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Registered
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: outta here
Posts: 53,370
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Hell, I can remember when I used to order a fillet. Of course that was 40 years ago, but still...
when it comes to steak or pork, or even chicken or fish, fat is where it's at... |
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Banned
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: los angeles, CA.
Posts: 41,257
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Quote:
They were incredibly good but I always wondered if his eventual cancer of throat was caused partially by eating too much charred food, which is really high-risk for that. Of course he also smoked for years and drank a lot of Scotch for years, etc. The real danger discovered in recent years is from acid reflux, which all of us lovers of acidic foods usually have. Not meaning to be a wet blanket, just that there might be a health aspect to certain very tasty diets. Definitely moderate red meat but GD those steaks were good. ![]() |
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Registered
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: outta here
Posts: 53,370
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I definitely think when you brown meat to the point of charring, it becomes less healthy. I also think that charring ruins the taste of the steak. I once ate at The Forge in Palm Beach and they cooked my steak like that. It was a huge disappointment and I probably should've sent it back to the kitchen.
I would imagine your dad probably used salt too, without that most steaks are nowhere near as tasty. The question of when to salt and pepper steak is an interesting one. I tend to prefer to salt my steaks fairly heavily well ahead of cooking, at least an hour or two. I hold off on the pepper until after it's cooked, for two reasons. Pepper is soluble in oil, so I tend to think it does better when you pepper the meat while it's resting. It also changes its flavor when cooked and it can be burned if it gets too hot. |
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Targa68
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![]() Beef Wellington at Home,Yummy. |
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Targa68
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resident samsquamch
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Cooterville, Cackalacky
Posts: 6,815
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Yeah, as for pepper, I save it for resting. I only season my steaks with salt. I found that adding pepper upfront before cooking sort of added a bitter flavor.
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-jeff back in the saddle: '95 993 - just another black C2 *SOLD*: '87 930 GP White - heroin would have been a cheaper addiction... "Ladies and Gentlemen, from Boston Massachusetts, we are Morphine, at your service..." - Mark Sandman (RIP ![]() |
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resident samsquamch
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Cooterville, Cackalacky
Posts: 6,815
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And nice job on that Wellington!!
__________________
-jeff back in the saddle: '95 993 - just another black C2 *SOLD*: '87 930 GP White - heroin would have been a cheaper addiction... "Ladies and Gentlemen, from Boston Massachusetts, we are Morphine, at your service..." - Mark Sandman (RIP ![]() |
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Banned
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: los angeles, CA.
Posts: 41,257
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It could be that my dad salted the steak before grilling, I can’t remember and unfortunately, it’s too late to ask him.
![]() I may be describing his technique wrongly, it was a fairly quick cook on a very hot grill and while it was pretty dark and a little charred on the outside, it was still very delicious and juicy. We ate at some very famous steak restaurants in town and definitely knew the difference between sublime and mediocre. Sidebar; have you ever squeezed a chunk of fresh lemon on a steak on the plate before eating it? There is a place in town here w a great ribeye where they always put a large slice of lemon on the plate and it makes it even more delicious, IMO. I also use a little salt and fresh ground pepper, I am crazy about black pepper on almost everything I eat. I remember being at the butcher counter w my dad once when I was in college, grabbing a couple steaks to take home and cook for dinner. I asked my dad, “how can you tell the best one to buy?” He answered, “You go out and make some money, boy. I’ll show you how to spend it.” ![]() He was a character. |
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Registered
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: outta here
Posts: 53,370
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I've never used lemon on a steak but I've used lime a fair bit. It's something I've learned from studying Mexican cuisine and you can also find it occasionally in some parts of Europe. I use mostly the zest and I will admit that I do use a lot of lemon zest in other dishes.
I will often pan fry a skirt steak. I will rest it for at least an hour before cooking it and prior to putting in the pan I will salt it and squeeze some lime juice over it. I will let that sit for 10 or 15 minutes then it gets thrown into the pan long enough to get good color on both sides and get to about 110° in the middle. I remove it from the pan and let it rest, then I start a pan sauce with what's left. I will sauté some finely chopped garlic and finally diced anchovies, then deglaze the pan with about a quarter cup of water and when that becomes a sauce I'll throw in some finely diced green onion tops and pour the sauce over the steak. It gets finished with a little freshly grated lime zest. I agree about pepper. I consume vast quantities of it. |
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Platinum Member
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: Leave the gun. Take the cannoli.
