Steak Diane | Gordon Ramsay
Gordon Ramsay's recipe for traditional steak Diane from the Cookalong Live 70s themed menu.
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4 Butter Basting Mistakes to Stop Making
4 Butter Basting Mistakes to Stop Making
Butter basting has 3 primary benefits:
1. More even cooking as the hot butter cooks the steak from all sides
2. Distributes the flavor and aromas of the basting ingredients (butter, garlic & herbs)
3. The browned butter deepens the crust for better flavor
My goal in this video is not to over complicate butter basting, rather a few things to think about (at the end of the day it doesn’t always have to be perfect). Here are some additional tips:
How hot should the pan be initially?
I let the cast iron preheat on high for several minutes until it’s just starting to smoke, then add avocado oil. If the oil starts smoking like crazy, take the pan off the heat for a bit, you want the oil close to its smoke point but not excessively hot.
How hot should the pan be when adding the butter?
It should still be very hot. If you add enough butter, it will naturally cool down the pan. If it’s burning, turn down the heat or just remove the pan from the heat for a minute while basting.
Do I always butter baste?
I only baste with thicker steaks, about an inch or more. If it’s too thin, the steak will already be done by the time butter should be added. My only priority with thinner steaks is getting a good crust before over cooking the inside. In this case all you need is oil and a really hot pan, flipping frequently.
How often do you flip?
Let the steak start to develop a good crust initially. I press down on the steak for better contact with the pan, and let it spend about a minute on each side. Once the crust is on its way, start flipping frequently. This is key for an evenly cooked steak.
When is the steak done?
Butter basting is a high heat cooking process, so the carry over will be way higher than something like a reverse sear. If the steak is dry aged I pull at 105F, if not dry aged around 110F. By the time you slice, the steak should have reached medium rare (130-135F internal).
Let me know any other questions in the comments!
#butterbaste #butterbasting #butterbasted #howto #tutorial #cookingtutorial #butter #mediumrare #steak #cooking #learnwithme #learning
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Bacon Wrapped Stuffed Pork Tenderloin – Bruno Albouze
Learn how to prepare, stuff, wrap and bake pork tenderloin in bacon. An elegant and flavorful dish for your holidays, family gatherings and coming up parties! ????
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Beef Tenderloin
Smoking a whole beef tenderloin is an elevated classic dish that my family thoroughly enjoys, especially during the Holidays. It just feels like you are enjoying one of the best, most tender meats ever. I start off with an English mustard slather that is inspired by the classic preparation of a Beef Wellington. In this recipe and accompanying video we are going to reverse sear (smoke and then sear) the tenderloin, so we get a smoked element, but also the amazing taste from the char of a great sear.
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Welcome to the official Meat Church BBQ YouTube channel! Meat Church is a global lifestyle BBQ brand and has one of the largest social media reaches in the world of outdoor cooking. The unique brand offers some of the most popular craft BBQ seasonings, apparel, recipe development & live fire cooking instruction around the world. Matt Pittman is the pitmaster and the founder of Meat Church BBQ. He is an expert and respected authority on outdoor cooking. Students travel from around the world to attend BBQ schools in his private outdoor kitchen. Make sure to subscribe and enable ALL notifications!
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V-ZUG Recipe: Veal loin with braised tomatoes and risotto
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Homemade Demi-Glace
To call this classic sauce base kitchen gold would be to overly flatter gold. Thanks to Squarespace for sponsoring this video! Go to Squarespace.com for a free trial, and when you’re ready to launch, go to and add code “RAGUSEA at checkout to save 10% off your first purchase of a website or domain.
This is an adaptation of a recipe by Chef John at Food Wishes. See his original vid and subscribe to his channel:
Here's my Christmas dinner recipe that uses this stuff:
****RECIPE****
8-10 pounds chicken wings
5-7 pounds beef shank and/or oxtail
4 red onions, peeled and cut in half
2-4 tablespoons tomato paste
oil
water
ice cubes
Preheat oven to 400 F / 200 C convection (or 425 without convection). Oil a large roasting tray and put in the chicken wings. Oil another roasting tray or a rimmed baking sheet and put in the beef and onions. Roast both trays for about 45 minutes.
Remove the trays, and flip the beef and onions. Squeeze the tomato paste onto the chicken wings, and toss to coat them. Return the trays to the oven and roast them until everything is browned but not burned — about another 45 minutes.
Dump all the food and any juices into a large stock pot — at least 12 quarts. If any fond as developed on the trays, dry to deglaze it with some water and a wooden spoon, and add that liquid to the pot. Pour enough water in the pot to just barely submerge the ingredients.
Bring the pot to a bare simmer and hold it here for at least 12 hours, covered. Remove and discard the solids (no need to throughly strain at this stage), then bring the liquid to a boil and reduce the liquid by half, which should take about an hour. Transfer the liquid to a large bowl or other suitable container and add ice cubes until it's no longer hot.
Cover and refrigerate until all of the fat has risen to the top and solidified — overnight at least. If the fat still isn't solid, you can put it int he freezer for about a half hour — that should do it. Scrape all of the solid fat off the top and discard.
Return the liquid to the stock pot, bring to a boil, and reduce until it just achieves a syrupy consistency, stirring frequently once the liquid starts to get thick to keep it from burning. This could take up to two hours.
Let the demi-glace cool for a moment, then ladle it into ice-cube trays. You should get 32-48 cubes. Freeze them then transfer to a freezer bag. 1-2 cubes can be used to flavor and thicken enough pan sauce for 1-2 people.