How to Salt Your Steak

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  • Опубліковано 11 вер 2024
  • We ran a steak experiment to see whether salting a steak an hour before its hits the grill compares to a longer dry brine. We did a side by side comparison to see how the crusts, tenderness and taste profile differ between the two.
    #HowTo #Salt #Steak
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 941

  • @BBQandBottles
    @BBQandBottles  4 роки тому +36

    If you're enjoying our steak videos consider checking out our Steak Experiment series that we've been working on over the last year and a half. It's like myth busters but for steaks and we hope you enjoy it as much as we have enjoyed filming it. Here's a link to the complete playlist. ua-cam.com/play/PLA8Sgnre4XTUBNybUoykMXUD0HffOCp0O.html

    • @skalimit12
      @skalimit12 4 роки тому +2

      Awesome video. I’m the exact same way with steak experiments. I have a steak journal lol. There is an experiment I want you to try if you see this. It’s because I noticed you took the steaks off at 128, you were shooting for medium rare, but they ended up more like
      Medium. This is what I want you to try if you would because I’ve found it to work perfect. Take two similar steaks as these and dry Brine both of them. Medium rare is 135. So the end goal is to get the steaks to end at 135. Ive found the let the steaks come to room temp philosophy to be completely a myth. So instead of letting them come to room temp. Cook them both directly out of the fridge straight to hot cast iron. Flip every two minutes. The cold internal temp will give you the extra time you need to get the crust you need. Now, take one out as soon as it hits 102 degrees. And take
      The other one out at 128 or whatever you usually would do. You will find that the time it took the steak to go from around 38 degrees internal to 102, it gained enough momentum to raise to 135 after coming off, you will also have a crazy crust and your steak will be a perfect medium rare. Also it will prove that the whole room temp before cooking thing is pointless and ends up hurting you more than helping because you can’t get the crust you need before overcooking it.

    • @philliphayden2727
      @philliphayden2727 4 роки тому +1

      Subbed in a second, love this!

    • @matteotube6555
      @matteotube6555 4 роки тому

      Great video! When I put Kosher on a steak salt they come out really salty when all the salt is absorbed. I also tried large grain salt in quality and quantity, like you did. What's am I doing wrong? What's the secret?! is it that the steak is too thin?

    • @Surrey360
      @Surrey360 4 роки тому +2

      Totally trying this

    • @MrMZaccone
      @MrMZaccone 4 роки тому

      If you turn the steak more often, you'll get less of that grey border and you'll still get just as good a crust.

  • @nestogsw9659
    @nestogsw9659 4 роки тому +45

    I’d say medium rare is 130 degrees. While resting, the temp can still go up 5-10 degrees so I’d pull it off at about 120

    • @PhillipCummingsUSA
      @PhillipCummingsUSA 4 роки тому +1

      I'm not sure if it was the camera but the color looked very overcooked IMO. I cook to 120-125 myself.

    • @Carpcontrol
      @Carpcontrol 4 роки тому

      @nothingbutaname........ Because of thermodynamic

    • @TRPGpilot
      @TRPGpilot 4 роки тому

      Degrees Celsius . . .

    • @1969tss
      @1969tss 2 роки тому +1

      @@TRPGpilot it’s not degrees Celsius or you would have a hockey puck

    • @invisiblekid99
      @invisiblekid99 Рік тому

      @@PhillipCummingsUSA Yeah that was a medium steak, not medium rare.
      Also leaving the steak and turning once is not the way. Flipping every 30s ish will get an evenly cooked steak, not this where the first side cooked the steak halfway through.

  • @scott7695
    @scott7695 4 роки тому +162

    Those steaks are medium in my neck of the woods bud....great video...I’m drooling 🤤

    • @BBQandBottles
      @BBQandBottles  4 роки тому +26

      Yeah, in retrospect these were a little overdone

    • @thehonesttruth8808
      @thehonesttruth8808 4 роки тому +5

      Agreed...those were medium to medium-well...medium rare should be reddish-pink in the center...i wonder what cut that was

    • @scott7695
      @scott7695 4 роки тому +8

      Hey I’d still be horking those down 😀

    • @anthonyc4622
      @anthonyc4622 4 роки тому

      @@thehonesttruth8808 ny strip

    • @Kostas1601
      @Kostas1601 4 роки тому +1

      Yep. I've had that issue multiple times. It's really hard to get medium rare on a thick steak like than without doing something like a reverse sear or sous vide.

  • @RussH9999
    @RussH9999 4 роки тому +14

    As a few others have mentioned; these are overdone. Way too much grey, especially on the non-48 hr. one. If you removed them at 128 -129 degrees the carry over cooking turned them into medium done. I have switched over to the "reverse sear" method. I end up with perfect medium rare throughout and just the exterior nicely charred. The difference in taste is amazing.

    • @SimplyRedVirginia
      @SimplyRedVirginia Рік тому

      Could be the camera and lighting. They do appear to be only "medium" in the video.

  • @Twigglesnix
    @Twigglesnix 4 роки тому +195

    dude, that looks medium well, not medium rare

    • @adulations
      @adulations 4 роки тому +6

      should be more like 125 not 128

    • @jackdalope27
      @jackdalope27 4 роки тому +9

      Yes, it is medium well.

    • @Asdasty
      @Asdasty 4 роки тому +5

      he took it off too late. The steak will continue cooking and the heat will continue increasing after its out of the pan. Thats why i take my steak out a few degrees below my desired temperature and rest it 10-15 minutes. I noticed that in some cases, the temperature continues rising even 7 minutes after its out of the pan.

