Meat contains active enzymes called cathepsins, which break down connective tissues over time, increasing tenderness (a fact that is demonstrated to great effect in dry-aged meat). As temperature rises, these enzymes work faster and faster, until they reach 122 degrees, where all action stops. While our steaks are slowly heating up, the cathepsins are working overtime (in effect “aging” and tenderizing our steaks within half an hour). When steaks are cooked by conventional methods, their final temperature
is reached much more rapidly, denying the cathepsins the time they need to properly do their job
Wheattoast wrote:I've read about this in a lot of other places as well. Specifically remember Alton Brown talking about this on one of his shows. As preheating and searing with such a hot pan in my condo sets the fire alarms a-blazin' - I've pretty much reserved hard searing to my grill. I'm anxious to see how well this works. Will give it a shot this weekend for sure.
Wheattoast wrote:I've read about this in a lot of other places as well. Specifically remember Alton Brown talking about this on one of his shows.
eatchicago wrote:America's Test Kitchen recently piqued my interest with an alternative to this method. They took a thick strip steak, patted completely dry, and put it in a medium-low oven (275) for about 20 minutes (until the interior temperature warmed to just below 100 degrees) and then finishing with a sear on the stovetop.
Jay K wrote:eatchicago wrote:America's Test Kitchen recently piqued my interest with an alternative to this method. They took a thick strip steak, patted completely dry, and put it in a medium-low oven (275) for about 20 minutes (until the interior temperature warmed to just below 100 degrees) and then finishing with a sear on the stovetop.
What type of "cooking vessel" do you put it in for the oven - the same cast-iron skillet you're gonna sear it on later? Or do you have to "warm" it in one skillet, then heat another on the stovetop for the sear?
stevez wrote:I remember that episode as being the one where he debunked the whole sear-to-seal-in-the-juices method as bunk
trixie-pea wrote:Heston Blumenthal takes this low heat steak cookery to an extreme. He asks his readers to first quickly blowtorch their steaks with a powerful flame and then warm it in the oven for 30 hours
eatchicago wrote:I have the utmost respect for Chef Blumenthal, but I often feel like he's trying to win the award for "most unreasonable recipe".
MikeLM wrote:With regard to the smoke detector problem, a simple solution is to put a plastic baggie over the detector, securing it at the top with a rubber band.
eatchicago wrote:Has anyone used this technique and chosen it as their primary method for indoor steak cookery
Katie wrote:I prefer medium rare, so depending on how thick the steaks are and how close they are to room temperature at the start, I shoot for 20 minutes on the first side and 15 on the other, before removing the pan from the oven to get a final sear on the stovetop. My attitude toward cooking steak at home has improved enormously.


tatterdemalion wrote:I would still like to find a way to properly cook a steak indoors, in a small place with a dysfunctional fume-hood, without smoking out the place, but I'm afraid I'm at a loss.
trixie-pea wrote:I think I recall watching Jacques Pepin use this method to do a whole prime rib roast. I suppose if you're going to lay out that kind of cash for dinner, this style of warm'n'sear cookery seems like a sure fire way to not eff it up.
trixie-pea wrote:I tried the ATK method tonight, and it was indeed a very satisfying, and somehow more civilized way of preparing a steak....
trixie-pea wrote:I'm not sure if I thought it tasted more aged--it started aged, and in the end it still didn't really taste all that aged.