How Michelin Chefs Cook Steak (From Blue to Well Done)

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  • Опубліковано 21 гру 2024

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  • @JordanSlash
    @JordanSlash Місяць тому +3020

    For anyone who doesn't understand the numbers he is saying, that is what you are ordering. When you order Medium Rare, you are ordering a temperature, not your own esoteric idea of what the color pink is.

    • @svenkefa4552
      @svenkefa4552 Місяць тому +124

      This is the best comment I have ever read regarding steaks! 👍
      The very good (and expensive) restaurants should mention this on the menu... 😉😂

    • @mctrials23
      @mctrials23 Місяць тому +88

      I would suggest that unless you are at an exceptional restaurant you are simply guessing and trying to adjust for what the chef thinks each level is. I order blue most of the time and its very very rare its actually blue. Restaurants in Europe tend to be a bit better than the UK for actually giving you what you asked for. I think many places in the UK are sick of people ordering rare steak and then complaining when its actually rare. When I worked at a pub in my youth that was the chefs pet hate. People who would send a steak back because their rare steak was actually rare.

    • @demods1
      @demods1 Місяць тому +118

      ​@@mctrials23I was at a restaurant a few years back and this pretentious little shhaart with his pretending to be more wealthy than they are family ordered a medium rare steak. The steak came out medium rare he had a meltdown at the waitress and sent it back saying it wasn't medium rare it was blue rare, he then received his medium well steak and proceeded to laugh with his family about how crap the chef was saying how hard is it to cook a steak?.... It's your job! When I left the restaurant as i walked past I said hey btw your steak was medium rare, what you ate was medium well you really should check the terminology before you attempt fine dining, the waitress giggled in the background was hilarious

    • @stephengreen9720
      @stephengreen9720 Місяць тому

      @@neilp3773take it up with Heston😂

    • @JonnySublime
      @JonnySublime Місяць тому +24

      Who the hell orders steak with numbers?

  • @ceeaymoore
    @ceeaymoore 8 днів тому +90

    The nicest possible way a chef can talk about well done steak. I really appreciate the professionalism

    • @benjones7634
      @benjones7634 7 днів тому +7

      You could pick these people out in a crowd

    • @DanBlabbers
      @DanBlabbers 6 днів тому

      i like blue steak the most. take it out and salt it and let it sit until its room temp then sear super hot for a short amount of time. i like the chew and sear contrast.

    • @generalock3015
      @generalock3015 6 днів тому

      😂 fr

    • @christianzuniga1580
      @christianzuniga1580 6 днів тому +1

      What a waste of meat

    • @katherineberger6329
      @katherineberger6329 5 днів тому +4

      That said, I would never insult a chef, myself, or the cow by ordering steak well-done. If I want well-done beef I'll order a hamburger.

  • @lynch7
    @lynch7 Місяць тому +851

    So the steaks cook for 4 mins (30 seconds each side before flipping), then into the oven at 180degrees C (2 mins each side before flipping), probe and roughly 4 minutes total is where he removes the medium-rare, 6 minutes medium, 8 mins for medium-well and 10 mins for well-done. Then the 40C drawer is to raise their temps, until the target temp, then cover with a lid and set a 10 minute timer for resting. Blue is 38C, rare 44-46C, medium-rare 48C, medium 50-52C, medium-well 56C, well-done 60C. Finally, from Heston’s other steak recipes, remove pan from heat, add butter/aromatics and beef juice from steaks, slice up the steaks and spoon the dressing over it. Will be trying this out, thanks.

    • @burritodog3634
      @burritodog3634 Місяць тому +32

      and what is the point of all this? just let meat get to room temp, throw on grill, flip, then done.

    • @THE-X-Force
      @THE-X-Force Місяць тому +77

      @@burritodog3634 To have the desired temp be consistent throughout the steak .. and avoiding the grey line.

    • @RYNO2511
      @RYNO2511 Місяць тому +102

      ​@@burritodog3634did you actually watch the video? The point is how to consistently achieve the required doneness, if you order a medium rare steak from a restaurant, do you think they just throw it on for some arbitrary amount of time and go "yep thats probably right"?

    • @frickezthias8638
      @frickezthias8638 Місяць тому +2

      Is the target temp 40 C? The steak reaches 40C in the drawer and (for example a medium rare steak) and it will continue to climb in temp to 48 C by the end of that 10 minute rest?

    • @ryanskogg5211
      @ryanskogg5211 Місяць тому +5

      Great comment. Just so I have this right. a total of 4 min on the grill. Every 30 seconds flipped (or turned for the grid) so 30s turn, 30s flip, 30s turn 30s flip. for 4 min? It seems like the video he only flipped once but turned several.
      After that, it is in a 180 oven flipping every 2 min until the probe hits the doneness mark (say 48 for medium rare) which is probably another 4 min
      Then let it rest for 10? And when it rests, under a lid? or is the lid not necessary. Was that drawer he had at 40, was that the resting?

  • @tommac5411
    @tommac5411 9 днів тому +51

    My favorite part of these FALLOW instructional videos' is that the chef is not an egotist. He makes it about the food and not himself.

  • @Nosceteipsum166
    @Nosceteipsum166 Місяць тому +143

    I spend all my life cooking meat without a probe. Sometimes it would come out good, sometimes under or too well done. After buying a cheap probe, my life changed. No need to think of time, just technique. Now I can cool accurately any piece of meat. Probably the best buy in my life in terms of cooking.

    • @DavidMcEachren
      @DavidMcEachren 11 днів тому +7

      Part of the issue for home cooks is consistency, especially on a grill, as we often do not have professional grade equipement that holds the temps the same each time, so cooking time can vary more.

    • @rpdx3
      @rpdx3 8 днів тому

      I like to probe meat also. 😏

    • @KingSchmeat
      @KingSchmeat 7 днів тому

      I agree

    • @christianzuniga1580
      @christianzuniga1580 6 днів тому +1

      I don't use a probe and my steaks always come out good.

    • @Colors82
      @Colors82 6 днів тому +3

      @@DavidMcEachren probes are pretty cheap nowadays, you dont need super crazy professional grade equipment just one that gets the job done

  • @csarcpab
    @csarcpab 22 дні тому +81

    This is definitely the best and most comprehensive guide I've seen online on steak terms and temps. I love how he precisely and objectively is able to show the difference with temperature.