    • @alexrandell9199
      @alexrandell9199 4 роки тому +10

      Fluorescent and natural light are much cooler lights, so it could be affecting how they look. Incandescent light is much warmer and more accurately reflects the doneness color of a steak. Studio and camera lights are often florescent. That’s why steakhouses have old timey lighting and very little natural light / windows

    • @airbender7025
      @airbender7025 4 роки тому +4

      The second side should be just 3 minutes max

  • @nadiamond
    @nadiamond 4 роки тому +9

    Yes some of the moisture was for sure reabsorbed into the steak, but lets not forget Fridges are very dry environments, a lot of that moisture would have also evaporated, which is also why the dry brined one is darker, from moisture loss, hence why when you dry brine a steak like that in your fridge it makes the whole fridge smell like Steak lol.But what does get reabsorbed is wonderfully salty. I always saly my steak the day before i cook it to get that wonderful salt into it fully.

    • @Aaronsm83
      @Aaronsm83 2 роки тому

      Agreed.

    • @1969tss
      @1969tss 2 роки тому

      Yes only 24 hours needed.

  • @thomasrobertson4088
    @thomasrobertson4088 4 роки тому +2

    We tried this, and we want to now what we did wrong. We had two "twin NY strip steaks", and we grilled the "worst" of these two steaks (salted just prior grilling) the day we got them. That steak was incredibly good - tender, juicy , and flavorful! We had salted that first steak just prior to grilling it as we usually do. We salted the "better" of the 2 steaks per your video (this technique is recommended by many other videos as well) and allowed it to rest in the fridge for the specified 48-hour period. We used sea salt, and we used less than is shown in your video. We pan-fried the steak as is shown. The end result was VERY tough (the muscle fiber bundles were distinct - somewhat stringy). The steak was so salty that we could not taste the meat, and our tongues are now burning from too much salt! (We love salt and eat way too much of it!) My wife and I split the steak, and we couldn't even finish eating it. We love salt and eat way too much of it - What did we do wrong? Has anyone else had this experience?

    • @BBQandBottles
      @BBQandBottles  4 роки тому

      Sorry to hear it didn’t turn out. It sounds like you used to much salt for your flavor profiles. For dry brining, I’d only use as much salt as you would normally season your steaks with. That way you know it won’t be too salty. As for the toughness, not sure about that. Was the steak resting on a cooling rack in the fridge the whole time?

  • @JeffreyTheTaylor
    @JeffreyTheTaylor 4 роки тому +13

    My dude, that is medium bordering on on medium well. Three minutes per side (half of the time covered), then low heat for your butter baste for 2-3 minutes, then into foil to rest for 5-6 minutes. Then check temp with thermo pen. If you are 128-132 you are good.

    • @tsuobachi
      @tsuobachi 4 роки тому +2

      Yes. I'm so sick of steak "experts" overcooking their steak, cutting it open, then saying "There! A perfect medium rare!" It's like they're all blind. If there's no red in the center and all pink, that is medium or worse. It's not hard to tell the difference, yet I've just watched 3 videos in a row where they get the temp wrong. I did like the actual experiment though.

    • @mr.bojangles2191
      @mr.bojangles2191 4 роки тому

      True words. Same thoughts at first side.

  • @rustyshaklferd1897
    @rustyshaklferd1897 Рік тому +3

    The grey band is from only flipping once. If you flip every 30 seconds or so you won’t get a grey band. It will be more uniformly medium rare though out. Flip regularly to avoid this.

  • @Henlarious
    @Henlarious 4 роки тому +146

    Medium rare? Seriously? Come on. That is medium - easily. Not even close to medium rare. The cast iron was too hot. You do not need to blast the heat that high on a cast iron. Medium heat is fine and it will still give steak a great crust without over cooking. And...no pepper???

    • @The_Crazy_Monkey75
      @The_Crazy_Monkey75 4 роки тому +6

      I was also wondering the same thing...medium to medium well depending on what part of the cut.

    • @djones1304
      @djones1304 4 роки тому +18

      Pretty sure the fridge evaporated the moisture away. It wasn’t all reabsorbed

    • @madthumbs1564
      @madthumbs1564 4 роки тому +4

      Pepper is in the compound butter. The more videos I see using cast iron, the more I'm convinced it's for dumb dumbs. My first steak in a clad pan was edge to edge medium, but burned on the outside.

    • @psychohist
      @psychohist 4 роки тому +28

      The cast iron was not too hot. The time was too long.

    • @kesuya
      @kesuya 4 роки тому +7

      Practically medium well lol

  • @mkl126
    @mkl126 4 роки тому +2

    i love how you explain well without saying too much... and thanks for no music.

  • @Fl-Pride
    @Fl-Pride 4 роки тому +5

    Oh man!! I know what I’m eating today and then again in 48 more hours 👏🏼👏🏼

  • @michaelpascarella187
    @michaelpascarella187 4 роки тому +2

    A friend sent me this video and it had me drooling. I never cooked steaks in a cast iron skillet like this before. I ran out and bought prime NY steaks 1.5" thick. I followed the directions, salted them and put them on the drying rack for 48 hours. The only difference was I used Mortons course ground sea salt and applied it exactly like the video. The finished steaks looked and smelled great. When I sliced them they were very tender. Then I tasted it and the steaks was so "F"ing salty they were not even edible and I threw them out.. I will never brine or salt a steak like that again.

