The Best Steak You Make at Home!!!
- 32 ounces steaks
- 2 ounces olive oil
- 2 ounces freshly cracked peppercorns (crushed but not ground to powder!)
- 4 ounces sweet butter
- 1 ounce cognac
- 4 ounces dark veal stock (something to keep in your freezer)
- salt and pepper
- Preheat the oven to 425 degrees F. Moisten the meat very slightly with oil, then dredge each of the steaks in the crushed peppercorns to thoroughly coat.
- Don't be shy with the pepper.
- Heat the remaining oil in the skillet over high heat.
- Once the oil is hot, add 2 ounces, which is half of the butter.
- Place the steaks in the pan and brown on all sides, about 5 minutes per side.
- Transfer the pan to the oven and cook until desired doneness, about 5 to 7 minutes for rare, 10 minutes for medium rare, and so on.
- Remove from the oven and remove the steaks from the pan to rest.
- Have I told you yet to always rest your meat after cooking?
- I've told you now.
- DIRECTIONS FOR SAUCE.
- Return the skillet to the stovetop and carefully stir in the Cognac.
- As much fun as it is to create a column of flame as you add flammable material to an incredibly hot pan, it's not really desirable or necessary especially in a home kitchen.
- Unless you're a pyromaniac, I recommend carefully adding the Cognac to the still-hot pan off the flame, stirring and scraping with the wooden spoon to get every scrap, every peppercorn, every rumor of flavor clinging to the bottom of the pan.
- Now place the pan on the flame again and cook it down a bit, by about half.
- Stir in the veal stock and reduce over medium heat until thick enough to coat the back of a spoon.
- Whisk in the remaining butter and season with salt and pepper.
- Serve immediately with French fries or sauteed potatoes.
- Note on searing: With any recipe that calls for searing meat and then using the pan to make a sauce, be careful to avoid blackening the pan; your sauce will taste burnt.
- Avoid by adjusting the heat to, say, medium high, so it will still sear the meat but not scorch the pan juices.
- But stoves and pans vary, so pay attention.
olive oil, freshly cracked, sweet butter, cognac, veal, salt
Taken from www.food.com/recipe/the-best-steak-you-make-at-home-349416 (may not work)