    • @Lmtn33
      @Lmtn33 13 днів тому

      ​@johnman559 What is better about a well done steak than one cooked to a lower temp

    • @searingss
      @searingss 8 днів тому +3

      @@johnman559 because ur a child that eats rubber with no moisture

    • @zackmash851
      @zackmash851 5 днів тому

      @@johnman559 he could be typing in 1337 speak and he'd still look more like an adult than the person ordering a well done steak

    • @matthew401
      @matthew401 14 годин тому

      Yeah, but he didn't explain what his steak is made out of. He said they have cell walls, so it must be something new, or steak that is from somewhere unknown.

  • @tattoomesam
    @tattoomesam Місяць тому +239

    Finally a video where the chef explains all the levels of doneness and there aren’t the usual “That’s fooking raw” comments

    • @Uncle-ruckus-bit
      @Uncle-ruckus-bit Місяць тому +11

      That's raw

    • @GunsNGames248
      @GunsNGames248 Місяць тому +12

      Its still raw. Rare medium rare anything with rare is raw

    • @NoahThatcher
      @NoahThatcher Місяць тому +4

      @@GunsNGames248weak rage bait

    • @seeharvester
      @seeharvester 25 днів тому +4

      It's still mooing. Mooooo!

    • @gtertgvsdfv4904
      @gtertgvsdfv4904 24 дні тому +4

      @@GunsNGames248 not raw, I think the better word is undercooked

  • @MrJacobThrall
    @MrJacobThrall Місяць тому +24

    Love this. Genuinely expected a lot of the myths and alchemy that seem to accompany steak cooking guides. There seem to be lots of things that you must/should do, often for badly explained reasons, and that don't actually stand up to scrutiny - they're just things that that chef was told to do as an apprentice, and so they still do them, whether they confer any real advantages or not.
    How heat interacts with meat is essentially a mix of physics and biology, so it makes a lot of sense to treat it that way when explaining it - even when you get practiced enough to do it instinctively, those are still the processes you're working with.

  • @Jan-yc2lr
    @Jan-yc2lr Місяць тому +189

    Really nice to see chefs applying the knowledge that Heston has acquired with the help of food scientist. I think a lot of chefs would rather stick with their old ways because that's what they've always done.

    • @mattymattffs
      @mattymattffs 21 день тому +1

      *knowledge

    • @hb1338
      @hb1338 20 днів тому +4

      Heston's approach has the very important benefit of consistency. Given what he charges, that matters a great deal.

  • @proesje
    @proesje 18 днів тому +14

    In Belgium (and in France of course) we use de terms: Bleu (= rare), Saignant (=Medium rare), A Point (= Medium), Demi-anglais (= Medium well), Bien-cuit (= well done), Trop-cuit (=Overdone).

  • @TheIndyRex
    @TheIndyRex Місяць тому +277

    Man is a true professional, committed to the craft completely.

    • @animaladam5
      @animaladam5 Місяць тому +19

      I just took the biggest dump of my life

    • @allanm2064
      @allanm2064 Місяць тому

      @animaladam5 I just queefed all over my rare steak and then ate it with some butt lube

    • @dylanfox8530
      @dylanfox8530 Місяць тому +1

      @@animaladam5I just took a dump that would make your dump look like a toddlers. Get good

    • @matthewcasagrande231
      @matthewcasagrande231 Місяць тому +2

      @@animaladam5what did it look like and are you doing ok?

    • @animaladam5
      @animaladam5 Місяць тому +5

      @@matthewcasagrande231 looked like a giant pretzel you get from a restaurant/ pub. I survived and am feeling better thank you

  • @jozzoazoa
    @jozzoazoa Місяць тому +59

    Mate, because of your video our home cooked steaks were absolutely terrific and on point today. Thank you!

    • @jinx20001
      @jinx20001 Місяць тому +4

      amazing, a single video turned you into a michelin chef.

    • @jozzoazoa
      @jozzoazoa 29 днів тому +4

      @jinx20001 well, not quite

  • @hananyariv
    @hananyariv Місяць тому +398

    This is the real deal. a real chef that understand thermodynamics is the way to go. hats off chef !

  • @MikkoVille
    @MikkoVille Місяць тому +468

    Seriously, these videos are some of the best on UA-cam to improve my cooking game. Thanks for making them!

    • @music4dages
      @music4dages Місяць тому

      Completely agree and wonder why other steak houses haven’t done the same thing. It would be interesting to see how Gordon Ramsay does a steak. He has an excellent video on cooking Beef Wellington. If I had the money and knew my time on earth was limited, I’d pay Gordon to cook my final dinner.

    • @sonortubelug3853
      @sonortubelug3853 Місяць тому +4

      Now your boring friends can come over and listen to you talk about it.

    • @johnboylan3832
      @johnboylan3832 29 днів тому

      @@sonortubelug3853 I was going to say something, but you put it better than I ever could.

    • @seeharvester
      @seeharvester 25 днів тому

      @@sonortubelug3853
      lol

  • @CG-hf2cd
    @CG-hf2cd Місяць тому +4

    I've noticed as I've gotten older (30 years old now) that the more done I like my steak. Back when I was in elementary/middle school I liked rare, then high school and a little after medium rare. Now at 30 I still like medium rare, but prefer medium.

  • @shmebYouLock
    @shmebYouLock Місяць тому +1684

    What's a freaking queeson?

    • @Halfjera
      @Halfjera Місяць тому +445

      Cuisson. Cook. Doneness.

    • @jameswelsh4479
      @jameswelsh4479 Місяць тому +161

      The doneness of a steak.

    • @t23c56
      @t23c56 Місяць тому +497

      Nothing, what's a queeson with you?

    • @user-sb5wu6oy7e
      @user-sb5wu6oy7e Місяць тому +117

      Cuisson. It’s French and translates directly to cooking. He’s using it to refer to how done the steak is or how it is cooked.

    • @twolessba1087
      @twolessba1087 Місяць тому +61

      there's this magical thing called google...