    • @BBQandBottles
      @BBQandBottles  4 роки тому +1

      Michael sorry to hear about the outcome. If you try it again, just use however much salt as you normally would. There's no magic to the amount of salt being used here.

    • @michaelpascarella187
      @michaelpascarella187 4 роки тому +2

      I think the problem might have been I used Morton's Mediterranean Course Sea Salt and you used Maldon Sea Salt Flakes which must be much milder than the Mortons. I recently ordered Maldon Sea Salt Flakes.

    • @BBQandBottles
      @BBQandBottles  4 роки тому +1

      That could very well be it. If you try it again, I’d love to hear how it goes. Maybe dial the salt way back so you know you won’t ruin the steak and then if you like it you can gradually increase the level of salt until you find what works for you.

  • @jetcitysinatra7300
    @jetcitysinatra7300 3 роки тому +3

    I would like to see you do an experiment where you cook a steak on a gas and also on an electric stove. Use a steel pan and also a cast iron to see what does the best cook.

  • @Fergo101
    @Fergo101 4 роки тому +84

    What we have here is two fine looking Medium steaks.

  • @4seasonsbbq
    @4seasonsbbq 4 роки тому +9

    Steaks turned out great, I love making my steaks both ways. Like you said if you have time do it if not don't. Keep up the great work

  • @caetanonav2912
    @caetanonav2912 4 роки тому

    This was recommended by YT. I had my butcher cut me up a couple of Prime Beef steaks, pricey, but worth it! I patted them with paper towels, then sprinkled sea salt, put them in zipped lock freezer bag, put them in the fridge, took them out, after 24 hours, let them rest for at least 2 hours, (couldn't wait 48 hours), my mouth was drooling. It was so delicious! I made steak quesadillas, nachos, steak and eggs. I am single, so I can eat off of a steak for 3 days, or so. Thanks for the tips.

  • @slydogger
    @slydogger 4 роки тому +26

    Note to Self:
    When designing a kitchen make sure to include an industrial exhaust fan.

  • @Nick-from-norfolk
    @Nick-from-norfolk 5 місяців тому

    I did the 48 hour brine. Flipped it every minute in a cold pan and finished it off in the oven for 3 mins to get to 50c. Really the best steak I’ve ever eaten. The wife thought so too and she is very difficult to please

  • @tcirilli
    @tcirilli 4 роки тому +3

    The moisture on the dry brine didn't get absorbed back into the steak, the fridge dried out the steak. Any time you leave a product uncovered in a fridge it loses moisture. The process of refrigeration dries the air. That's why there is a drip pan under your fridge!

    • @BBQandBottles
      @BBQandBottles  4 роки тому

      Maybe we should do an experiment where we weight the steak before and after it comes out of the fridge to see if you’re right. The steak definitely absorbs moisture back in - you can tell a difference in the tenderness of the steak from the brine and tell that it’s evenly seasoned throughout.

    • @cedarridgen2791
      @cedarridgen2791 4 роки тому

      I think you are both right; the dry brined stake is more tender than the control steak for sure because of the salt added. But it is also dryer due to refrigerator air being much dryer environment than house air. Research heat transfer and fluid dynamics. Or talk to a heating and air conditioning engineer. Or do a test: put a cup of water in the frig and cup of water on the counter and see which one loses more. Or 2 cups of water in the frig one covered one not.

    • @lesthomasson7220
      @lesthomasson7220 4 роки тому +2

      What drip pan are you talking about??? You mean the one underneath the refrigerator itself??? Because if you are, that is for the coil defrost cycle for the freezer.

    • @lesthomasson7220
      @lesthomasson7220 4 роки тому

      Cedar Ridgen I agree with you. But I don’t know about the refrigerator drip pan part.

  • @PicklesBBQandCooking
    @PicklesBBQandCooking 4 роки тому +2

    Yet another great experiment Jared! On the plus side, you win either way since both of those steaks look amazing. Makes sense the dry brine was better and if I have the time and fridge space, I’ll do it. Awesome job!

  • @MistaTomsk
    @MistaTomsk 4 роки тому +6

    Right, I am so confused. I've tried this twice. With sea salt first, then smaller grain salt. It just makes it ridiculously salty. As a result I will be seasoning with salt and pepper in just a tiny quantity, like I do normally, but I will be letting it rest for an hour. Not covering the thing in Salt top to bottom.

    • @BBQandBottles
      @BBQandBottles  4 роки тому +3

      Just use the amount of salt you’d normally season your steak with for the dry brine. No need to over season if you prefer less salt.

    • @davidcooper5790
      @davidcooper5790 4 роки тому

      Yeah same with me Tom Putnam. I also smoked out the kitchen and I was using peanut oil which is high smoke point.

    • @staypositive4358
      @staypositive4358 4 роки тому

      How hot do you cook/grill your steak?

    • @davidcooper5790
      @davidcooper5790 4 роки тому

      @@staypositive4358 I don't have an infrared thermometer but tried it really hot like the vid. I see his smoking also but he might have a strong extractor fan, I have a window. Never had problems cooking my usual way but my usual way didn't make the best steak, not like the ones here. I'm on gas using a seasoned de Buyer steel pan and peanut oil. Just picked up some avo oil so will try that, and turn it down a bit. Advice welcome.

    • @staypositive4358
      @staypositive4358 4 роки тому

      @@davidcooper5790 . Thanks for the information!

  • @bakedbeyondbelief321
    @bakedbeyondbelief321 4 роки тому +1

    Holy shit underrated channel. I loved the intro, simple, smooth and you got my attention. Thank you for your work.

