You get a great smokey taste and crust. Just create your own flare ups.
Definitely didn't use the gas grill how it is made to be used if you want to go 250 and get no benifits use a oven... Turn it up get some flame going you'll melt that fat get a great charred taste ect....
I gotta say, a smoked steak is incredible - but it's also pretty damn intense too! About the only way I cook steaks anymore is a 4-24hr dry brine followed by reverse searing, and sometimes I'll smoke them, but it's too much for regular eating so most of the time I'll just bake them in the oven at 175° until reaching 120° internal and finish on cast iron to 130-135°. I love charcoal - but that's typically too much hassle; and, if you're thinking about using a gas grill, consider just reverse searing in the oven/on the stove top(in either cast iron or steel) instead. That's how your preferred steak house probably does it after all. Gas grills definitely have their place, but, IMO, they're just unnecessary for cooking steaks unless you're just having a cookout hanging out with people of course. BTW, sprinkling some ground cumin on a steak can help add a lil depth if you aren't smoking or charcoaling it, cranks up the 'beefiness'. REALLY light dusting of cayenne paper can open up the flavors too. And, no matter what, dry brining for at least a few hours is a MUST else you're just leaving flavor on the table, definitely the most important part!
As someone who smokes everything on a weber kettle, I can tell you that smoking on charcoal is indeed the best of both worlds. Those steaks were ridiculous!
I did a 2 inch thick strip starting with standard dry aging for 24 hours, then submerged it in sparkling apple cider for another 24 hours. Seared it on a smoking hot cast iron, using the fat cap to grease the iron, nothing else. One of the best steaks I've ever tasted. Definitely worth a try. Cheers, everybody.
Yep, I've been watching a ton of Guga for the last six ish months, but he definitely fudged this experiment. To sear a smoked steak with a gas torch was bad enough, but like most of the comments said, doubling that up with a griddle seared steak... This one was leaning towards the charcoal from the beginning. With a pellet grill, best way I've found is to let it sit on the grill at 200° for at least 15 minutes or until it reaches about 100°, then if I'm patient I'll take the steaks off and heat the smoker up to 500° and put a sear on then. If I'm being impatient I'll honestly just leave the steaks on while it heats up and that's usually good enough (mine can get from 200 to 500 in about 5-7 minutes). Just have to keep an eye on it and flip it at the right time and it'll be so tender, juicy, and so soaked in flavor that I haven't had many steaks that'll beat it. I vote a remake on this video! With doing both the steaks as correctly as you do charcoal! 😁
@@tioswift3676 Honestly, I wouldn't think it would be very possible. You need the wood chips/pellets/whatever to really get the good smokey flavor in there. That said, I do think that if you followed Guga's usual instructions for cooking them - searing them in direct heat but letting them cook in the "coolest" part of the grill, with a burner set low. Even that, though, is entirely possible to not work at all - I don't really experiment with gas grills anymore. I'd also suggest keeping an eye out over the next couple of months. I got a Cuisinart Wood Creek Pellet Grill/Smoker from WalMart - normally about $600-700 - for $250 a couple years ago, and it's been amazing. You can sometimes find them drop down to at least decent prices.
@@xofmetleh6618 not the point, nobody who uses gas grills is going to sear on a flat top, the grill itself is much superior for flavor when you get flare ups from the fat
You should have also tried a gas-fired infrared grill. Infrared grills are the types used by restaurants to cook their really expensive high-end USDA Prime steaks.
I get charcoal from a gas grill by putting bricketts into aluminium foil and get them hot and smoking on the gas grill. Charcoal flavor and taste on a gas grill. Likewise you can use any gas grill as a smoker in the same way. And, before you say you cannot get a reverse sear or a slow and low indirect heat on a gas grill, surprise, you can! An aluminium pan with it's own grate you put that on the gas grill and you can even bake bread on it. I have. But it's perfect for a slow 225 - 250° slow smoke to get it cooked perfectly inside, and then kick the temp of the grill up to 450 - 475° to sear it all the way around for a nice crust! I go camping a lot and always have those tricks for the perfect steaks out in the middle of nowhere with my portable webber gas grill!
Guga: how’s the steak Leo? Leo: the flavour is so pronounced, the crust is on the highest level of crust it can achieve on this human earth, there are so many layers of flavour, so many elements going on in my mouth right now. The texture is so special and the smokiness is the highlight of the night. Guga: oh really, I didn’t like it. Leo: actually now I had the time to reflect, the flavour is not as pronounced as I said 3 secs ago.
I have a Napoleon 665 prestige pro. Doing steak I fire up that smoker box for a hit of smoke flavor. After getting temp, I either use the 1800 degree sear, or crack on all the burners to high, wait 30 secs for it to get to 700 plus degrees, and toss those steaks back onto the grill to eat beautiful licks of flame. I would never toss them on a flat top after reverse sear. I don't feel you gave the gas a good chance. But either way, good video.
I reverse sear my steak all the time. I set it on my traeger for about and hour at 180 then go right to my charcoal m16 and finish it off. Absolutely amazing.
I dunno i can see both sides of that argument. The engineer in me wants to see conditions controlled like you say. However i think what he's really doing is comparing methods you're be likely to use at home. Direct flame over charcoal, smoked then seared, and the gas grill. That being said, i dont think the gas grill got a fair shake, it shoulda been cooked direct flame like most people would at home.
@@tippyc2 if it's a real comparison then it has to be real. Methodology is key to outcome in a comparison. Everything is done exactly the same way, just with a different heat source. I know that a frozen, stuffed burger turns out better cooked at 400 on the pellet side of my bbq compared to the gas side because I do everything the same. This comparison didn't do everything the same.
That last bit about feeding Leo and he never left reminds me of my second wife. She came over to my house, I cooked some steaks for her, and she just basically never left 😂 We were moved in together a few months into dating. I actually have to thank Guga for that, because I had just discovered his channel and was trying to be a better cook. Now both my girls love when I cook and I am confident in what I make for others
Guga, you should do more videos where you focus on the difference between Grilling (charcoal) and Barbequing (smoking). They are essentially two different culinary fields, one mainly rooted in American / Asian culture (bbqing), and the other in European (grilling). For instance: Why not do a comparison between barbeque marinated spare ribs (bbq) and plain salt and pepper marinated spare ribs (grilling)? If you haven't tried it before, I think you'd be surprised by the results
I am a steak lover, with over 45 year experience. My favorite steak is cooked in a cast iron skillet on either gas or charcoal. It cooks evenly and has the best crust. Charcoal alone tends to burn or not cook, as there are hot spots and it is hard to keep even temperatures. Gas grills are consistent, but sometimes hard to get a good crust without burning.
>Charcoal alone tends to burn or not cook i think you're running your fire too hot if thats the case. You're burning the meat because its too hot, so to compensate, you're using the cold side of the grill which isnt hot enough. Try spreading out your fire till it's 2 briquettes thick. It would be the same thickness if you're using lump charcoal like you should be, but i'm using briquettes as a reference because they're a consistent size.