  • @Holden-McGroin
    @Holden-McGroin Місяць тому +45

    I recently ordered a steak and the waiter asked how I wanted it cooked. I replied “medium rare.” He replied “that’s correct.”

  • @HardTimesUK
    @HardTimesUK Місяць тому +25

    Yes Chef! I know I say this a lot but the openness and insight you guys give is invaluable. I’m over next Wednesday with a mate and can’t wait! Best channel on UA-cam!

  • @chechoaus
    @chechoaus 20 днів тому +6

    This is passion in the form of a chef.

  • @realalexsmith
    @realalexsmith Місяць тому +16

    This was the best and most informative of all of them, for my day to day amateur cooking - this was amazing, cheers guys!

  • @JustinViola-x7o
    @JustinViola-x7o Місяць тому +4

    Thankfully, I've had the pleasure of working in a lot of restaurants and cooked a lot of steaks so I didn't need the tip, but I've got to say this may be one of the absolute best videos about cooking a steak I have ever seen.

  • @Billy_B
    @Billy_B Місяць тому +127

    The grate marks can do one, prefer to have caramelisation all over the crust

    • @1flash3571
      @1flash3571 Місяць тому +13

      If you do fire from the Bottom, they have NO CHOICE. The grate have to be used.

    • @juliecox6509
      @juliecox6509 Місяць тому +3

      same, I even make sure the sides get a bit of a sear I don't think I'll ever be in a situation where I'm cooking on a grill like that but the info on temps was interesting

    • @avalanchecarter
      @avalanchecarter Місяць тому

      Maillard fond, unless you’re coating your steak in sugar before firing it.

    • @TheVirulentoblivion
      @TheVirulentoblivion Місяць тому +27

      @@1flash3571 Not true. Go watch Guga cook steaks with charcoal repeatedly, no grill marks, perfect crust. He uses a circular rack with a cold side and a hot side and spins it just to avoid the grill marks, because they truly are so bad. You can't get a good crust on the rest of the meat without burning on the grill marks. Seriously.
      What this man did was impressive for sure, but I wouldn't be happy paying for that steak. I'd rather sous vide a perfect mid rare and then sear it with charcoal on a cold grate. Far better to me.

    • @ItsMeYourRealDad
      @ItsMeYourRealDad Місяць тому +9

      ​@@TheVirulentoblivionexactly. I'd much rather have a guga steak

  • @MyFamilyGathering
    @MyFamilyGathering 12 днів тому +1

    I can only be grateful for the education you just graciously displayed to me and us all. Finally. Some one clearly explains and shows what we are all doing wrong and how to start on the proper Journey of cooking a steak properly. I'm so thankful to see all this. I embarrassingly have been stumbling and struggling to comprehend how to …"cooking Steak" …. and probably only achieved the desired result...5 % of the time ( Tasty juicy tender steak). More by good luck not good cooking. Sir, you have just confirmed all of my internal queries of..."what about this " ….. "or that".... ??? Thankyou for sharing. I'm so pleased.

    • @buttmonkiesdotcom
      @buttmonkiesdotcom День тому

      Most people do tend to "be good" at cooking steaks by sheer luck - myself included. Until I learned about the maillard reaction. Changed the way I cook steaks. This video showed me even more now. There's always something to learn about cooking, no matter what youre experience level is in cooking.

  • @ShawnyPlays
    @ShawnyPlays Місяць тому +9

    Fallow just looks like a good restaurant. I've eaten and worked at a few Michelin /San Pellegrino spots but short of experiential fine dining, this is the kind of place I want to eat on the regs.

  • @DaVillain06
    @DaVillain06 3 дні тому

    those steaks are perfect!! I used to work at a steakhouse where they taught me how to check temp by using a cake tester, it requires some practice but it is absolutely accurate once you master it. We never used probes there because they leave bigger holes in the protein.

  • @davidh9823
    @davidh9823 Місяць тому +14

    I can watch videos like this all day. Thank you Chef for sharing your knowledge.

    • @music4dages
      @music4dages Місяць тому

      That makes two of us. Sort of like watching Bob Ross paint except the finished product you can eat.

    • @vhawk1951kl
      @vhawk1951kl 12 днів тому

      If you imagine that knowledge can be"shared", you understand nothing of knowledge

  • @sidlives2672
    @sidlives2672 21 годину тому

    I have gone the gamut of the cooking range in my life. I started at well, moved to medium rare, then wanted blue, and back to rare and now I just want a well cooked steak. Just not well done. I have also tried different techniques such as grilling, sous vide, pan fried, reverse sear, and broiled. Again, just want a well cooked steak. Thanks for showing us your technique.

  • @Herbderpin50
    @Herbderpin50 27 днів тому +4

    Heads up at 4:51. The cells cows are made of do not have cell walls. They have cell membranes, but they aren't rigid like the cell walls in something like a pepper cell.

    • @matthew401
      @matthew401 14 годин тому

      LOL. Yes! But, at least he knows what cells are and thinks about them while cooking!

    • @FetidPhlesh
      @FetidPhlesh 9 годин тому

      I was looking for this comment. the first time he said cell walls I was like, he isn't cooking veggies here.

  • @andrewhadden133
    @andrewhadden133 Місяць тому +46

    Cuisson - is french for 'cooking'. However it is also used to ask about cooking. For example 'what is the cuisson on your steak?'

    • @hscomet
      @hscomet Місяць тому +10

      Thanks for that explanation I was trying to google it, helps when you spell it correctly.. cheers

    • @RottnRobbie
      @RottnRobbie Місяць тому +10

      Well then why is this British chef, in an English-language video, not _saying it in English_ ?? How the hell is this a 'how to do it at home' tutorial, when he's using professional jargon that 95% of us won't understand?

    • @Romans8-9
      @Romans8-9 Місяць тому +15

      @@RottnRobbie Its one word bro.

    • @Mrtheunnameable
      @Mrtheunnameable Місяць тому +3

      @@RottnRobbie You are on an internet with access to Google.

    • @dselleno
      @dselleno Місяць тому +1

      Thanks

  • @bandidol200
    @bandidol200 День тому

    That must be the best explanation of steak cooking that I've ever seen. Top job.