  • @ricardonazario4391
    @ricardonazario4391 4 роки тому +3

    I thought about salt my stakes for 48-72 hrs, now that i saw this video im going to do it ...cant wait for the results !!!
    Thank you for the video !!!

    • @thomasbale2099
      @thomasbale2099 4 роки тому +2

      There's another series on you tube, they did a test and didn't recommend more than 48. They did 24, 48, maybe 72, and then i know one was like a month.

    • @eddierodriguez3472
      @eddierodriguez3472 4 роки тому

      I did 24 hours and the steaks looked similar to a 48 hr dry brine. I’m sticking with 24hrs

  • @DEJaegerWoodworking
    @DEJaegerWoodworking 4 роки тому +2

    Agreed with the other comments... far more on the medium to medium well end. Not close to medium rare. Still a good comparison of salting techniques though.

  • @nichobarton
    @nichobarton 4 роки тому +7

    Love the tips and the steaks look incredible. But those are medium at best

    • @seanpereira6961
      @seanpereira6961 9 місяців тому

      I would have thought a 3 minute / 3 minute cook would have been better

  • @lonewolf3564
    @lonewolf3564 3 роки тому

    I'm new to cooking steak in a cast iron pan and have questions.
    1) whats the best oil to use and how hot should the pan be?
    2) do only season select or choice steaks like this and not prime?
    3) everytime I put the steak on the pan the salt and pepper rub/seasoning gets burnt and sometimes the steak can taste salty. How do I keep the seasoning from burning?
    4) when do I add butter? Does it go on the top only or also in the pan? Won't it burn

    • @BBQandBottles
      @BBQandBottles  3 роки тому +1

      Watch this video. We go through all of the answers to your questions. ua-cam.com/video/O5m2bfZ8AVs/v-deo.html

  • @HIVOLTAGEZzz
    @HIVOLTAGEZzz 4 роки тому +17

    How about an expensive cut dry aged for 28-32 days vs a cheap cut dry aged for 28-32 days?

    • @s.b.4242
      @s.b.4242 4 роки тому

      have you ever looked at a dry aged steak before they trim and cook it? grossssssssssssssss

    • @HIVOLTAGEZzz
      @HIVOLTAGEZzz 4 роки тому

      @@s.b.4242 haha yea, I guess the end result is what matters the most!

    • @staypositive4358
      @staypositive4358 4 роки тому

      I think that's a different process altogether.

  • @alansarpy
    @alansarpy 4 роки тому +2

    Awesome Video ... salted my steaks exactly how did in the video ... They Were NY’s and pretty thick... Came out so salty ... I’m willing to try again ... is there a certain thickness needed not to have them so salty ?

    • @BBQandBottles
      @BBQandBottles  4 роки тому

      Just use as much salt as you would normally season your steaks with. There isn’t a specific amount of salt required for the dry brine process.

  • @aeroplane_jellie
    @aeroplane_jellie 4 роки тому +5

    Man I love this! I always dry brine on a rack for a long while!
    I thought you should know I'm getting the 'Grillgun' by Grillblazer in a few weeks! Heard of it? That will make starting my charcoal and even searing steaks a dream! 400,000 BTU

    • @BBQandBottles
      @BBQandBottles  4 роки тому

      Thanks Matt. I’ll have to check out the Grillgun.

  • @JohnDoe-dp1if
    @JohnDoe-dp1if 6 місяців тому

    Just an FYI: basting actually increases the resting cook. So if you’re going to do it, start basting earlier and pull at like 110 or 115.

  • @criticalthinking8769
    @criticalthinking8769 4 роки тому +3

    Wow I just did this and it came out amazing

  • @SimplyRedVirginia
    @SimplyRedVirginia Рік тому

    This is a good way to go if you have salted your steak and got rained out and dont want to have all this smoke and vapor indoors. I salted mine yesterday and got rained out. Then looked around on the web and found letting it sit for a couple days until the weather clears is preferable!

    • @SimplyRedVirginia
      @SimplyRedVirginia Рік тому

      Follow up report:
      So, I had salted my steak and had it ready in the fridge on a plate covered in plastic for grilling that night. Then the rain came and I dont have an area I can grill that is protected from rain and I didn't want to pan fry inside because of the smoke and smell (I dont have a good range hood). I thought, wonder if it would hurt the steak to just sit in the fridge for a day? That's when I looked on the web and stumbled across this video and conversation.
      Turns out, it was going to rain the next night too. So the next day, early-on I moved the steak to a rack in a pan uncovered in the fridge. It dry brined like that about 36 hours I guess.
      I let it rest for an hour at room temp, got the grill maxed out on temp and grilled the steak 3 minutes, turned 45 degrees, another three minutes then flipped. After 3 more minutes I turned 45 degrees again (this was a 1-1/4" thick steak) and started temp probing. It just wasn't getting up to that 130 degrees and I knew that was weird, so I squeezed it and knew it had to come off the heat. Sure enough, my Thermapen was wrong...or something. That steak came out just like in this video, a significant gray border with a medium core to the meat. Not a nice even fading from edge to center like we want.
      The steak was still good. Not melt in your mouth tender but not tough. It could be the quality of the meat, it was purchased on-sale (NY Strip) and cut for me to the thickness I wanted and was foodsavered in the freezer for some time.
      I dont think I will do this salt and cure for 48 hours intentionally in the future. I've cooked the perfect steak a "few" times in my day and it was always salt and pepper, maybe rest that way for a few hours, bring to room temp then grill the way I describe above and I've always been able to count on my Thermapen to pull the steak at 130 degrees. I dont know how, but this dry brined steak fooled my Thermapen and I nearly overcooked the steak.

