Ditto. Medium for me alsoFor me, I prefer my steaks cooked medium.
One of the juiciest steaks you’ve ever cookedMedium.
And I've been cooking more steak recently, and getting better at it. Some of the restaurants I go to seem to need a bit more practice though
Last week I bought a steak from Lidl. I only shop there for meat; it always seems good quality at a reasonable price, even if it’s pre-packaged. This one was beautifully marbled. I don’t see the point in buying steak that isn’t marbled -- it’s where much of the flavour comes from.
It was a fairly thick steak, so I cooked it in a pan. When I took it out and let it rest, I was worried I’d overdone it based on its internal colour. But it turned out to be one of the juiciest steaks I’ve ever cooked. The taste was absolutely divine.
Cooked it slowly at a medium heat. Then added butter to the pan, turned the heat down, and basted it with the butter.
One of the juiciest steaks you’ve ever cooked
and its taste absolutely divine. That is what I call a perfect steak![]()
Yum! Looks good!
Adding soy sauce to the pan near the end of cooking, I’m going to try …At first i thought I had cooked it wrong. Perhaps I should try to cook in 'wrong' more often?
When I said I cooked it on a medium heat, it was just based on how big the flame looked on my hob. The pan was still hot. Turned the flame down towards the end so as not to burn the butter I later put in the pan. I suppose if I were using someone else's pan, on someone else's hob, in someone else's kitchen, the steak would be different, and I would have to learn all over again. You get used to what you get used to.
I have been known to add soy sauce to the pan near the end of cooking, instead of butter, again turning the heat down. Add a bit of additional glaze to the glaze that is already on the steak, and it adds a different taste.
I've had a few disasters too.![]()
Love the flavor of grilled steakWe don’t eat red meat very often, but occasionally we’ll have ribeyes or a flank steak and we both like them medium rare.
I cook them in an iron pan, rubbed with olive oil and favorite seasonings. Sear each side so that any existing fat crisps, let them rest under a dome for 5 minutes, use the pan drippings and any released moisture from the steaks to make a flavorful au jus, and they’re perfect.
Sometimes too I’ll ask Ron to throw them in the grill. Nothing beats that flavor!