The recipe said to leave it on high without touching for 7 minutes… how could it go so wrong

by justonefrog

28 Comments

  1. 😭 got a link to the recipe? I cook a lot of steak (I think that’s what this is 😂) and have never ever seen a recipe saying to leave it on one side on high for that much time. Typically you want to do the same exact opposite and flip every 30 seconds or so with high heat

  2. anonymous_subroutine

    You never cook ANYTHING on high, except boiling water.

  3. Most recipes give burner heats in terms of gas stovetops, not electric. Electric high is far hotter than gas. If you doubt me, ask the steak I atomized back in 2005 while filling my apartment with smoke.

  4. Salohacin

    Honestly thought they were oysters from the thumbnail. 

  5. Roscoe_P_Trolltrain

    house filling with smoke at the 4 minute mark, houseshold starting to panic.

    OP: HOLD!!!!!!

  6. electric_kool_AIDS

    Are those steaks? Pork chops? They look on the thin side. When it comes to cuts of meat, you can always check the doneness and go back to heating without an issue.

  7. Punch_Your_Facehole

    Did you go for a walk after putting them on?

  8. anonymousgamer

    I can’t follow how something gets that burned unless you set it and forget it. Just screams I set a timer and walked away and came back to prevent a house fire

  9. No clue what it was prior to sticking it into an F-22s engine at full afterburner… But it looks like either a below average steak or above average lung

  10. MyAssPancake

    So you know how to follow a recipe, but you don’t know how to cook.

    This is actually an important thing to realize. You take this experience, and next time use logic & wisdom to cook a better meal.

    Logic: meat comes in different shapes, thicknesses, sizes, cuts, etc. that means different cook times generally.

    Wisdom: I burnt it last time; maybe this time I should check on it at the 3-4 minute mark.

    Skills: using the wisdom and experience to be a better cook! It looks like it was well seasoned and tasty, if not burnt to a carbon crisp. Recipes are best followed perfectly when baking… when cooking meats, vegetables, basically anything else you want to be watching it cook.

  11. thefivetenets

    what are you cooking this over, mount doom?

  12. Notacat444

    OP, thank you for posting this. I’m thoroughly enjoying all the maniacs yelling at eachother in the comments. Better luck on the next steaks.

  13. entirecontinetofasia

    aye, I’m not sure where you are on your cooking journey but you have to get to a point where you trust your own judgement instead of the recipe. there are so many variables- what *exactly* is a medium onion, and what if you can only get the huge ones? how will you adapt?

    fwiw i would never leave a steak alone that long- i believe in frequent flipping (about every 30 seconds) and then doing the poke test verified by a meat thermometer. you’ll get there! every cook has fcked up something

  14. Reasonable_Plan_332

    You know you’re allowed to look at the food in those 7 minutes though, right?

  15. Creme_de_laCreme

    Vague descriptions of heat like “low, medium, high” are…well…too vague so I often just observe the objects being cooked to avoid incidents like yours. If it starts smelling a little…smokey…might be a good idea to intervene.

  16. When I cook steak (medium), I cook them for about 3-4 minutes medium heat and flip. Baste after flipping on a gas stove. 7 minutes hot without touching? damn…

  17. Globewanderer1001

    So, when it started burning and smoke filled the room, you thought, “well the recipe said leave it for another 4 minutes…..”

    Because, really?

    ![gif](emote|free_emotes_pack|flip_out)![gif](emote|free_emotes_pack|facepalm)

  18. thesun-isnotarealist

    Op, you’re allowed to to take it off the heat if it starts turning to charcoal, the recipe police aren’t waiting to arrest you

  19. fennek-vulpecula

    How did you not smell that?

    You should not leave your food when you dont want to burn down your house with that nose of yours.

  20. Overwatcher_Leo

    Your high is not the same temperature as the recipe makers high.

    It’s better to use your intuition for choosing the right setting on stoves. You know your stove better than anyone else.

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