  • @gamerkyle14
    @gamerkyle14 Місяць тому +26

    I wish customers knew this , amount of times I've served medium steaks and they've sent them back complaining they're medium rare or rare .. so many will say there shouldnt be almost any pink , and you can even show , pictures of the cuisson and how it's meant to look, and they will swear your wrong.
    Customers always right . Except when they're not . Great video great instructions , cheers chef

    • @noobarium
      @noobarium Місяць тому

      its spelt cuisson

    • @gamerkyle14
      @gamerkyle14 Місяць тому

      @noobarium thank you for correcting me !

    • @crice1uk
      @crice1uk 26 днів тому

      ​@@noobariumforget that, it's number of times, not amount of times and he doesn't know the difference between you're and your.

    • @stephaniecoomey2356
      @stephaniecoomey2356 23 дні тому

      @@crice1uk stfu buddy i could correct 5-6 mistakes in your writing, if you wanna be a smart ass, maybe learn high level english writing. lmfao

    • @cwaddle
      @cwaddle 22 дні тому

      Yeh, on this guys scale, medium rare is perfect, but ive been to some places that medium rare was closer to this guys rare so sent it back. Its quite a fine line but if you just over or under cooking by one scale ppl will complain

  • @RussManK3
    @RussManK3 18 днів тому

    GREAT video. I just made a few fillets yesterday on my charcoal grill. Grilled them to medium rare then let sit for about 10 min them wrapped them in foil for a bit till the sides were done. Came out perfect. I don't bother throwing them in a stove.

  • @mrbeaman06
    @mrbeaman06 Місяць тому +21

    informative video but temps must be different around the world? here in NZ always been taught blue 43-46c, rare 48-52c (50 being spot on), med-rare 53-56c (55 being spot on) , med 56-65c (60 being spot on) , med well 66-70, well done 72-75c. these temps havent failed me so far

    • @petermaag9622
      @petermaag9622 Місяць тому +4

      Maybe slightly on the wide side those ranges, med rare is dead 52 Ive always thought (dont really care about the rest but 65 is def no medium, thats grey all the way) him saying 48 is interesting ..

    • @RottnRobbie
      @RottnRobbie Місяць тому +5

      What gets me is how he purposly went mad on the well done to make sure it was as bad as possible. He has rare at 6° higher than blue (44° vs 38°); med-rare another 4° higher (48); med +4° (52); med-well +4° (56); then for well done, _fourTEEN_ degrees higher (70)!!
      It's perfectly possible to cook a steak to 60, or even 65, but he won't do it? Why?

    • @Artielpc
      @Artielpc Місяць тому +3

      The temps are wrong in the description, I use a termometer and for medium rare you need 130-135F, even 125F could be acceptable but 118F is clearly wrong

    • @Artielpc
      @Artielpc Місяць тому +2

      I have just ended the video and I think the problem is that he is measuring the temperature before resting, so the temperature actually will get up like 10-15F when you let the steak rest (at least for medium rare)

    • @mrbeaman06
      @mrbeaman06 Місяць тому

      @@Artielpc agree taking it out under target temp is correct.

  • @bassaddict1988
    @bassaddict1988 День тому

    How did this guy just kick my most favorite cooking channel from it's throne?!

  • @Ryu-lg9yq
    @Ryu-lg9yq Місяць тому +9

    Love the Heston history from Fat Duck. 🦆
    Can you do a couple of videos on how your prior training has affected or influenced your current cooking?
    Your inventive streak is clear to see, let’s hear all about it!
    Love the videos boys, not sure if you read all the comments but me and the wife have travelled twice from Sweden to eat at Fallow, all down to your videos. ❤

  • @timdernachn9851
    @timdernachn9851 29 днів тому

    Tried this twice now and it's amazing. The flavour is addictive. The fats are luxurious and rich. The meat is tender. It's predictable and controllable. Fantastic👌 I do think his explanation is poor and doesn't really explain how to rest it. But the technique is: brown exterior in a pan turning every 30seconds. Then 180c oven for 4mins, turning after two. Internal temp should be 48c. Then rest at 40c (maybe with oven off and door open, or just covered with a plate).

  • @DMonath
    @DMonath Місяць тому +34

    Chef's mastery of the skills he's executing is undeniable, but it's a crime to refer to that cross-hatching as a proper crust. Imagine if he executed a crisp flat sear on these otherwise beautiful steaks.

    • @DrDoohickey
      @DrDoohickey 14 днів тому +5

      Well put. Not actually much of a maillard reaction at all on those.

  • @mrimc
    @mrimc 3 дні тому

    I dont discriminate, I'd eat every single one of those delicious steaks. Brilliant video mate.

  • @darkreddust2135
    @darkreddust2135 Місяць тому +11

    Here a small summary from what I understood for this type of steak (cut and thickness):
    1. Grill the steak for 1min each side turning every 30s.
    2. Into 180°C oven:
    Blue - skip oven, straight into rest
    Rare - 2min then rest
    Medium Rare - 4min then rest
    Medium - 6min (?) then rest
    Medium Well - 8min (?) then rest
    Well Done - 10min+ then rest (70+°C)
    4. Temps after Resting:
    Check every few minutes(?)
    Blue - 38°C
    Rare - 44-46°C
    Medium Rare - 48°C
    The rest he didn't mention but following the pattern of about 4-6°C increments
    Medium - 52-54°C?
    Medium Well - 57-59°C
    Well Done - 60+°C
    Correct me if there's anything wrong.

    • @123Andersonev
      @123Andersonev Місяць тому +2

      Don't forget the hot drawer is 40 degrees, so technically the blue probably isn't 38 degrees internal when you rest it off the grill, it actually comes up to temp in the drawer.

    • @cipher-6.66
      @cipher-6.66 Місяць тому +1

      Where's the part where he wipes his nose with his fingers and uses the same hand to touch the steak. That's gotta add to the flavour.

    • @WrenKainIV
      @WrenKainIV 29 днів тому

      ​@@123Andersonevi threw my steak into our kitchen drawer once like this, too. My wife beat me up with that steak afterwards and had me clean it all up
      Guess I need a very special drawer for this method

    • @aaronburdon221
      @aaronburdon221 13 днів тому

      @@cipher-6.66 Glad to know I wasn't the only one to catch that.