Hey Guga, thanks for your great videos. After watching your videos, I have three requests for future videos: - Please try some other cattle breeds than wagyu and American beef. - How do you clean all your pans and other cooking ustensils so they continue to be so shiny ? - Please cook a foie gras in a terrine using sous vide. And yes I'll repeat those requests often. ;)
Finally got around to smoking my new york strip with charcoal / hickory then searing for 1 minute on each side on a pan... It's a game changer. Couldnt have done it without ya Guga.
Guga Ive always loved your videos! But bruh......im a little confused to your use of the gas grill. Im not sure many people use it that way? Ive gotten a great crust and sear directly over flames. If you use a gas grill...let your steak get a flame lick.
It's not charcoal, but a well seasoned old gas grill (the type with drip guards that let the flames lap and burn the drippings/runoff and the meat at the same time) man they have a flavor of their own that's hard to beat.
Exactly. Plus, his gas grill is too new to be cooking great steaks. You have to get some drippings all over those bars under the grate and get some flames kicking up in the hot spots. Come on Guga, get it together!
Weird, I picked up a small camp propane grill recently, the flavor it produces is better than most things I make in my smoker. I prefer to use a charcoal or smoker on thick cuts of meats, but for smaller cuts or veggies I definitely go with propane
THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR THIS CONFIRMATION!!! I will be using this to help prove to everyone who is a doubter about the awesome might that is the charcoal grill.
Souse Vide to 125...smoke on lowest setting for 10-15 minutes...finish sear over charcoal or wood embers for best results. I like my steak finished at 137 degrees.
i have been using the dry age umai bags, before doing it had legit dry age in a proper cooler. My wife says it tastes different is there a way to test the dry age differences between the umai dry age bags vs traditional dry age?
@@GennySavastone i have pics to prove so sure, feel what you want but i have done it both ways via a proper cooler/dry aging machine and umai dry age bags.
@@Ali__C I'm sorry but you do not have that Ali, you're lying to impress people on the internet and thinking you'll be invited to one of Adam fairhead restaurants in watford 😂😂🤣🤣 behave mate
I think your use of gas could be improved greatly. Additionally your gas grill looked brand spanking new and usually needs a couple of cooking cycles to burn off anything that was left from the manufacturing. Also while most gas grills use the type of burner that you do which is mostly convection cooking, if one uses one with lava rocks or other such bricks it turns in back to the radiant cooking gas grills of yesteryear and that makes a huge difference, including the drippings really adding to the smoke flavor, and many people have converted their newer gas grills back to a lava rock type to get improved cooking and also a hotter grill. So while what you did was a decent way to cook on gas and many people do, using a different gas set up could yield dramatically better results yet still have the connivence of gas grill cooking.
I had my last Grill converted to Lava Rocks, almost like charcoal, but overtime it ruined the burners, I replaced, and it was gone really fast again... It was great for as long as it lasted, my new one I'm not converting again, Got one with great flavoring plates and its very good, I love charcoal, but my picanhas in the Gas Grill are very close and tastes amazing.... cooking in indirect heat then searing in a griddle is not even close to what a gas grill can do... if you do a blind test with a few people, you might be amazed how many will get it wrong... and you are totally right about a brand new grill
I'd love to see a series from you either on here or on Sous Vide where you make various international dishes (pho, pierogis, lasagna, etc) and then make the same dish the Guga way and see which one is better. You gotta DOOO IIIITT! Call it Guga vs The World
Some people add wood chips in stainless steal container that's prefarated to the propane grill. Some people use BBQ bricks that have holes. The holes cause less flare ups and add smoke and cook even. You can also use bbq stainless steel grill pans for the steaks and turn up the bbq, less flare up and burn.
i do both sear and smoke on the charcoal grill. if using cut steaks, I light up the coals, and when they are lit, add the hardwoods on top. Then just cook the steaks as you would on a charcoal grill, going from high sear to low heat until they reach your preferred doneness. Best of both worlds. Smoke + the flame from the charcoal. Yes, they dont sit in the smoke as long as a low and slow smoke, but these are also thinner cuts so the smoke still penetrates it and you still get a smoke ring. I dont understand why the “smoked” steak has to be done purely on the gas grill. Both the gas and “smoked” steaks can be finished over charcoal. I really doubt anyone actually cooks a steak like this, but I guess this just shows that each process creates different flavors -which we already know, they just dont have to be separate methods. A more realistic and real-world test would have been to cook the gas grilled steak and the smoked steak over charcoal that way you get a gas/coal finished steak, a smoke/coal grilled steak, and a pure charcoal grilled steak without any hardwood. In that case, I think the smoke + coal grill would win.
I have all three of these and I personally think the best (meaning most convenient with good flavour) is to smoke on traeger at lowish temperature with super smoke on and then use the infrared side burner on my napoleon gas bbq to sear the steaks at a really high temperature and cause fat flair ups. Really gives it a good taste to finish off.
Charcoal or wood give great meat indeed. But gas is handy, you fire it up and you're ready. Also, that smoke feature is really nice! I enjoyed the video! Thanks Guys!
It’s funny because when we cook at home yeah it’s good but there’s only certain dishes that are as good as leftovers also. In Gugas house that’s not the case, i’m sure any leftovers never go to any waste
I switch it up. I prefer charcoal for steaks overall but it takes a while to get the coals going just right. On the other hand nothing beats gas for a quick steak to unwind on the weekend. Gas for Friday nights, charcoal for Sunday afternoon.
I have a pellet smoker that has a section that can be used to sear. Porterhouse smoked at 180 until internal temp hit 130 then seared. Turned out perfect. Side dish was smoked mac-n-cheese. Love your channel it has taught me a great deal.
This test was completely skewed toward the charcoal from the get go. Wrong technique on both the smoke and gas steaks, really boofed the crust lol. On a gas grill I like to go for a nice coating of oil on the steak pre seasoning and a roaring hot grill. Oil will cause some small flare ups and you get a fantastic sear/crust with medium rare consistency after about 3 minutes per side. Guga's bias is showing here :D
Like I said you should have had your grill on high flame you should have seared it and then cooked it in indirect heat by lowering the temperature of the burners and put it to the other side of the grill to cook it in indirect heat just like you do on the charcoal grill and it's a fair fight then what you did I don't get cuz that's not how you cook in a gas grill
I started with a gas grill long ago, as I experimented and learned I did away with it and went charcoal grills and a charcoal gravity smoker..the flavor cannot be beat, also the meat isn't gray.
There’s a fourth option: gas, with wood chips. If you don’t have time to set up a wood fire, throw a couple large chips of your fave wood into the gas fire.
