Miss Mimi wrote:iblock9 wrote:jpeac2 wrote:I always question how much salt though, what does it take to over-salt?
I asked Chef Miller how he seasons his steaks, he said "Kosher Salt, thats it" and he meant lots of it. I asked him how much salt was too much and he said that there was no such thing. He simply brushed the excess salt off the steak before it went on the grill. He proceeded to serve me the best steak I had ever tasted. I have tried his method of "oversalting" at home and have had varying degrees of success. i think the key is getting most of it off before the meat hits the grill so that you dont get an oversalted flavor. when done right the meat is just soooo tender.
That reminded me of
this blog post. I read it a while back, and was intrigued, but haven't had a chance to try it yet. Maybe I will now that grilling season is upon us once again.
After a round of Passover shopping on Monday (more for interesting gluten-free items than for religious reasons), we stopped at City Market on Devon. They had some choice ribeyes on sale. We don't normally like ribeyes because of the intensive fat. Sure, it tastes like heaven, but neither of us like to eat a lot of fat, so we spend so much time removing it that we don't do much eating. For some reason, I thought I'd buy them.
I started to salt them and had a temporary memory loss - salt and sit? or salt and cook immediately?
Of course, I came to LTH (I did make a stop at Cook's Illustrated on the way) and found this thread. The blog listed above made salting sound so much fun, I had to try it. I salted, we went for a walk, came home, rinsed, and threw them on the grill.
Wowsa! They were great. The taste was superb and Mr. Views loved the salty taste. To me is seemed quite different from a brine, as the saltiness wasn't throughout (they were 2" thick steaks) and seemed somehow more intense and meatier tasting where it was deposited. They were heavily marbled with a thick core of fat that wasn't too hard to spot and remove; as to be expected with such marbling, the steaks were very tender, full of flavor, and were very juicy. I removed the core of fat first, then sat there nibbling at the steak left on the edges, as one sometimes does with a bone. When finished, my face was greasy along with my hands and shirt and I was extraordinarily satisfied.
I will definitely do this again.