  • @carterjr6465
    @carterjr6465 6 днів тому

    I'm amazed at the simple but ever effective method. Great job Chef

  • @philipstaite4775
    @philipstaite4775 Місяць тому +4

    Nicely done. (pun intended) Best thing I've learned off the internet in weeks. Thank you for this.

  • @lostwsbf
    @lostwsbf 20 днів тому

    This dude cannot stand still. I know almost nothing about preparing awesome steak but i think this guy is legit.

  • @stevel6895
    @stevel6895 Місяць тому +24

    Unless you're a pro like this guy you will never get the touch method down. You need to cook hundreds of steaks of all different varieties and weights to get that good. The best thing I ever did was buy an instant read thermometer, I haven't over cooked a steak since...

    • @garywagstaff7142
      @garywagstaff7142 Місяць тому +5

      This.
      Seriously, unless one is cooking several steaks a day…touching it to judge doneness is guessing at best. Get a Thermapen and be done with it.
      I have some friends that INSIST that they can tell the doneness AND temp by touch. Not one of them has ever been completely correct. And they’re certainly not consistent. OTOH, I DID graduate from culinary school and have ZERO issues with using an instant read…it’s just another tool…and I can hit the exact temps every time.

    • @xipalips
      @xipalips Місяць тому +6

      It's an ego thing, why actually measure and get it correct when I can use my macho intuition and hope I didn't mess up? It's so silly, because the extra couple degrees absolutely impacts the quality of the dinner you just spent like $12+ per lb for. Just get over yourself, get it right, and enjoy a perfect dinner!

    • @DuBLD33
      @DuBLD33 Місяць тому +6

      @@xipalips from working in a busy, understaffed restaurant, it is as the guy says. you use the probe for your first month or two, then after you've done thousands of steaks you kinda know before you probe, but you check anyway because you are still new, then eventually you just know. And sometimes your head chef and the orders coming in simply don't give you enough time to probe every piece of meat (they should have more staff but that's another issue). Not to mention many restaurants don't have the instant temp like that one, it will take 10-15s for the thermometre to get an accurate reading, which you simply don't have time for (remember you need to rotate every 30s and you have maybe a dozen steaks on already)

    • @BnFGProductions
      @BnFGProductions Місяць тому +2

      @@AviatorChefget a grip mate, we all know you’re well hard because you know how to cook. The comment you’re replying to is obviously talking about people who are not professionals and have never stood in front of a grill with 20 steaks on it.

    • @IrrelevantPlease
      @IrrelevantPlease Місяць тому +1

      nah, the only people who throw around terms like "macho intuition" have never worked to become good at anything in their lives. They don't get to criticize others.

  • @MrSoccertronics
    @MrSoccertronics 14 днів тому +1

    Very informative. Us Aussies love steaks cooked on the BBQ but most overcook and incinerate the meat.

  • @filmcrew3531
    @filmcrew3531 Місяць тому +8

    As a previous executive chef, this is perfectly done! Cheers Chef, Cheers Fallow!

  • @brightymcbrightface
    @brightymcbrightface 21 день тому

    I used this grill 30 second -> oven 2 minute cycle for 9 Elk chops (a lean bone-in ribeye) and the results were consistent.
    Given a thinner cut and less fat, the 48°C range resulted in medium, which for Elk is a near perfect cuisson.
    Some were resting on the plate at a slightly lower temp which is my usual result for lamb chops.
    I don't smother the steaks in fat, I use a vegan butter (!) called Miyoko's, with great results.

  • @graefx
    @graefx Місяць тому +7

    I learned that i really like blue but its highly dependent on the cut. Filet is about the only cut thats got the right combination of being lean and tender. Unrendered fat isnt pleasant and a lot of cuts need heat to become tender.

  • @JigsawCode36
    @JigsawCode36 Місяць тому +2

    I don’t use UA-cam for cooking videos often, but when Fallow serves up something I gotta dig in

  • @stevenswall
    @stevenswall Місяць тому +17

    0:15 If you pat the steaks dry you'll steam them less and have an easier time getting a crust. That being said, if you have enough heat in a professional setting it's not as necessary.

    • @Schachtens
      @Schachtens 24 дні тому +1

      Still using seed oil 🤮

    • @SteAnderson
      @SteAnderson 6 днів тому

      He just said he learnt in a 3 star kitchen. Come on. Just watch the video haha

  • @motelcity22
    @motelcity22 23 дні тому

    man this guy is awesome. Just sub. Actually professional and not some dude bro telling me how to cook a steak in the most obnoxious way

  • @Chris-v6b1n
    @Chris-v6b1n Місяць тому +13

    What an awesome tutorial.

  • @stevied8855
    @stevied8855 24 дні тому

    Thanks Chef
    I saved this video
    Medium rare for me
    People may not realise the skills here but this video is fantastic
    Thanks so much
    Stevie in fife

  • @lukericketts4055
    @lukericketts4055 Місяць тому +6

    This is the best explanation of how meat is cooked..... Well Done Sir....... Medium Rare for me🥩🥩

  • @Charlhiq
    @Charlhiq Місяць тому +1

    This is a guy who knows his job. We'll done sir

  • @danielm0rk
    @danielm0rk Місяць тому +91

    Am I the only one who associates cross hatch on steaks with poor tourist trap locations?

    • @matthewcasagrande231
      @matthewcasagrande231 Місяць тому +20

      Or like an Applebees commercial?

    • @erictucker5030
      @erictucker5030 Місяць тому +9

      Yes you are lol

    • @zincminer
      @zincminer Місяць тому +5

      I agree... the steaks looked more like they were modeled after a commercial

    • @russellhesse4510
      @russellhesse4510 Місяць тому +1

      Quite probably.

    • @speedyazi5029
      @speedyazi5029 Місяць тому +5

      I’ve seen this guy cook his own steak (or another fallow person on this channel), their personal steak doesn’t have grill marks.
      It is a tourist / rich person trap.

  • @DrivingWithJake
    @DrivingWithJake Місяць тому +1

    Great video showing people the colors and temp differences. My only issue with all of them is the "grill marks" I want that sear on the whole steak as it gives so much better flavors to a steak.

