Peppercorn Steak
- 4 (8 ounce) steaks, good quality like top sirloin, ribeye, filet mignon, porterhouse, T-bone or 4 (8 ounce) New York strip steaks
- kosher salt
- 2 tablespoons grapeseed oil, canola oil or 2 tablespoons other high smoke-point oil
- 1 tablespoon freshly ground black peppercorns (more or less to taste)
- 14 cup finely chopped shallots or 14 cup onion
- 14 cup cognac or 14 cup other brandy
- 1 cup beef broth or 1 cup stock
- 14 cup heavy cream
- 14 cup finely chopped parsley
- Sprinkle salt generously over both sides of the steaks and let them come to room temperature, about 30 minutes.
- Heat the oil in a large saute pan over high heat.
- (Use a pan that can handle high heat.
- Cast iron works well for this or anodized aluminum.)
- When the oil begins to smoke, take the pan off the heat.
- Pat the steaks dry with paper towels (steaks brown better if they are patted dry first).
- Sprinkle with fresh ground pepper and place in the hot pan.
- Return the pan to the heat and turn the heat down to medium-high.
- Sear, without moving the steaks, for at least 4 minutes.
- Try to pick up a steak with tongs and if it comes clean, flip it and turn the heat down to medium.
- If it sticks to the pan, let it cook for another minute or two on that side.
- Set steaks aside and tint with foil.
- Cooking Note: Sear on one side on high heat and cook on lower heat on the other side.
- This way you get great flavor from the seared side and better control over how done you want your steak by cooking the other side more slowly.
- To Make the Sauce: Add the shallots and saute for 2 minutes.
- Add the brandy and as it boils, deglaze the pan by scraping the bottom of the pan with a wooden spoon (helps to have one with a straight edge) to dislodge all the browned bits.
- Once the brandy is almost cooked away, add the beef stock and turn the heat to high.
- Boil the sauce down until there's a noticeable trail when you drag a wooden spoon through the center of it (4-5 minutes).
- Pour in the heavy cream and resume boiling.
- Again, boil down until you can make that telltale trail from the wooden spoon.
- Turn off the heat and add the parsley and adjust with salt and pepper, if needed.
- Pour the sauce over the steaks.
sirloin, kosher salt, grapeseed oil, freshly ground black, shallots, cognac, beef broth, heavy cream, parsley
Taken from www.food.com/recipe/peppercorn-steak-498846 (may not work)