Guga...You've got to try steak done three ways!!! 🤤🤤🤤 Step 1: Season and smoke steak @ 220f until it reaches 90f internal. Step 2: Sous Vide at 125f for two hours. This not only makes meat more tender but vacuum draws smoke flavour entirely throughout meat. Step 3: Sear over red hot charcoal until internal hits 130-135f, about a minute per side. It'll blow your mind! 🤯
My question is... Do you eat the cut steaks cold? Because obviously cooking them in 3 different ways will have them ready at 3 different times. Is there a way for you to keep them warm without overcooking them?
Video magic, he makes it seem like he's making them one at a time in order but in reality he's just putting them in appropriately and editing footage. You notice he also usually makes two of his side dishes ( At least ).
@@Mihajloje8643 for like 30 minutes tops. I am almost positive he starts them at appropriate timings with a little wiggle room which is what his warmer is for
@@DollanFerinal while you're probably not wrong about the timings food warmers especially on higher heats WILL keep food warm for hours not necessary good as new but warm for sure
Guga as always love your Channels and content, but I felt like that if you were doing an experiment just on the cookers then you should have seared them all the same way, and done the reverse sear method for all three as well. *Omg I had just watched one of Mikey Chen's videos and put down the wrong name. I'm so embarrassed Guga you are the man sorry about the confusion
I was thinking the same thing. I cook them on my gas grill the same way as the charcoal grill. I swear first and then indirect heat. I also use Montreal Steak Seasoning a day before.
I replicate the taste of charcoal and smoking by using a Pit Boss vertical smoker with a 50/50 mix of charcoal pellets and Lumberjack Supreme Blend. And for a little extra charcoal flavor, I finish it off on a charcoal grill. I also smoke low at 200 until I reach the desired temp.
Also need to add cooking the steak over an open fire with red oak on a Santa Maria grill, like a tri-tip, I’ve done this test with all 4 methods, open fire beats them all! (But as you found out, they are all good)
After some thought, I had to watch this video again. In the day, late 60s to late 70s, lave rock was the thing. The drippings would char on the rocks. Then popular thoughts were that the charred fats were potently dangerous! So was butter for years. I remember this because I actually saw a bag of lave rocks in a store recently. Yes, plain propane is bland. My girlfriend would add chunks of shag bark hickory bark we would collect while hiking to the fire. Just remember we had to burn the rocks hot and long to clean them off for the next cook, and replace from time to time. Old school propane cooking!
Hey guys, first of all, I loved the video. I do smoke my steaks, but the one thing I do differently, is that as my steaks are coming up to temp, I place a flat cast iron on the coals in my firebox and use that to sear the steaks. Makes an awesome crust.
Always good videos. Couple things: 1. How long is the steaks sitting before taste test - looks like cooked first 2 on same grill so one would have not rested same as other. 2. Too many variables changed. Reverse sear 2 but not the last one. If reverse searing either sear on same method as cooked or sear on same process eg hot plate. Would love comparisons with less changes in variable to really compare cook fuel source
My favorite is "Eisenhower steaks"... cooked directly on hardwood or its coals... no grate at all. Get a nice mature fire in a firepit and throw it in. A touch test for doneness is essential.
My steak preference top 4' Ranking is.. 1.Pan 2.Grill 3.doesnt matter 4.dont care Im personally Not a fan of smoked meats honestly. Great Vid. As always!
i do charcoal by leaving the kettle blazing 500+. and cook it indirect. may finish up with some flame kiss depending on color. also do my prime rib roast this way.
@@zerodynamic that from the butcher, in ditch supersrkets, cuts are yo thin to get a good crust in while still get your steak perfectly medium rare, also the muscle fiber in for example supermarket Ribeyes, don't contain any fat marbeling, inside the eye or the cap, on around the eye and the cap, also it hasn't ripened nearly as good slehivh results in a though steak, it's a waste of money over here, as at the same price per kilo, but thicker and heavier gives people the illusion steaks from the butcher are more expansive, it's not, ground beef is a waste of money and the butcher, their steaks are the same price per total weight like in the supermarket while providing much better quality.
My preference is to Cook in Hickory smoke @225º until IT 125º then HOT sear over charcoal. Best of both worlds. The charcoal adds the flavor in the SEAR. The smoker adds the flavor in the slow cook in the smoke. Just my opinion.
Best steak I ever made, thick porterhouse, warm to room temp, salt,pepper, wortaschire lee & Parens 2 sides. Lightly brown over hot coals, safe zone move, at 115 deg F returns to finish sear. Use smoke Mesquite. TO DIE FOR!
Hey Guga, there is a undocumented cooking method where you use dehydrator in place of a sous vide bath to 'slow cook' the steak for 1-2 hours before finishing it. Since air is harder to transfer heat than water, it requires a bit of experimentation. My Air fryer has a dehydrate function and I'm testing if a setting of 135F for 1 hour would be enough for a 'marinated' steak. Also, this is something you'd want to use a flamethrower for. I saw a blog posting on the internet where someone dry cured the steak for 1 hour, then 130 F for 2 hours in dehydrator, and resulted in a internal temp of 110F which is then seared.
I'm a big fan of gas grills, because of the ease of use, speed and convenience and no need to clean up all that ash... And with some practice you can achieve amazing results.
I've experimented with several ways of doing steaks and my go to for the best steaks is reverse sear using the oven to get to 120° with a short rest and sear over charcoal. Gives me the opportunity to get the charcoal just right while they're in the oven.
We do our steaks on the ol' charcoal Weber with just a chunk or 2 of wood, hickory, mesquite or maple, reverse seared. I've also eaten at smokehouses all over Texas, and the best brisket I've had is at Hard Eight in Coppell, which uses mesquite.
I'm definitely a charcoal man, but the gas was really used in an odd way here imo. Most suprising part was that it wasn't even seared on the flame but instead the flat top, also it didn't get the epic music which of course adds the most flavor
Ya I feel like the gas grill was intentionally misused here… sure would hate to add too much flavor and ruin the experiment! I think we all knew how it was going to go. I primarily cook with charcoal but I’ve had some seriously good steaks off a gasser!
It was a very hokey and disingenuous video, to be sure.
@@AnalogPipeDream eh the gas is more annoying to clean tbh
I have never cooked a steak like Guga did on the gas... It didn't look right at all. I usually just get the gas as hot as possible and go medium rare. You get char and such good flavour.
Yeah. Much like hank hill, I prefer my clean burning propane grill.
Charcoal tastes dirty to me.
And yeah…… no sear on the grill……
I’m charcoal man myself. But I don’t think the gasser steak got a fair shake without being flame grilled. Also side dish looked amazing will definitely be trying that one. Thanks guys.
I was thinking the same, should've seared first on the gas then let it cook indirectly. It won't beat charcoal but will be better than the skillet sear
Yea, different sear methods is not going to produce the best results. If the smoked steak was seared on charcoal, it would have been much better. For me, I normally sous vide then charcoal sear.
@@Kujashin We do a charcoal sear, then cook indirect with applewood smoke...
Pretty amazing.