  • @troyboy4345
    @troyboy4345 Місяць тому +8

    Blue for me ... with a nice wash of Myoglobin and of course a deep, warm red wine to ensure maximum mouth/nose palette

    • @Lema-e6k6o
      @Lema-e6k6o Місяць тому

      brave man!
      I went from Medium well, to medium rare, I'm back to medium now

  • @NoogaNZz
    @NoogaNZz 14 днів тому

    Tried you method in my restaurant tonight, Fantastic results CHEF!. please can you tell the rest of the chefs so they don't look at me like I'm nuts.

  • @myyoutubehandle-rr
    @myyoutubehandle-rr Місяць тому +13

    One of the best ‘how to cook a steak’ videos I have seen. Although he didn’t mentioned when to take the meat out of the fridge before cooking. Would be interesting to know his thoughts. Also whether to pat meat dry before cooking.

  • @steveperry1344
    @steveperry1344 Місяць тому

    i'm just a home cook and I use a timer and a thermometer for Fahrenheit because we don't have centigrade in the states and am very consistent with results. thnx for the info.

  • @louisastuto2878
    @louisastuto2878 Місяць тому +11

    Love that this chef admits he is not above using a meat probe, many are so arrogant they would rather send out a steak that was under or overcooked than ever use one. Meat thermometers are an amazing kitchen tool, even the best most experienced chefs will have difficulty telling precise doneness at times.

    • @AviatorChef
      @AviatorChef Місяць тому +1

      Dude if you cook steaks long enough and know what you're doing, you don't need a thermometer. It's not about being arrogant, it's about being efficient and not poking unnecessary holes in your meat. You clearly must use them all the time and have some subconscious feeling about not being good enough or something. When you are cooking a lot of steaks at once on a grill, you don't have time to sit and temp every one. You touch it and boom there's your info

    • @Popspicker
      @Popspicker Місяць тому +4

      @@AviatorChef No need for the insults, obviously, he's not going to get the touch from cooking steak occasionally, don't think it shows any repressed feelings of inadequacy. You just proved his point perfectly about arrogance.Boom.

    • @AviatorChef
      @AviatorChef Місяць тому

      @@Popspicker if you consider what I wrote being insulting, you must be softer than baby shit. And no he didn't prove anything haha. I wasn't being arrogant at all, softie.

    • @AviatorChef
      @AviatorChef Місяць тому

      @@Popspicker he was also insinuating that you can't send out correct temps without using one. Too many arm chair quarterbacks who don't know what they're talking about.

    • @Popspicker
      @Popspicker Місяць тому

      @@AviatorChef Think he's saying that SOME chefs don't have the skill that you obviously have😀

  • @djburdee
    @djburdee 24 дні тому +1

    top vid mate, the correct way to rest the steak at desired temp was knowledge to me

  • @trustmeimaphysiologist
    @trustmeimaphysiologist Місяць тому +6

    I vacuum bag my steaks up, sling them in the meat jacuzzi at the desired temperature for a few hours. When done, pat dry and sear on a ripping hot pan to create the crust. Cover in foil while I make some aromatic melted butter, cover them in it and serve.
    I'm not good enough to not cook meat sous vide, so i bought the kit to cover my failings!

  • @badger4579
    @badger4579 20 днів тому

    High quality info in a 10 minute video. Thank you.

  • @taintedgooch
    @taintedgooch Місяць тому +5

    When he said the 40°drawer it blew right over my head it was celsius 😂 i was like what the hell is he doing

  • @thetuna8099
    @thetuna8099 9 днів тому

    thank you! This video has helped a lot, in my cooking and ordering at resturants! thank you sir and as always great videos.

  • @36424567254
    @36424567254 Місяць тому +6

    I aim for medium rare when I cook myself, but I almost always order rare because the vast majority of places overcook them in my experience. Of course I'm not talking about fine dining places, just steakhouses etc

    • @brockkomar4743
      @brockkomar4743 Місяць тому +1

      yep much safer to order rare, med Rare at low end joints are medium at best likely medium well. I used to be a rare guy only but I'm more into bleu steaks now. I like it cold in the middle and I like sashimi too.

    • @artful1967
      @artful1967 Місяць тому

      I think most places just ask you how you want it as something to say then cook them all the same. I have sent steaks back when I have ordered them rare or medium rare and they have arrived medium well done or even well done. I think being 1 step away id acceptable but not 2 or 3

    • @wfemp_4730
      @wfemp_4730 Місяць тому

      That's interesting, because the majority of places that I've been to (just steakhouses) undercook them one level.

  • @schreinertx6315
    @schreinertx6315 Місяць тому +1

    Medium looks perfect 🤌🏻

  • @KLucero22
    @KLucero22 Місяць тому +6

    Excellent video. I never understood why probes are such a contentious topic among chefs. Seems to me like just another tool in the kit. You and the Fallow team show how to use it properly 👍🏽

    • @armante4u
      @armante4u Місяць тому +4

      I understand that one can be quite adept to gaging the temp of a product they work with often. But if you were to get a product from a different supplier or all of a sudden it's a product that differs from your usual in aging duration and/or method. Or you're working with one that's now an ex dairy cow, grass or grain. Then i think you should err on the side of caution. I know, lots of "if's" but I think probing is just a sure fire guarantee. Would be a shame to mess up the cuisson on a beautiful product just because of 'pride'.

    • @KLucero22
      @KLucero22 Місяць тому +1

      @ agreed

    • @mandtgrant
      @mandtgrant Місяць тому +4

      Using the thermometer diligently trains you to do it by feel, but if you stop temping it, your ability to gauge starts to deteriorate over time. I have gone back to probing every steak; no surprises, and steak is expensive

  • @CoffeeggSPWL
    @CoffeeggSPWL Місяць тому

    Ive been achieving better cooking on my steaks thanks to you mate ! Love the way you teach.

  • @tommybf3778
    @tommybf3778 Місяць тому +14

    I actually often find myself picking the biggest steak to cook for a well done order. Too many times I had unsatisfied ‘well done type of’ customers complaining that their steak didn’t meet the weight (whether 180g, 200g or whatever) stated on the menu. However the more you cook a piece of protein, the more liquids it will lose. Still it hurts to pick the biggest piece for someone that should just order chicken instead. Just to avoid problems. But yeah, cooks tend to get more food back than feed back

    • @MajarityJo
      @MajarityJo Місяць тому

      A layman question to a chef. Would a well done steak guy expect his chicken to be cooked in the same way; well done?