  • @stupidrules1000
    @stupidrules1000 4 роки тому +4

    Have you considered constantly turning the steak (like every 30 seconds to a minute) instead of leaving it in for 4 minutes straight, to minimize the amount of the brown ring?
    It would be interesting to see a comparison between turning often vs leaving it alone. I wonder if there would be a difference in how the crust forms.

    • @1969tss
      @1969tss 2 роки тому

      He cooked it too long to 128°. If he did it to 120 and tinted it then it would not have the greatness. You need to do it 2 minutes a side without touching it. If you turned it every 30 seconds it does not develop the crust. If the steak is thick put it in the oven at400° for 2-3 minutes until it reaches 120 then tint it. (Loosely putting tinfoil over it for 5-10 minutes)

    • @stupidrules1000
      @stupidrules1000 2 роки тому

      @@1969tss that's not accurate. Turning every 30 seconds absolutely creates a good crust. In addition, it gives you better control of the overall cooking (and the crust) because you get to see the crust develop. I used to leave the steak for 2 minutes on each side, but for the last 2 years I've been turning every 30 seconds and then finishing by butter basting. I get reactively small bands and really good crusts.
      Also (in my experience), removing from heat at 120 will leave you kind of rare after it rests. Steaks don't usually cook 15 degrees when taken off the heat. You're better off cooking it to at least 125, but between 125 and 130 and then removing from the heat ti let it rest.
      But either way...give constant turning a try. Let me know if it works out for you.

    • @1969tss
      @1969tss 2 роки тому

      @@stupidrules1000 watch all the videos of these salted aged beef. The longer you age it the more of a grey ring they develop. I just watched one that went from 1hour to 30 days. They cooked them all at the same time. So the ring is from the aging in this case.

    • @stupidrules1000
      @stupidrules1000 2 роки тому

      @@1969tss these weren't dry aged. They were dry brined. Dry brining a steak overnight doesn't generally give you a thicker gray band (for much longer than that, I don't know what the effect will be).

  • @cantrell0817
    @cantrell0817 4 роки тому

    I appreciate the no nonsense, unpretentious approach. You slightly overcooked the steaks but I'm sure they were tasty anyway.

  • @OdintheGermanShepherd
    @OdintheGermanShepherd 4 роки тому +9

    Looks great

  • @douglasbankston3869
    @douglasbankston3869 4 роки тому +2

    Lil follow up...in a previous post you turned us on to Maldon Sea Salt. I bought a pkg of the "smoked" and it is really good. Actually my favorite so far. Thank you. Nuff' said.

    • @BBQandBottles
      @BBQandBottles  4 роки тому

      Yeah, it’s great stuff isn’t it. That smoked salt is really good.

  • @campos1372
    @campos1372 3 роки тому +4

    Steaks smelled great while I cooked them. Then I served it for my family and they almost threw the streaks at me. They came out SALTY!! Never again 🤢

  • @lass93dub
    @lass93dub 4 роки тому +2

    Do you think some types of fridge might dry it out?
    Do you the type of fridge that you used in this video?
    Static cold, ventilated cold, ...?

  • @bencastagno5676
    @bencastagno5676 4 роки тому +12

    What goes into your “compound butter”?

    • @BBQandBottles
      @BBQandBottles  4 роки тому +9

      Garlic, chives, salt and pepper. Here’s our video on how to make it if you’re interested. ua-cam.com/video/ZviL3enCICk/v-deo.html

    • @hitzncritzmobilegaming9988
      @hitzncritzmobilegaming9988 4 роки тому

      Give marrow butter a try if you haven't already.

    • @mikeb2496
      @mikeb2496 4 роки тому

      BBQ and Bottles try adding thyme, oregano, and basil also. Delicious looking!

    • @BBQandBottles
      @BBQandBottles  4 роки тому +1

      I like what you did there. 😉

    • @Dartowl1
      @Dartowl1 4 роки тому +1

      Who’s asking?

  • @Kylroyboi
    @Kylroyboi 4 роки тому +1

    Great video, I’m going to pick up some of that salt you used in this video. I’m glad yt has the ability to play at 2x speed. Much easier to enjoy quickly.

  • @paul6560
    @paul6560 4 роки тому +6

    A little over done but look amazing would eat both no worries 🤙🏻

  • @machupicchu4517
    @machupicchu4517 4 роки тому +1

    Need to take them off 3-6 degrees (depending on ambient temp) before they are perfect medium rare. You will get carryover cooking while resting. Your steaks are more cooked medium.

  • @joshlevitt1811
    @joshlevitt1811 4 роки тому +39

    “You don’t have to worry about over seasoning a steak this thick.” FALSE: if you put this much salt on a steak, you’ll ruin it. Following this video absolutely trashed a couple $30 ribeyes.

    • @marcgonsalves6414
      @marcgonsalves6414 4 роки тому +7

      Us too. Four New York strips here and they came out way way way too salty.

    • @tebhernandez
      @tebhernandez 4 роки тому +3

      Same here

    • @tomlewis632
      @tomlewis632 3 роки тому +4

      Yes I salted two New York strip steaks with sea salt. For 4 hrs. Then rinsed off and grilled. They were so salty, I threw them in the trash.

    • @titok16
      @titok16 3 роки тому +1

      Same. That exact line. Destroyed our dinner. Couldn't eat a bite.