For real I he might as well have gone with a cast iron on an electric stove with that one. Gotta get those grill markets for extra flavor which he couldnt...
yep nothing beats a steak cook over raging hot charcoal
"The Smoked Steak Experiment": Does different woods really affects the taste? Or does different woods just barely make any noticeable change?
great idea
The answer is yes. Wood has different smells based on origin.
I find cherry my favorite for steak. Definitely big differences
Well a wood chuck would chuck wood like a wood chuck would, if a wood chuck could chuck wood. Hope that helps
@@chinaboss6683 💀
There were a lot of differences outside of the method being tested that could have messed with the results. E.g. the first 2 were reverse sear and the 3rd wasn't. The 1st was seared on the flattop and the 2nd was with the torch. I experience fairly different results when I switch between those things.
Yeah, I was thinking for a true gas grill steak, he should've seared on the gas grill, just turn it up to high. Most people probably don't have a flat top.
Reverse seating for the gas grill is just over engineering a steak. You can throw that steak on high for 3 minutes on each side and it will be a perfect medium rare with a nice charred crust. Maybe not as good as the charcoal one, but definitely much better than this one was.
I think the best way is to smoke over charcoal(like with a Kamado Joe) and then either sear it on charcoal or sear it on cast iron with butter/garlic/rosemary
Guga should do an experiment: 1 - properly grilled steak in the Gas Grill with open flame, sear first rest it away from direct heat till get to temperature, dont need to be fancy, do it like it should be done if you're using a gas grill; 2 - convert a gas grill to Lava Rocks, its as easy as it can be... ceramic bricks dont do the same effect, Lava Rocks need a couple of cycles to get rid of any off taste, also washing them first will reduce any off flavor too, after that it will be 90% what you get from charcoal, its impressive; 3 - just regular charcoal; Season and treat the steaks the very same way, no different searing methods... just sear on the grills, direct heat for all of them, the dripping is what makes the churrasco flavor, if you use the gas grill without lettign the drips do the flavoring job you're doing it wrone, or like Uncle Roger woudl say, you fucked up! Get a few more people on a blind test and I think people will be amazed with the results... I would say Guga should do the blind test as well.
Feel the gas grill got a bit done dirty. Should've turned the heat up for that nice flare up for the sear on the fats just like on charcoal instead of using flat top. Many people are really quick to dismiss gas grilling just because it might not have that same flavor or smoke flavoring that charcoal gives, but gas grilling definitely can give a good cook when done justice.
I didn’t understand why the gas grill steak it wasn’t cooked on open flame either. I personally don’t know one person who grills steaks outdoors, on a gas grill, on a flat top instead of the flame.
Came to comments just to tell this. Myself a charcoal lover, but newer seen anyone grill a steak like this on gas grill.
Normally underneath the flames with the smoke/flavor shields giving of some smoke.
Glad I wasn't the only one thinking this. No one cooks on a gas grill like this 😂
Yeah why reverse sear the gas grill but not the charcoal??
@@rondorthecruel124 either way the flavor of the charcoal can't be beat. And honestly he probably did that so the gas doesn't affect the flavor. The burning of propane does give off a gassy flavor
Why not finish off the gas grill on the grill itself? There was no need to use the flat top. Also, if you cook the steak less during the reverse sear, it won't get overcooked and the crust will be better than the flamethrower
It helps give a uniform sear and do it quicker since there’s much more surface area on a flat grill top opposed to grill slots.
When doing reverse sear, I only cook the steak to 110F before the sear. It keeps it from getting overdone.
Yeah, I dunno what this experiment is supposed to be, it's clearly not comparing the gas vs charcoal cooking methods. It's just steaks cooked completely differently at every step of the process.
Feels more like a covert ad for the grill than anything else
Yup should have ran the gas grill the same as charcoal, seared it hot then indirect to temp.
I have had charcoal steaks that had a dirty char taste but haven't cooked on one even once to give it a fair shake. I've done a ton of Propane grill and electric smoker pellet grill steaks (with direct flame sear options) with great success. One of the best steaks of my life was on a $120 abused Walmart propane grill with no upkeep so maybe Gordon Ramsay is right when he says "The flame is the flavor." Even though he does a ton of cast iron steaks. (Which I also enjoy basted in butter, garlic and thyme.)
This experiment isn’t fair to the gas grill as you didn’t cook it first on high heat causing fat flare ups like with the charcoal steak, charcoal will still be better but the gas can be better if you cook it on high causing fat flare ups
tell me you overcook your meat without telling me you overcook your meat.... respectfully
@@CaptainBuggyTheClown key word: first. Not the whole duration
Tell me you never use your brain without telling me you never use your brain
@@triparadox.c Cooking it that way will end up having your steak overdone 60% of the way in by the time it reaches the correct internal temperature. You absolutely never sear it at a super high temperature when finishing the cook on the grill afterwards. Doing a super high sear on a grill like that is when you finish the steak off cooking in an oven, the fast high sear seals in the juices for when it goes in the oven. That is the absolute only time you do that, unless you're trying to over cook it to medium well/well.
The gas grill was never going to win. You're delusional if you think it had a real shot in a flavor comparison.
I've been in the charcoal game for only 2 months and I love it. Such an amazing flavor so it's the only way I grill now 😋
I found a way many years ago to elevate the flavor when grilling steaks & chops on propane gas grills. Most of the flavor charcoal gives beyond the wood smoke is from the fat & meat juices falling onto hot coals creating both smoke & aerosols (a fine super small droplet size particles). I upped my game after finding ceramic pyramid shaped char rocks. When laid out side by side on the rack covering the burners I got both much higher temps (and IR output) and instant "poof" when drippings hit the "rocks". Last time I saw them may have been at a Walmart.
You should’ve seared on the gas grill too for a fair comparison.
I know right. Half ass everything.
he did?
Cast iron skit over has, while searing salt into the meat, still the easiest with great results every time.
He seared it using more surface area than it would have had on the grill. He gave it a better sear than it would have gotten on the grill. Giving it an advantage it shouldn't have had. And you're still mad.
Can Guga teach me how to make a steak on an electric stove in an apartment where the smoke gets so bad you can't see your hand in front of you?
I feel you bro
Use a higher smoke point oil.
Use avocado oil
I use grapeseed oil sometimes and use my cast iron, medium heat without going too high on the temps. Keeps the smoke pretty low til the butter and herbs come into play
@@kvngamo205 This! I thought avocado oil was just some marketing hype but it's so useful. It's high smoke point allows me to cook multiple steaks at higher temperatures to get that nice sear without worrying about the oil burning or the temperature dropping too low.
Guga needs to make a recipe website for all side dishes..
Seriously though. I got to sift threw his videos trying to find the side dish I wanted to try. He should make a list on his website.
I'd subscribe to "Guga Sides"
Cookbook, and Guga branded gear would be an idea to look into
90% are potatoes so maybe build a cookbook around that idea as well
He actually has a third channel now that does shorts with all his side dishes. Its a little slow to catch up right now but they are going back through old videos and uploading them by popular demand
Guga I watch your videos and I will say you are the real deal.