    • @artful1967
      @artful1967 Місяць тому +1

      @@MajarityJo unlikely he will ask for his chicken to be rare :-)

    • @MajarityJo
      @MajarityJo Місяць тому

      @@artful1967fair point. I assume they would like their chicken cooked “dry” then

    • @wfemp_4730
      @wfemp_4730 Місяць тому +2

      Legitimate question: Why do you think someone should "just order chicken"?

    • @KeepItSimpleSailor
      @KeepItSimpleSailor 20 днів тому +3

      You’re the problem. The customer wants well done, not your snobbery bs.!

  • @monochromatech
    @monochromatech 14 днів тому

    i swear if i hear maillard reaction one more time im gonna go postal. im soo happy the world finally figured this out, we get it.

  • @qriusjorj38
    @qriusjorj38 Місяць тому +12

    Blue and well done are definitely the hardest marks to hit. Unfortunately, none of that matters when the customers are often wrong about steak temps. You can give two perfect med-rare steaks to two people and one will say it's still raw and the other one will say it's overcooked...

    • @DanishTroll87
      @DanishTroll87 Місяць тому +6

      What I have understood through my years of cooking is that people who make fun (sometimes even are aggressive) of well done steaks generally don't know how to cook a well done steak. The juiciest and most tender steak I've ever had in my life was surprisingly a well done.

  • @JamesJansson
    @JamesJansson 21 день тому

    I usually order medium rare, but that medium actually looks amazing.

  • @Thanosisnotreal
    @Thanosisnotreal 20 днів тому +3

    0:17 What kind of seed oil you hosing those steaks down with there? 👀

    • @susancampbell7335
      @susancampbell7335 10 днів тому

      Beef fat

    • @Thanosisnotreal
      @Thanosisnotreal 10 днів тому

      @@susancampbell7335 where can I get beef fat/tallow that is liquid without being mixed with other oils?

    • @AS-tk437
      @AS-tk437 8 днів тому

      @Thanosisnotreal The beef tallow is heated, that's why it's liquid. It won't be liquid if it's not heated if you buy it in a jar. Or if you make your own beef tallow when it is stored it will be a solid.

  • @devonutopia
    @devonutopia Місяць тому

    I've been doing steaks (I think properly / nicely) for years and had never heard the term quiescent until today. ha! Love a nice rare steak. At home I have to pan fry with butter though, then let rest or if a really thick cut finish off in the oven a tiny bit.

  • @waywardmind
    @waywardmind 12 днів тому +4

    I can't make out what he's saying, and the auto-generated CC is zero help. The word I'm curious about sounds like "Kwee's'on" ? 1:04 is the second usage in the video, I think.

  • @sonatine3266
    @sonatine3266 14 днів тому +1

    Thanks for this awesome guide. If someone orders a well done steak he should get a "no" or "maybe a chicken breast for you?" as an answer. ;) Eating a good piece of beef well done is simply not very smart imho because it doesn't make the meat more healthy or better digestible (you could eat good quality beef literally raw and btw. blue is NOT raw), it will just make a perfectly tender and delicious steak tough and furthermore it deletes loads of flavour. I personally think medium rare is the perfect temperature and I always got the best results (with almost no grey searing ring) by grilling or searing a room temperature steak (unsalted) in a pan with high temperature in clarified butter and later arosizing it with butter, garlic (pressed cloves or maybe even dried powder, both works very well) and maybe rosemary. Salt and black pepper will be used when served, not before.

    • @CDAtheCPA
      @CDAtheCPA 11 днів тому

      Took a lot longer than I expected for someone to show how cool they are by telling everyone what to eat

  • @lehoff
    @lehoff Місяць тому +11

    Love my steaks blue. But i also love steak tartare. I've never had a steak cooked more than rare. I can't abide overcooked meat. But that's of course personal. There's no right or wrong here just personal taste.

    • @lehoff
      @lehoff Місяць тому +2

      @southerndiscomfort171 yeah quality is so important. It also depends on the cut of the meat too. Sometimes you do need to cook it a little more.

    • @archiecalkins4790
      @archiecalkins4790 Місяць тому +4

      Love Steak Tartare, but for fattier cuts I do prefer Mid-rare to Medium

    • @SideQuest3
      @SideQuest3 Місяць тому +2

      I would only order a blue steak at a top tier place as I have seen people order blue steaks from regular places/pubs and they are never happy with their steak. My go to order is rare which usually comes out as medium rare

    • @tristancleary
      @tristancleary Місяць тому +2

      While you are completely right - its all personal and nothing is wrong - a very highly marbled steak really benefits from being cooked to at least medium rare to actually render a bit of the fat.

    • @lehoff
      @lehoff Місяць тому

      @@tristancleary oh yeah that crispy fat is to die for. But I'd choose a cut that offers the ability for a rarer/blue cuisson just because I generally like the flavour and texture better. However you're right on a grill or wood fired BBQ getting that fat melting and keeping the steak nice and moist is also lovely. But even then I think if you do as the chef showed and keep it at a reasonable temperature for a while you can probably achieve that?

  • @57thorns
    @57thorns Місяць тому

    4:14 is so important. It is the same with measuring spice and salt, you use measurements while you learn, but eventually you can do without.
    Asking someone new to cooking to do it without tools like measuring cups and probes is like asking a three year old that just got their first two-wheel bike to do without training wheels. (and yes, I know some people will gate keep that as well, talking about "learning the wrong lean in curves" etc),
    There is a reason why baking is "an exact science" to a chef, and cooking is "an exact science" to a confectioner. It is the difference in experience, the difference in how exact you are without the help of measuring tools.
    When you start out you need to experience what is correct, to learn what is correct. If you wing it as newbie, how will you learn to get it right?

  • @mbk4395
    @mbk4395 Місяць тому +6

    In no Michelin Star Restaurant, I've ever been, they asked me for the doneness. They always do it on the point. If you want your steak well done, you are not the person who should eat at a Michelin Star restaurant.