    • @IlDeimos
      @IlDeimos Рік тому +1

      Because he dry brined. I never do that. I generously season my steaks with a lot of salt then cook them right away. And you need to make sure that your using really thick steaks when dry brining. The thinner they are, the more salty they will be.

  • @jonathanprice9960
    @jonathanprice9960 4 роки тому +2

    Great video team! I loved the tip about the water and the avocado oil. I also like how you added butter, garlic and rosemary to the pan then used those juices to base the steaks. I’m going to try this tonight. It’s too late for the 48 salting but I might try that next time.

    • @BBQandBottles
      @BBQandBottles  4 роки тому +1

      Jonathan, just make sure you only use as much salt as you would normally put on a steak for your dry bring. You don’t want it to be saltier than you’re used to

  • @josephcampese5347
    @josephcampese5347 4 роки тому +3

    outstanding tutorial, thanx.

  • @I8one2Many
    @I8one2Many 3 роки тому +1

    What surface am I dragging my steak across?

  • @paulbryant8403
    @paulbryant8403 4 роки тому +12

    I could eat that every day and die happy at age 55

  • @jesustamez9047
    @jesustamez9047 Рік тому

    To add to this I never check wellness of steak by temp. I do it by taste.. the old palm test . Perfect for tell you how rare or well done you want your steak . The steaks in the video we just over medium

  • @saics
    @saics 4 роки тому +3

    after the cast iron reaches temp, what do you do with the heat? did you lower it down or keep it on high?

    • @BBQandBottles
      @BBQandBottles  4 роки тому +2

      I still keep it on high but you can lower it to medium high if you prefer.

    • @ericedmunds9488
      @ericedmunds9488 4 роки тому +2

      Way too much fuckin salt

  • @ronaldyeater3322
    @ronaldyeater3322 2 роки тому

    Hi. I age my steaks. Usually a 1.5" ribeye. I salt heavily(not extreme), then wrap in paper towels and put on rack in fridge for 24-36 hours. Then I change paper towels and put back on rack in fridge for 3-5 days. It's like butter, if go 5 days might have to trim a tiny bit of fat sometimes

  • @Ellipses13
    @Ellipses13 4 роки тому +4

    Would be interested to see a frozen steak taste test - thawed vs cooked frozen

    • @BBQandBottles
      @BBQandBottles  4 роки тому

      We just got our freezer setup in the basement so get ready for it!

  • @TheAlaskansandman
    @TheAlaskansandman 3 роки тому

    I use webers Chicago steak seasoning, coat the steak and seal in a ziplock bag while pushing out all the air and steak comes out of bag next day very moist still, not dry. Ive read ziplock is better than tinfoil or wrap paper and will keep the steak fresher longer.

  • @f1nate
    @f1nate 4 роки тому +7

    No pepper???

  • @alberlusconi1
    @alberlusconi1 4 роки тому +3

    Wouldn’t say I am an expert, but if I ordered a medium rare at an expensive steak restaurant and I was served this In the video, I would probably send it back.

    • @raulvidal8846
      @raulvidal8846 4 роки тому

      Alessandra Berlusconi and you’d be very wise to do so

    • @JonBonesJones84
      @JonBonesJones84 4 роки тому

      LMAOOOOOOO. You wouldn't want to do that or have them grill up another steak. Don't ever send shit back. The chef or prep cook throws your new steak in a microwave or on the floor, since you pissed him off. Either way, just dispute the charges with your credit card company

  • @josim7598
    @josim7598 4 роки тому +5

    Damascus blade is what caught my eye tbh tho lol

    • @BBQandBottles
      @BBQandBottles  4 роки тому

      Here's the link on Amazon if you want your own - amzn.to/2NYyC6D

  • @BIZZLLENIZZLLE
    @BIZZLLENIZZLLE 4 роки тому

    I have an experiment. Cut the steak up in bite size pieces and put them in my mouth one at a time. Don't forget the potatoes. I wonder what will happen.
    Seriously....great video. Thank you.

  • @Tekwa1234
    @Tekwa1234 4 роки тому +10

    That at medium rare champ. They are over cooked my friend

    • @akirayoung1101
      @akirayoung1101 4 роки тому

      Hey:) I think me and you have similar idea:) I like to cook my steak with low temperature but cook it precisely to meet your juicy tasty soft tenderness :)

  • @Young_Star
    @Young_Star 4 роки тому +4

    I think I would have done that with a reverse sear with that thick of a cut.

  • @christophercharles8758
    @christophercharles8758 4 роки тому +4

    Those steaks are clearly medium well... looked nice though.

    • @p.jeffreyungar4908
      @p.jeffreyungar4908 4 роки тому

      More like medium by the time the carryover heat did its thing while they rested. Pull them out at 118F and they will likely reach 130F at the end of the rest (but experiment). They still look really tasty, though!

  • @tinman7249
    @tinman7249 4 роки тому

    All salts you buy from store are from the sea at some point. The difference here is really the size, which affects the speed the salt dissolve, which in turn affect the taste. You can't taste the trace difference in mineral But you can taste the speed salt dissolves in your mouth.

  • @jlw1985
    @jlw1985 7 днів тому

    I’d eat it, however, my and my families preference is garlic salt and lemon pepper about 2 hours before cook time, 1st hour fridge 2nd hour on the counter, why? I don’t know, just how my dad did it and I do it also, then preferably cooked on a grill (gas for me, charcoal is great but if I’m only doing steaks I only need a few minutes) or on the black stone

  • @simeongarratt
    @simeongarratt 4 роки тому +3

    I mean that definitely looks more like a medium, than a medium rare

    • @MerloBrcko
      @MerloBrcko 3 роки тому

      It looks freakin' deleacious in whatever way those steaks were made, but I must agree with you. Gettin' an cast iron pan soon and looking forward.