You never leave details out. And I know everything you show is just about right everytime.
Thanks!
Smoked all day! I smoke my steaks on a chimney stack with apple wood and mesquite charcoal for about 40-50 minutes depending on thickness. Temp around 220 and never fails to impress me how amazing it is
It's all about the smoker! I reverse sear on my pellet grill all the time. It's easy to just set the temperature on the smoker, put the steak in, and wait until it hits that internal 125. No babysitting is required.
Had to upvote. Smoking is definitely the best whenever you want to cook steaks for multiple people. Since you don't have to be perfect on your timing, you can smoke all the steaks at once, set a timer & do something else. Smoking is like a cheat code to make great tasting steaks with very little effort.
Angel has been doing this so long, he knows almost exactly what Guga has done to every steak.
He's a *PRO*
Guga, my man... I always love your videos, but this experiment wasn't fair to the gas grill.
I'm a charcoal guy, but when you use gas, you use it the same way you do charcoal. Do that reverse sear on it, and let the fat drip down on the flames and plates below to let the fat smoke hit it just like it would on charcoal, and you will get a different result than what you got here.
It won't be quite the same as charcoal, but it will be a LOT better than what you did on this video. I promise.
You are correct.
Reverse sear is nonsense - on ANY grill. Doesn't matter.
@@foobarmaximus3506 and you would be wrong sir
Weber grill is the goat.
exactly, this was not a fair comparison and I'm a charcoal guy too. The gas steak needed to be seared over an open flame
Here’s what I do. Every few months I go in a steak run. I smoke the steaks in my Backwoods smoker as low as possible to an internet temperature of 125. I immediately vacuum seal the steaks individually then deep freeze them. Whenever I want a steak, I sous vide it frozen, then sear on a gas’s grill. Smoke and charcoal flavor, perfectly cooked, and seared with a flame. Delicious and perfect every time! 😋
I made a simple little smoker pan for my gas grill out of a small aluminum pan, fits right in between the heat shields it works well. I definitely prefer steaks cooked on my green egg, they turn out 10 out of 10. Hardwood lump is simply the best. Still have my ole classic weber kettle even though I don't use it often.
i love guga showing his personality and humor more and more on camera, it just makes me so happy watching his videos lately!
edit:
all i see npc's in this thread. very disappointed. i just wanted to give a positive message to guga and everyone in the thread shoots it down. thank you people who agree but as for the rest, you need a shape up. guga is a human too and a great one at that. angel has something called free will and can do whatever he wants. if he isn't healthy that's up to him.
I feel Guga a little bit... fake, in this video
I’m the opposite. I find their personalities very cringe and not appealing at all.
And angel makes me cringe especially removing bits of vegetables in his food
@@TonnoNinja yeah i agree. Been watching for years now and I used to like the videos more. Feels like every video now is the same almost and even the phrases are the same every time.
@@marioh.3014 yeah I agree
Best way to sear on a gas grill without a searing insert is to just put the steak fat cap down and create flare ups from the fat. You get a great smokey taste and crust. Just create your own flare ups.
Basically. Different methods of grilling yields different techniques, just like using a different type of grill
Definitely didn't use the gas grill how it is made to be used if you want to go 250 and get no benifits use a oven... Turn it up get some flame going you'll melt that fat get a great charred taste ect....
@@joeykennedy5910 for a lot of people it's not the technique, they just like the taste of charcoal.
Hank Hill would be fuming over this video. That being said the charcoal one looked best overall!
“Taste the meat, not the heat”!
🤣
I gotta say, a smoked steak is incredible - but it's also pretty damn intense too! About the only way I cook steaks anymore is a 4-24hr dry brine followed by reverse searing, and sometimes I'll smoke them, but it's too much for regular eating so most of the time I'll just bake them in the oven at 175° until reaching 120° internal and finish on cast iron to 130-135°.
I love charcoal - but that's typically too much hassle; and, if you're thinking about using a gas grill, consider just reverse searing in the oven/on the stove top(in either cast iron or steel) instead. That's how your preferred steak house probably does it after all. Gas grills definitely have their place, but, IMO, they're just unnecessary for cooking steaks unless you're just having a cookout hanging out with people of course.
BTW, sprinkling some ground cumin on a steak can help add a lil depth if you aren't smoking or charcoaling it, cranks up the 'beefiness'. REALLY light dusting of cayenne paper can open up the flavors too.
And, no matter what, dry brining for at least a few hours is a MUST else you're just leaving flavor on the table, definitely the most important part!
I'd love to see another version of the experiment where you finished the smoked one on charcoal. I think that would be the best of all worlds.
Just do it on a weber kettle, move from the indirect side to the direct heat to finish it. That's why I love my 26" kettle
@@gdidieu
Yup
I use my smoker for big cuts
I alwase you my weber 22 for steaks
As someone who smokes everything on a weber kettle, I can tell you that smoking on charcoal is indeed the best of both worlds. Those steaks were ridiculous!
I did a 2 inch thick strip starting with standard dry aging for 24 hours, then submerged it in sparkling apple cider for another 24 hours. Seared it on a smoking hot cast iron, using the fat cap to grease the iron, nothing else. One of the best steaks I've ever tasted. Definitely worth a try. Cheers, everybody.
Yep, I've been watching a ton of Guga for the last six ish months, but he definitely fudged this experiment. To sear a smoked steak with a gas torch was bad enough, but like most of the comments said, doubling that up with a griddle seared steak... This one was leaning towards the charcoal from the beginning.
With a pellet grill, best way I've found is to let it sit on the grill at 200° for at least 15 minutes or until it reaches about 100°, then if I'm patient I'll take the steaks off and heat the smoker up to 500° and put a sear on then. If I'm being impatient I'll honestly just leave the steaks on while it heats up and that's usually good enough (mine can get from 200 to 500 in about 5-7 minutes). Just have to keep an eye on it and flip it at the right time and it'll be so tender, juicy, and so soaked in flavor that I haven't had many steaks that'll beat it.
I vote a remake on this video! With doing both the steaks as correctly as you do charcoal! 😁
Any ideas how one could smoke a steak on a regular gas grill? Possible?
Thanks for saving me the time. 😉
This video is like this because it's an ad for the Camp Chef grill lol
@@tioswift3676 Honestly, I wouldn't think it would be very possible. You need the wood chips/pellets/whatever to really get the good smokey flavor in there. That said, I do think that if you followed Guga's usual instructions for cooking them - searing them in direct heat but letting them cook in the "coolest" part of the grill, with a burner set low. Even that, though, is entirely possible to not work at all - I don't really experiment with gas grills anymore.
I'd also suggest keeping an eye out over the next couple of months. I got a Cuisinart Wood Creek Pellet Grill/Smoker from WalMart - normally about $600-700 - for $250 a couple years ago, and it's been amazing. You can sometimes find them drop down to at least decent prices.
@@tioswift3676 use a pellet tube to get smoke on the meat
You should have seared it on the gas grill for a fair comparison
Very confusing decision. Was he just showing off the grills features?
