Honest thoughts ? Been trying to dial in my steaks. My seasoning always feels lacking. Reverse sear on stainless

by Subject-Director1480

23 Comments

  1. Razoreuphoric

    Feel free to add seasonings post cook. Some flakey salt after slicing goes a long way

  2. Rounders93

    Seasoning is a personal preference so try different ones until you get what you like. Steak looks great. I don’t season my steaks with a seasoning, I butter baste with fresh garlic and either thyme or rosemary.

  3. You’ve got the cook down. Just dial in the seasonings by adding a little at a time. You can always add more, but it’s a lot of work to remove.

  4. Free-Computer-6515

    The cook looks beautiful chef. Salt is love and fat is flavor. Just give ‘em a pinch after the cook if you aren’t happy and adjust for next time.

  5. That_Replacement6030

    Cook looks impeccable. I flavor my steaks with 24hr dry brine, then reverse sear, and after I take the steak off I melt some butter and let it cook with some thyme and rosemary and pour it over the steak. Delicious every time imo

  6. I actually gasped when flipping to the second picture. This looks unbelievable, great job dude.

  7. PoisonBones

    If you like blue cheese then put some crumbles on top when you let it rest. I do it from time to time and love it

  8. throwingbadthoughts

    Looks great. But pls let your steak resttttt

  9. bigcat7373

    Crust game could improve a touch. Making sure you’re completely patted dry and pan is ripping hot? A weight wouldn’t hurt either for even surface area contact.

  10. There is a science to adding salt before hand AT LEAST 30 MINUTES before cooking – look into that and dry brining.

    Also are you doing butter and garlic? Try that and cowboy butter

  11. StatementOfObvious

    My immediate honest thought is that the first photo looks like a rat (probably helped by the mouse in a car video I saw just before this). Beautiful job though!

  12. Awkward-Kiwi452

    Typical go to. Baste in pan with butter, fresh sliced garlic and rosemary sprig. Flavortown.

  13. Our lord and savior kosher salt and dry brine has entered the chat

  14. Objective_Warthog620

    Seasoning is a matter of preference. That said, you could adjust a few things pre-cook (that dry brine is pretty short even for short brines) or post cook (feel free to add flaky salt and more pepper in the end). Some of my guests prefer sauces so I’d do an au poivre, chimichurri, or maybe compound butter.