  • @jedimadrox
    @jedimadrox 3 роки тому

    Down here in Sonora, we only add SALT to our meet too, that´s enough but the matter of timing is interesting, greeting to Canada!

  • @headfog7621
    @headfog7621 4 роки тому +6

    Call 911!!!! I'm starving to death watching this video...but some how tasteing the love..🤟👍😜the only thing keeping my alive🕺

  • @kurtborchers6178
    @kurtborchers6178 4 роки тому

    two things. first, like most folks are saying, that's at least medium on its way to medium well. the other thing, which was a bit more blatant to me. after you stuck that big probe into the steaks, when you went to put them on the cutting board you flipped them over, so you had a nice big hole on the bottom for all of the juices to drain out...which is why the one-hour steak had such a big puddle of juices around it. maybe next time don't flip them over and ruin them?

  • @cunclerich
    @cunclerich 4 роки тому +5

    Got to say bro....the steak you cooked looked like a medium.

  • @kylekashuda6754
    @kylekashuda6754 2 роки тому

    So I had an entire rib eye roast I got from Costco, no idea what class it was, prime or choice or whatever. I cut it into about 1.5 inch steaks, vacuum sealed them and then froze them. I thawed one out and did a 48 dry brine I saw on this channel. After cooking in the cast iron, it had a great crust but tasted kinda funny. Honestly it tasted a little like old meat. What did I do wrong? I definitely didn’t use as much salt for the brine as here in this vid. Perhaps that was my problem?

  • @xoxo_yummy
    @xoxo_yummy 4 роки тому +23

    He sounds like he knows what he’s saying but then took his steak out at 128

  • @sandtown6116
    @sandtown6116 4 роки тому

    Also the 2 day stake was dry you could tell it had less juice to it. Salting a stake for 2 days will pull the natural moisture from the meat. In culinary they told us you only want to season your steak 2 hours before cooking not 2 days. You can dry age it for 2 days but you're not supposed to Salt it for 2 days.

    • @BBQandBottles
      @BBQandBottles  4 роки тому

      We’re doing an experiment right now to test how much moisture gets lost by doing this. We’ve got the scales out and everything. Anyway, this is going to be one of our best experiments yet. Stay tuned - I think it might be a different outcome than you expect.

  • @thewalmer7942
    @thewalmer7942 4 роки тому +6

    1. Steak looks overcooked 2. You burnt the butter.

    • @user-vi3tb3bw5t
      @user-vi3tb3bw5t 4 роки тому

      Yeah, it makes me fucking cringe whenever people do that. Don't add the butter until after you've cut the heat. The cast iron has more that enough heat retention.

  • @dougm1985
    @dougm1985 4 роки тому +1

    i love pittsburge style, can you do a video on that. i've tried to get that burnt taste, but just can't.

  • @ob1853
    @ob1853 4 роки тому +10

    No pepper? And looks like you either dont know whats a medium rare, or you’re in denial. Cus you over cooked it.

    • @rw9307
      @rw9307 4 роки тому +3

      Some people have different preferences and don't require pepper on their steak. It's a medium, no need to overreact and say he overcooked it, there's pink in the middle, calm down.

  • @ainschuntayleuhn1147
    @ainschuntayleuhn1147 3 роки тому

    I finally got my Question regarding salt answered. Thank you

  • @bbearhug
    @bbearhug 4 роки тому

    Kosher salt is absolutely fine too...Bro, Kosher salt is the only salt that will permeate the meat faster than any other salt. Different salts are meant for different things and different techniques. Or different foods entirely.

  • @kennethcunningham9496
    @kennethcunningham9496 3 роки тому

    BBQ and Bottles... Oh my, did I make the absolute best medium rate Ribeye ever... I dry brined the two Ribeyes for 48 hrs and then, heated my 10 inch 'cast iron' pan to 448° F and for a 1.25" thick steak (room temperature) it took only just under 7 mins (6 min 48 sec) to reach 127° F. I basted the steak in a butter/canola oil--50-50% with garlic and shallots... Oh my, what I got was the most consistant ribbon (from the bone to the cap) with a beautiful crust on a home cooked steak that I have ever made... OBW, the dry brine is definitely the way to go... at 48 hrs the salt was so well integrated within the steak and after cook time with a 5 min rest the temperature rose to 136° F. The Ribeye was so juicy, so delicious... this is how I will prepare All my steaks henceforth. Just to see the difference, next time I will try a 24 hr dry brine.... thanks for the video...
    Last comment: I saw your wine choice on your community page, the great Brunello di Montalcino. This is my absolute favorite red wine... but at $55 to $95/bottle... I can only occasionally buy it... generally I buy the lesser cost Rosso di Montalcino at $25 to $35/bottle, which is still a great drink... but I commend you on your wine choice...

    • @BBQandBottles
      @BBQandBottles  3 роки тому

      I love reading comments like this Kenneth. This is why we spend the time making these videos. Thanks 🙏

    • @kennethcunningham9496
      @kennethcunningham9496 3 роки тому

      @@BBQandBottles I didn't know that you would see my comments, but I am glad you did... I learned a lot... in fact, I bought a Infrared Thermometer, because I saw your video, Next will be the Clarified Butter... because I cook Indian... it will be handy there too...

  • @riverotter68
    @riverotter68 Рік тому +1

    how is that dry brined steak not salty tasting, and don't you have a grill?