You don't know what you're talking about
Because you can't, that's why!
What ever is your point the taste and smell of steak cook in charcoal is better.
@@xofmetleh6618 not the point, nobody who uses gas grills is going to sear on a flat top, the grill itself is much superior for flavor when you get flare ups from the fat
You should have also tried a gas-fired infrared grill. Infrared grills are the types used by restaurants to cook their really expensive high-end USDA Prime steaks.
I get charcoal from a gas grill by putting bricketts into aluminium foil and get them hot and smoking on the gas grill. Charcoal flavor and taste on a gas grill. Likewise you can use any gas grill as a smoker in the same way. And, before you say you cannot get a reverse sear or a slow and low indirect heat on a gas grill, surprise, you can! An aluminium pan with it's own grate you put that on the gas grill and you can even bake bread on it. I have. But it's perfect for a slow 225 - 250° slow smoke to get it cooked perfectly inside, and then kick the temp of the grill up to 450 - 475° to sear it all the way around for a nice crust! I go camping a lot and always have those tricks for the perfect steaks out in the middle of nowhere with my portable webber gas grill!
I'd be interested to see Guga try something like this and see if the other two guys can pick up on any differences
That side dish blew my mind. So creative. Good job, Guga!!
That side dish is worth an episode all by itself. Surprised Maumau didn't show up today considering the side dish haha.
Guga: how’s the steak Leo?
Leo: the flavour is so pronounced, the crust is on the highest level of crust it can achieve on this human earth, there are so many layers of flavour, so many elements going on in my mouth right now. The texture is so special and the smokiness is the highlight of the night.
Guga: oh really, I didn’t like it.
Leo: actually now I had the time to reflect, the flavour is not as pronounced as I said 3 secs ago.
Typical, that guy is fake as hell
I have a Napoleon 665 prestige pro. Doing steak I fire up that smoker box for a hit of smoke flavor. After getting temp, I either use the 1800 degree sear, or crack on all the burners to high, wait 30 secs for it to get to 700 plus degrees, and toss those steaks back onto the grill to eat beautiful licks of flame.
I would never toss them on a flat top after reverse sear. I don't feel you gave the gas a good chance. But either way, good video.
I reverse sear my steak all the time. I set it on my traeger for about and hour at 180 then go right to my charcoal m16 and finish it off. Absolutely amazing.
the sear was done 3 different ways, and charcoal was cooked backwards from the other 2. Good experiments have consistency and reduced variables.
His experiments have such mistakes all the time, different steaks, different tools, different preparations
Agree Hightower. A true comparison would be all 3 steaks cooked the same way.
I dunno i can see both sides of that argument. The engineer in me wants to see conditions controlled like you say. However i think what he's really doing is comparing methods you're be likely to use at home. Direct flame over charcoal, smoked then seared, and the gas grill. That being said, i dont think the gas grill got a fair shake, it shoulda been cooked direct flame like most people would at home.
@@tippyc2 if it's a real comparison then it has to be real. Methodology is key to outcome in a comparison. Everything is done exactly the same way, just with a different heat source. I know that a frozen, stuffed burger turns out better cooked at 400 on the pellet side of my bbq compared to the gas side because I do everything the same. This comparison didn't do everything the same.
This is hands down my favorite channel. I love the content and it's a dream of mine to eat the food y'all make.
That last bit about feeding Leo and he never left reminds me of my second wife. She came over to my house, I cooked some steaks for her, and she just basically never left 😂 We were moved in together a few months into dating. I actually have to thank Guga for that, because I had just discovered his channel and was trying to be a better cook. Now both my girls love when I cook and I am confident in what I make for others
I'm curious to know what happened to the first wife! I guess she didn't like what you had to offer in the ... kitchen.
@@delinquense lmao, nah she's still around. I got two 😂 Just way harder to impress the first because she's a culinary student!
Awesome video! I always use a combo of hickory and charcoal and get the wood and a good sear. Best of both worlds!
Usually you don’t see a side dish included with these grilling videos. Good grillers serve good meat, Grill masters serve a good meal. Love to see it.
Guga, you should do more videos where you focus on the difference between Grilling (charcoal) and Barbequing (smoking). They are essentially two different culinary fields, one mainly rooted in American / Asian culture (bbqing), and the other in European (grilling). For instance: Why not do a comparison between barbeque marinated spare ribs (bbq) and plain salt and pepper marinated spare ribs (grilling)? If you haven't tried it before, I think you'd be surprised by the results
I am a steak lover, with over 45 year experience. My favorite steak is cooked in a cast iron skillet on either gas or charcoal. It cooks evenly and has the best crust. Charcoal alone tends to burn or not cook, as there are hot spots and it is hard to keep even temperatures. Gas grills are consistent, but sometimes hard to get a good crust without burning.
Charcoal is the best. I cook it perfect evrytime.
>Charcoal alone tends to burn or not cook
i think you're running your fire too hot if thats the case. You're burning the meat because its too hot, so to compensate, you're using the cold side of the grill which isnt hot enough. Try spreading out your fire till it's 2 briquettes thick. It would be the same thickness if you're using lump charcoal like you should be, but i'm using briquettes as a reference because they're a consistent size.
I would love to see a classic Guga steak, cooked in real time. Share the love brother!
Hey Guga, thanks for your great videos.
After watching your videos, I have three requests for future videos:
- Please try some other cattle breeds than wagyu and American beef.
- How do you clean all your pans and other cooking ustensils so they continue to be so shiny ?
- Please cook a foie gras in a terrine using sous vide.
And yes I'll repeat those requests often. ;)
Finally got around to smoking my new york strip with charcoal / hickory then searing for 1 minute on each side on a pan... It's a game changer. Couldnt have done it without ya Guga.
Guga Ive always loved your videos!
But bruh......im a little confused to your use of the gas grill. Im not sure many people use it that way? Ive gotten a great crust and sear directly over flames. If you use a gas grill...let your steak get a flame lick.
It's not charcoal, but a well seasoned old gas grill (the type with drip guards that let the flames lap and burn the drippings/runoff and the meat at the same time) man they have a flavor of their own that's hard to beat.
Exactly. Plus, his gas grill is too new to be cooking great steaks. You have to get some drippings all over those bars under the grate and get some flames kicking up in the hot spots. Come on Guga, get it together!
It's gas no flavor man. 😒
@@embo22000 flame...smoke from drips... creates flavor.
Weird, I picked up a small camp propane grill recently, the flavor it produces is better than most things I make in my smoker. I prefer to use a charcoal or smoker on thick cuts of meats, but for smaller cuts or veggies I definitely go with propane
For high quality steaks gas is the best. Smoke and charcoal hide that sweet, delicious beef flavor!
Guga can you make a video on every side dish you have made? I want to add it to a playlist.
THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR THIS CONFIRMATION!!!
I will be using this to help prove to everyone who is a doubter about the awesome might that is the charcoal grill.