Posts: 20,989
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Two Words: Sous Vide
https://www.seriouseats.com/2015/06/food-lab-complete-guide-to-sous-vide-steak.html
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The truth is that while those on the left - particularly the far left - claim to be tolerant and welcoming of diversity, in reality many are quite intolerant of anyone not embracing their radical views. - Charlie Kirk |
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Band.
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1983 SC Coupe 1963 BMW R60/2 1972 Triumph Tiger 1995 Triumph Daytona SuperIII |
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Navin Johnson
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Wantagh, NY
Posts: 8,801
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I wonder if things have changed that much for the worse? I haven't been to Lugers for about 5 years..
The Times Drops a Brutal Zero-Star Review on Peter Luger The Times article Peter Luger Used to Sizzle. Now It Sputters. Some other related articles: Self-Satisfied New Yorkers Swear They Hated Peter Luger All Along Peter Luger Responds to Zero-Star Review: Critics’ ‘Whims Have Changed’ Eater Critics Debate: Is Peter Luger Still Good?
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Don't feed the trolls. Don't quote the trolls ![]() http://www.southshoreperformanceny.com '69 911 GT-5 '75 914 GT-3 and others |
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Platinum Member
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: Leave the gun. Take the cannoli.
Posts: 20,989
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Quote:
More specifically, I've been to PL, was not impressed considering the cost. If I was in the city wanting a steak, I'd probably go back to Old Homestead.
__________________
The truth is that while those on the left - particularly the far left - claim to be tolerant and welcoming of diversity, in reality many are quite intolerant of anyone not embracing their radical views. - Charlie Kirk |
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Registered
Join Date: Dec 2001
Location: Cambridge, MA
Posts: 44,368
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Quote:
Date and I went to one of Boston's best restaurants, Ocean Prime. I'll spare all of the (many) details of how the night was subpar, but I was literally astonished at the $70 bone-in ribeye placed in front of me, ordered rare with a very hot sear. It was supposed to be prime, it was certainly choice, and whoever butchered it left the silverskin in between the cap and the eye. It looked like it had been thrown on a flat top griddle at the local diner and let sit there a few minutes. It was sent back. And the whole experience was closer to Applebee's than a top tier restaurant. This sort of thing seems to be happening more and more when I go out. ![]()
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Tru6 Restoration & Design |
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I see you
Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: NJ
Posts: 29,919
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__________________
Si non potes inimicum tuum vincere, habeas eum amicum and ride a big blue trike. "'Bipartisan' usually means that a larger-than-usual deception is being carried out." |
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Registered
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St Elmo's has been disappointing the last few times I've been there. It used to be that waiters had to be able to take a table of 7 people's orders, without writing anything down. Not the case any more. Also, I ordered green beans last time I went...they couldn't even be bothered to trim the ends (like they used to).
I went to a newer place in Indy earlier in the year...Tony's. Terrific meal, and FANTASTIC service. A week after I went, I got a thank you card in the mail from my waiter, thanking me for coming and that he hoped I enjoyed my ribeye.
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Registered
Join Date: Dec 2001
Location: Cambridge, MA
Posts: 44,368
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Quote:
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Registered
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: outta here
Posts: 53,370
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I’ll eat his, if he doesn’t want it.
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Registered
Join Date: Dec 2001
Location: Cambridge, MA
Posts: 44,368
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That was one the best steaks I've ever done. It was perfect.
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Tru6 Restoration & Design |
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I'm with Bill
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: Jensen Beach, FL
Posts: 13,028
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Pssst... go to Tampa and go to Berns.
It is an experience. They grow butcher and age their own beef. The place us decadent to the point of gaudy the evening will leave an impression on you. Fly into Tampa, spend a quick weekend. Go see the Dali museum in St. Pete. Make sure to get reservations about 6 weeks out. After going there, I have no desire to visit any other steakhouse. I have tried others. The Forge in Miami ( go to place for cocaine kingpins) Charlie's in Tampa and Ruth's Cris in Palm Beach. None come close to approaching the experience of Berns. After posting this. I need to book a trip over and hit up Berns. I feel a road trip coming on. ![]() Sent from my SM-G960U using Tapatalk
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1978 Mini Cooper Pickup 1991 BMW 318i M50 2.8 swap 2005 Mini Cooper S 2014 BMW i3 Giga World - For sale in late March |
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