    • @xvnbm
      @xvnbm Місяць тому

      Probably. Too high IQ to waste your money on a restaurant.

    • @artful1967
      @artful1967 Місяць тому +2

      They usually still ask. There is a world of difference between rare and medium well done and some people have that valid pref. Few places will do a blue steak as people send them back as "uncooked" not knowing what they asked for.

    • @mbk4395
      @mbk4395 Місяць тому +1

      @artful1967 I've never been asked in a gourmet restaurant (Europe). Once I had a conversation with the Chef who told me, serving a Steak that is not a point (Medium rare) might them cost their Michelin star.

  • @benjones7634
    @benjones7634 7 днів тому

    I love this insight on cooking temps and steak cuisine

  • @neuroscalpel
    @neuroscalpel Місяць тому +10

    take a shot everytime he says "cuisson"

    • @AA-pq2ls
      @AA-pq2ls Місяць тому

      Ooft. Well I played your game and I am still stone cold sober

  • @randynelson9773
    @randynelson9773 29 днів тому

    Man you nailed it. Med rare is my favorite as well, but if you’re cooking I could handle med/med well too. Which is odd for me. Most resteraunts I feel like just guess at it.

  • @JamesChurchill3
    @JamesChurchill3 Місяць тому +5

    Bobby: What if someone wants theirs well done?
    Hank: We ask them politely, yet firmly, to leave.

    • @xvnbm
      @xvnbm Місяць тому +2

      Hank obviously isn't good enough chef, I understand, well done steak is the hardest one to make.

    • @aaronburdon221
      @aaronburdon221 13 днів тому

      @@xvnbm It's the hardest one to make to where it doesn't taste like horse hide. If you can get it well done and still juicy, you've become a very good chef.

  • @bearinsuit696
    @bearinsuit696 8 днів тому

    i work at a buffet and have to show the steak to the customer and what you would call a medium a customer would call rare lol but all of those came out amazing looking

  • @pstarr01
    @pstarr01 Місяць тому +4

    what is a que son?

  • @thecapone45
    @thecapone45 24 дні тому

    Very informative! I cook well done steaks for myself at home and order medium rare at restaurants.

  • @FamilyGuyVids11
    @FamilyGuyVids11 11 днів тому +4

    we always leave the worst steaks for the well-done eaters lol (they are clueless about food)

  • @tchoo18
    @tchoo18 7 днів тому

    Big fan of this channel. Thanks!

  • @ac1d23
    @ac1d23 26 днів тому +8

    1. Raw
    2. Raw
    3. Raw
    4. Raw
    5. Raw
    6. Almost well done

    • @IThinkICare
      @IThinkICare 16 днів тому

      4 medium well still had too much blood for me. 5 medium well is pink. 6 is done, 7 would be well done as in probably a bit dry.

    • @ac1d23
      @ac1d23 13 днів тому

      @@IThinkICare That's not even blood.

    • @IThinkICare
      @IThinkICare 13 днів тому

      @@ac1d23 9:56 not blood ... paint ?!

    • @fancykarlmarx
      @fancykarlmarx 13 днів тому +1

      @@IThinkICare it’s water and myoglobin. It’s a protein that has a lot of iron in it. The butcher bled the beef long before it gets sold. I thought it was blood for years.

    • @IThinkICare
      @IThinkICare 12 днів тому

      ​@@fancykarlmarx which is in the blood ....... I was gonna write ..... then I looked it up and no , it 's not . I learned even more today. Thanks !
      PS: just because they bleed it, doesn't mean all comes out.

  • @NotaPizzaGRL
    @NotaPizzaGRL Місяць тому

    The kitchen looks so clean and well organized

  • @FiresideCatsmile
    @FiresideCatsmile Місяць тому +6

    nice video. don't know why he keeps rumbling about croissants though

  • @ClodiusP
    @ClodiusP 5 днів тому

    I never knew there was that much science behind cooking a steak!

  • @JoannaHammond
    @JoannaHammond Місяць тому +6

    Temp probes are your best friend, you want to do it right, use a probe.

    • @szde
      @szde Місяць тому +1

      ET the Extra Terrestrial says what

  • @hebopavlos
    @hebopavlos Місяць тому

    I hope it doesn't go over people's head, how good this guy is at what he's doing. He could probably show Gordon Ramsey a thing or too.

  • @speeddemon2262
    @speeddemon2262 Місяць тому +6

    I'm a Blue/Rare person.

    • @smoath
      @smoath Місяць тому +4

      And you're getting by far the most nutrition from your meat. Apart from raw of course but that's a different story

    • @MGnKntkY
      @MGnKntkY Місяць тому +1

      🤢

    • @worldeater3242
      @worldeater3242 27 днів тому

      ​@@smoath You're on crack. Raw? Are you like high?

  • @thesaltysergeant4103
    @thesaltysergeant4103 21 день тому

    Im a blue to Rare guy. Love it!!!

  • @xosammyb
    @xosammyb Місяць тому +34

    bros touching his face and all different surfaces in that kitchen then touching the steak.

    • @bean9seventy
      @bean9seventy 20 днів тому +1

      entitlement of chefs
      then forget the dish is "over handled" throughout the process,
      pan frying is cleaner ,, safer, & better to control
      also no mention of "the minute steak" or "very well done" ( which in the normal world is cooked through & recommend )

    • @edik3310
      @edik3310 18 днів тому

      that kitchen and everything in it is cleaner than your mouth but still you complain about it

    • @xosammyb
      @xosammyb 18 днів тому +8

      @@edik3310 If you've ever worked in a restaurant you know that's not true lol

    • @bean9seventy
      @bean9seventy 18 днів тому

      @@edik3310
      over handling food ...
      not pan fried ,,
      could do a video reply ?
      ps,, & hint
      i doubt Keith Floyd ever saw a mop
      & soap in his life

    • @edik3310
      @edik3310 18 днів тому

      @@xosammyb professional chef worked both restaurants and hotels and know what you want to say... and still you are wrong

  • @ArtyShat
    @ArtyShat 28 днів тому

    This would be such a cool dish to have so you could try how every single temperature taste and eventually decide your favourite for the future