Souse Vide to 125...smoke on lowest setting for 10-15 minutes...finish sear over charcoal or wood embers for best results. I like my steak finished at 137 degrees.
i have been using the dry age umai bags, before doing it had legit dry age in a proper cooler. My wife says it tastes different is there a way to test the dry age differences between the umai dry age bags vs traditional dry age?
No you haven't
@@GennySavastone not sure what you mean
That you haven't been doing this
@@GennySavastone i have pics to prove so sure, feel what you want but i have done it both ways via a proper cooler/dry aging machine and umai dry age bags.
@@Ali__C I'm sorry but you do not have that Ali, you're lying to impress people on the internet and thinking you'll be invited to one of Adam fairhead restaurants in watford 😂😂🤣🤣 behave mate
I think your use of gas could be improved greatly. Additionally your gas grill looked brand spanking new and usually needs a couple of cooking cycles to burn off anything that was left from the manufacturing. Also while most gas grills use the type of burner that you do which is mostly convection cooking, if one uses one with lava rocks or other such bricks it turns in back to the radiant cooking gas grills of yesteryear and that makes a huge difference, including the drippings really adding to the smoke flavor, and many people have converted their newer gas grills back to a lava rock type to get improved cooking and also a hotter grill. So while what you did was a decent way to cook on gas and many people do, using a different gas set up could yield dramatically better results yet still have the connivence of gas grill cooking.
I had my last Grill converted to Lava Rocks, almost like charcoal, but overtime it ruined the burners, I replaced, and it was gone really fast again... It was great for as long as it lasted, my new one I'm not converting again, Got one with great flavoring plates and its very good, I love charcoal, but my picanhas in the Gas Grill are very close and tastes amazing.... cooking in indirect heat then searing in a griddle is not even close to what a gas grill can do... if you do a blind test with a few people, you might be amazed how many will get it wrong... and you are totally right about a brand new grill
Definitely doesn’t do gas grilling too often 😅
It’s a commercial …
I'd love to see a series from you either on here or on Sous Vide where you make various international dishes (pho, pierogis, lasagna, etc) and then make the same dish the Guga way and see which one is better. You gotta DOOO IIIITT! Call it
Guga vs The World
Yes, pirogies guga style…. What would that even be? 🤯🤯🤯
It’s called butchering international cuisine.
Some people add wood chips in stainless steal container that's prefarated to the propane grill. Some people use BBQ bricks that have holes. The holes cause less flare ups and add smoke and cook even. You can also use bbq stainless steel grill pans for the steaks and turn up the bbq, less flare up and burn.
i do both sear and smoke on the charcoal grill. if using cut steaks, I light up the coals, and when they are lit, add the hardwoods on top. Then just cook the steaks as you would on a charcoal grill, going from high sear to low heat until they reach your preferred doneness. Best of both worlds. Smoke + the flame from the charcoal.
Yes, they dont sit in the smoke as long as a low and slow smoke, but these are also thinner cuts so the smoke still penetrates it and you still get a smoke ring.
I dont understand why the “smoked” steak has to be done purely on the gas grill. Both the gas and “smoked” steaks can be finished over charcoal. I really doubt anyone actually cooks a steak like this, but I guess this just shows that each process creates different flavors -which we already know, they just dont have to be separate methods.
A more realistic and real-world test would have been to cook the gas grilled steak and the smoked steak over charcoal that way you get a gas/coal finished steak, a smoke/coal grilled steak, and a pure charcoal grilled steak without any hardwood. In that case, I think the smoke + coal grill would win.
I have all three of these and I personally think the best (meaning most convenient with good flavour) is to smoke on traeger at lowish temperature with super smoke on and then use the infrared side burner on my napoleon gas bbq to sear the steaks at a really high temperature and cause fat flair ups. Really gives it a good taste to finish off.
lol
No. Just no.
I’ve already tried this. Charcoal wins with the pellet smoker being 2nd and gas last.
You're a liar
All the dislikes are from fake accounts created by Hank Hill
Charcoal or wood give great meat indeed. But gas is handy, you fire it up and you're ready. Also, that smoke feature is really nice!
I enjoyed the video! Thanks Guys!
It’s funny because when we cook at home yeah it’s good but there’s only certain dishes that are as good as leftovers also. In Gugas house that’s not the case, i’m sure any leftovers never go to any waste
I switch it up. I prefer charcoal for steaks overall but it takes a while to get the coals going just right. On the other hand nothing beats gas for a quick steak to unwind on the weekend. Gas for Friday nights, charcoal for Sunday afternoon.
I want a cook book w/ Guga's side dishes
Weird you cooked the gas and charcoal differently. If it's a comparison video, least keep the methods as simular as possible.
Maybe he should try a grilled mushrooms since this is completely horrific. People who eat meat are the worst of humanity.
@@Mehsam.sheikh7003 I'm the worst at many things, just another to add to my growing resume.
@@craigs831 This is the top badness of it all.
I have a pellet smoker that has a section that can be used to sear. Porterhouse smoked at 180 until internal temp hit 130 then seared. Turned out perfect. Side dish was smoked mac-n-cheese. Love your channel it has taught me a great deal.
He said, "that's what happened with Leo!" Angel is just so honest. I love it. 😂
This test was completely skewed toward the charcoal from the get go. Wrong technique on both the smoke and gas steaks, really boofed the crust lol.
On a gas grill I like to go for a nice coating of oil on the steak pre seasoning and a roaring hot grill. Oil will cause some small flare ups and you get a fantastic sear/crust with medium rare consistency after about 3 minutes per side. Guga's bias is showing here :D
Like I said you should have had your grill on high flame you should have seared it and then cooked it in indirect heat by lowering the temperature of the burners and put it to the other side of the grill to cook it in indirect heat just like you do on the charcoal grill and it's a fair fight then what you did I don't get cuz that's not how you cook in a gas grill
Yeah for sure. 400 degree grill to start with some oil and butter for crust like he does. He'll get some roasted comments on this for sure 😂
I started with a gas grill long ago, as I experimented and learned I did away with it and went charcoal grills and a charcoal gravity smoker..the flavor cannot be beat, also the meat isn't gray.
There’s a fourth option: gas, with wood chips. If you don’t have time to set up a wood fire, throw a couple large chips of your fave wood into the gas fire.
Guga...You've got to try steak done three ways!!! 🤤🤤🤤
Step 1: Season and smoke steak @ 220f until it reaches 90f internal.
Step 2: Sous Vide at 125f for two hours. This not only makes meat more tender but vacuum draws smoke flavour entirely throughout meat.
Step 3: Sear over red hot charcoal until internal hits 130-135f, about a minute per side.
It'll blow your mind! 🤯
My question is... Do you eat the cut steaks cold? Because obviously cooking them in 3 different ways will have them ready at 3 different times. Is there a way for you to keep them warm without overcooking them?