  • @thomasbale2099
    @thomasbale2099 4 роки тому +1

    What size and thickness do you recommend. Tried a dry brine on a twelve ounce and was way to salty.

    • @BBQandBottles
      @BBQandBottles  4 роки тому

      I'd recommend 1.25-1.5 inches thick. Just use the normal amount of salt you'd use on a steak. There's not specific amount of salt that's required for this.

  • @advizedog4131
    @advizedog4131 3 роки тому +1

    i just use a salt shaker and go over my
    steak once or twice depending on the thickness, same with pepper. I’m still figuring out the perfect amount for my tastes, but adding salt after it’s cooked is a much better idea than ruining it imo

  • @qilu2004
    @qilu2004 2 місяці тому

    What is the temperature of your fridge? Won’t steaks go bad in it after 48 hours?

  • @pidhasuriyawong361
    @pidhasuriyawong361 4 роки тому

    Wrong to watch this around midnight!! 😋😉😂wonderful video thank you for making

  • @Mark-tt6rw
    @Mark-tt6rw 4 роки тому +2

    Great video, and nice watch! I also wear a 16610

  • @christianspain3015
    @christianspain3015 4 роки тому +1

    On the 48 hour dry brine, did you scrape or rinse off the salt or was it all absorbed into the meat? Sorry it wasn't clear to me in the video. Thanks and great video.

    • @BBQandBottles
      @BBQandBottles  4 роки тому

      It was all absorbed into the meat so make sure you use the amount of salt you would normally put on a steak so that it doesn't taste too salty.

    • @nolanschiffer3537
      @nolanschiffer3537 4 роки тому +1

      He used too much salt. The steak was way too salty.

  • @bermudarun3903
    @bermudarun3903 4 роки тому +1

    Nice work. Good skills. I’m big on again yet I need to find a decent market selling quality beef. What would say is acceptable for a price per pound, $18.00 for NY or rib eye?

  • @cebolla3837
    @cebolla3837 4 роки тому +1

    It looks scrumptious

  • @RoniShawn
    @RoniShawn 4 місяці тому

    Is there an alternative to salt? I’m KIND of new to cooking steak. But I have to keep salt of the menu for my mom who I care for.

  • @mickyboy1955
    @mickyboy1955 2 роки тому

    For medium rare pull the steak at 120 as it will carry on cooking for a while....if cooking a thinner steak use a lot less salt than used on these thick steaks and finally...turn the heat down before you put the butter in the pan as it will burn at that high temperature.

  • @drew4jc
    @drew4jc 4 роки тому +1

    I am new to cooking. Apparently I missed something in the video. I put sea salt around steaks. I cooked them on skillet and they came out way too salty like the ocean. Was I supposed to scrape salt off or just apply way less? I put salt in my hands and rubbed them all around steaks.

    • @BBQandBottles
      @BBQandBottles  4 роки тому

      I would just put as much salt on as you would normally season your steak with. It’s all going to absorb into the steak so don’t you too much. Sorry to hear it didn’t turn out the first time.

  • @whocares0692
    @whocares0692 4 роки тому +1

    Those steaks were not medium rare. The both were medium / medium well.

  • @nicgroves6116
    @nicgroves6116 4 роки тому

    You said that you prefer the “minerality” of sea salt over kosher salt for seasoning. What do you mean by that? Also, I’m not sure if searing a steak in a cast iron skillet counts as barbecuing.

  • @silentbob7984
    @silentbob7984 4 роки тому

    Always love to find new ways to cook steak

  • @GarrettXPrime
    @GarrettXPrime 4 роки тому +1

    Beautiful work I'm going to try this
    Thanks for posting

  • @davidfoster7119
    @davidfoster7119 4 роки тому

    Technically, the moisture evaporated, it didn't get reabsorbed. The refrigerator is a very dry environment. The salt was pulled into the meat and surface moisture evaporated. You could weigh the steak before and after the 48 hours to prove this out.

    • @BBQandBottles
      @BBQandBottles  4 роки тому

      After hearing so many people thing that it dries out the steaks, we did weight them out. Here the experiment if you want to see how little moisture evaporates. ua-cam.com/video/zk4HLo9Ps3I/v-deo.html

  • @gopa8166
    @gopa8166 4 роки тому

    The steak looks great!
    But the watch....extraordinary!!!
    Great show!!!👍

  • @xrpsilver7129
    @xrpsilver7129 4 роки тому +1

    Wow, delicious. I need to try this. I like salting my steaks after grilling them. I feel like the salt takes all the moisture out.

  • @muhammadfadhilah7951
    @muhammadfadhilah7951 4 роки тому

    please tell me if I'm wrong, cause i really don't know about it. steak is simply just a fried meat right?

  • @Javaman92
    @Javaman92 Рік тому

    I'm wondering if the steak that you left unwrapped in the refrigerator is redder because it has oxidized. That seems likely to me. What if you salted it and wrapped it just like the other one. I bet it would be the same color then.

  • @micahjames7941
    @micahjames7941 4 роки тому

    Those are medium to medium well. You aren't supposed to cook to the end temperature. The temp keeps rising while it rests.

  • @stevesamuels7032
    @stevesamuels7032 4 роки тому +2

    This is great, however, I'm just trying to figure out why he (you?) said that's a medium rare steak?

  • @dra6o0n
    @dra6o0n 4 роки тому

    What if you take a salt block and a saw and make criss crosses on it so it makes 'jagged' spikes to rest the steak on it?