The trick is to start them at different times so you plan to get them to finish at the same time
Video magic, he makes it seem like he's making them one at a time in order but in reality he's just putting them in appropriately and editing footage. You notice he also usually makes two of his side dishes ( At least ).
No he has a food warmer whitch keeps the food warm
@@Mihajloje8643 for like 30 minutes tops. I am almost positive he starts them at appropriate timings with a little wiggle room which is what his warmer is for
@@DollanFerinal while you're probably not wrong about the timings food warmers especially on higher heats WILL keep food warm for hours not necessary good as new but warm for sure
“You can’t eat just steak”…
Me as a Keto weight-lifter- “Blasphemous!”
Guga as always love your Channels and content, but I felt like that if you were doing an experiment just on the cookers then you should have seared them all the same way, and done the reverse sear method for all three as well. *Omg I had just watched one of Mikey Chen's videos and put down the wrong name. I'm so embarrassed Guga you are the man sorry about the confusion
Mike?
mIkE?
Who the f*ck is Mike?
I was thinking the same thing. I cook them on my gas grill the same way as the charcoal grill. I swear first and then indirect heat. I also use Montreal Steak Seasoning a day before.
Mike
I replicate the taste of charcoal and smoking by using a Pit Boss vertical smoker with a 50/50 mix of charcoal pellets and Lumberjack Supreme Blend. And for a little extra charcoal flavor, I finish it off on a charcoal grill. I also smoke low at 200 until I reach the desired temp.
Also need to add cooking the steak over an open fire with red oak on a Santa Maria grill, like a tri-tip, I’ve done this test with all 4 methods, open fire beats them all! (But as you found out, they are all good)
Hi Guga! Please dry age in edible dirt/ clay. It would be so interesting to see what tones and flavours it would give the meat! 69th time asking btw!
Um....wut
After some thought, I had to watch this video again. In the day, late 60s to late 70s, lave rock was the thing. The drippings would char on the rocks. Then popular thoughts were that the charred fats were potently dangerous! So was butter for years. I remember this because I actually saw a bag of lave rocks in a store recently. Yes, plain propane is bland. My girlfriend would add chunks of shag bark hickory bark we would collect while hiking to the fire. Just remember we had to burn the rocks hot and long to clean them off for the next cook, and replace from time to time.
Old school propane cooking!
Hey guys, first of all, I loved the video. I do smoke my steaks, but the one thing I do differently, is that as my steaks are coming up to temp, I place a flat cast iron on the coals in my firebox and use that to sear the steaks. Makes an awesome crust.
Smoke mushrooms not steak. Meat eaters are easily the worst of humanity.
Always good videos.
Couple things:
1. How long is the steaks sitting before taste test - looks like cooked first 2 on same grill so one would have not rested same as other.
2. Too many variables changed. Reverse sear 2 but not the last one. If reverse searing either sear on same method as cooked or sear on same process eg hot plate.
Would love comparisons with less changes in variable to really compare cook fuel source
when it comes to a smoker, NOTHING beats a stick burner. best flavor and can sear over the open flame
My favorite is "Eisenhower steaks"... cooked directly on hardwood or its coals... no grate at all. Get a nice mature fire in a firepit and throw it in. A touch test for doneness is essential.
My steak preference top 4' Ranking is..
1.Pan
2.Grill
3.doesnt matter
4.dont care
Im personally Not a fan of smoked meats honestly.
Great Vid. As always!
i do charcoal by leaving the kettle blazing 500+. and cook it indirect. may finish up with some flame kiss depending on color. also do my prime rib roast this way.
I always see you run lump charcoal, what charcoal do you use and do you every add hardwood chunks?
As a dutch resident of the Netherlands, I'm jealous on the choice grade supermarket steaks and the amount of marbeling.
What grade they the usually have in a Dutch market? I see PitmasterX with great cuts all the time.
@@zerodynamic that from the butcher, in ditch supersrkets, cuts are yo thin to get a good crust in while still get your steak perfectly medium rare, also the muscle fiber in for example supermarket Ribeyes, don't contain any fat marbeling, inside the eye or the cap, on around the eye and the cap, also it hasn't ripened nearly as good slehivh results in a though steak, it's a waste of money over here, as at the same price per kilo, but thicker and heavier gives people the illusion steaks from the butcher are more expansive, it's not, ground beef is a waste of money and the butcher, their steaks are the same price per total weight like in the supermarket while providing much better quality.
@@zerodynamicwe still have actual butchershops, here the Netherlands and eat more common than when compared to larger countries like the U.S ;)
My preference is to Cook in Hickory smoke @225º until IT 125º then HOT sear over charcoal. Best of both worlds. The charcoal adds the flavor in the SEAR. The smoker adds the flavor in the slow cook in the smoke. Just my opinion.
I like to use half charcoal and half mesquite wood to give it flavor. Nothing beats a big juicy smoked wagyu steak.
Best steak I ever made, thick porterhouse, warm to room temp, salt,pepper, wortaschire lee & Parens 2 sides. Lightly brown over hot coals, safe zone move, at 115 deg F returns to finish sear.
Use smoke Mesquite. TO DIE FOR!
Hey Guga, there is a undocumented cooking method where you use dehydrator in place of a sous vide bath to 'slow cook' the steak for 1-2 hours before finishing it. Since air is harder to transfer heat than water, it requires a bit of experimentation. My Air fryer has a dehydrate function and I'm testing if a setting of 135F for 1 hour would be enough for a 'marinated' steak. Also, this is something you'd want to use a flamethrower for.
I saw a blog posting on the internet where someone dry cured the steak for 1 hour, then 130 F for 2 hours in dehydrator, and resulted in a internal temp of 110F which is then seared.
Good job guys. That cheesy bread dip idea is awesome. Al carbon seared is the way to go.
as a korean.. korean short ribs on non stick pan vs gas grill vs kamado joe charcoal.... the difference is incredible.
Best steak I ever cooked was offset smoked for about 40-45 min, then moved over the fire cooked on a flame until a nice crust was formed.
In terms of smoking, I think that the best wood to use is pecan. It gives in a very smokey flavor.
I'm a big fan of gas grills, because of the ease of use, speed and convenience and no need to clean up all that ash... And with some practice you can achieve amazing results.
That’s how I do my steaks mainly. Over hickory. I do a reverse sear
Do yourself a favor and purchase an infrared (salamander) grill for steaks. That is if you want true steakhouse quality.
I've experimented with several ways of doing steaks and my go to for the best steaks is reverse sear using the oven to get to 120° with a short rest and sear over charcoal. Gives me the opportunity to get the charcoal just right while they're in the oven.
Charcoal is the only way I grill but I've really been interested if the different types of wood chips actually make the taste any better/worse.
I put apple chips in my charcoal
We do our steaks on the ol' charcoal Weber with just a chunk or 2 of wood, hickory, mesquite or maple, reverse seared. I've also eaten at smokehouses all over Texas, and the best brisket I've had is at Hard Eight in Coppell, which uses mesquite.
Guga's my boy!!! One of the best channels going!! 👌