Let's talk salt, primal cuts, induction cooking and pan compatibility. Oh and we're going to cook RIBEYE.
summerizer
Ribeye reboot
- The episode opens with "John Wayne ate steak," the first line from Good Eats, and returns to the original ribeye lesson.
- Alton Brown no longer cooks ribeyes with the old cast-iron sear plus oven finish because modern induction gives him more repeatable heat control.
- The reboot is organized around the meat, the heat, and the method, because each variable changes the steak.
Meat selection
- Ribeye comes from the rib primal, a tender and flavorful area between the chuck and short loin.
- The farther a cut is from horn and hoof, the more tender it tends to be.
- Ribeye stays forgiving because its fat can protect it from mild overcooking and dryness.
- A ribeye is not a single uniform steak; each rib location changes the muscle mix.
- The eye is the longissimus dorsi, the cap is the spinalis dorsi, the complexus grows toward the chuck, and the small costarum adds only a few bites.
- A steak near the eighth rib gives a four-muscle, cap-heavy eating experience, while a steak near the tenth rib carves more uniformly.
Salt and drying
- Each side gets about a teaspoon of kosher salt 8 to 12 hours before cooking.
- The salt first pulls moisture from the surface, then dissolves into a micro brine that soaks back into the meat.
- The uncovered refrigerator rest, plus occasional turning, dries the exterior and builds a tacky pellicle.
- The pellicle improves browning and supports Maillard reactions when the steak hits the pan.
- A fan can shorten the drying window to about 6 hours by increasing airflow.
Induction heat
- Induction is used because it allows repeatable heat levels, using a 1-to-20 power scale in place of vague gas flames.
- Induction heats compatible pans through an oscillating electromagnetic field; the cooktop gets hot mainly from pan contact.
- A magnet test identifies useful induction cookware: stronger sticking means better ferrous compatibility.
- Cast iron works strongly on induction but stores heat and responds slowly.
- Aluminum fails the magnet game unless it has a steel layer.
- Nitrided steel is tough, slick, and induction-ready, but its dark surface hides pan-sauce color cues.
- Magnetic stainless steel gives enough induction response, faster heat control, and a bright surface for sauce cues.
Cooking method
- The recipe uses unsalted butter, fresh black pepper, beef tallow, shallot, crushed garlic, and thyme.
- The cold, salted steak gets melted beef tallow so it solidifies on the surface and holds pepper.
- The steak goes straight from the refrigerator to the pan without a counter warmup.
- Cooking starts at medium-high, about 75% power, with flips every minute for 6 minutes.
- Frequent flipping lets heat enter one side while the other side rests, building crust while protecting the center.
- The target is 122°F through the side, followed by lower heat and added time as needed for steak size.
- Edge searing covers the raw-looking meat along the sides of thick ribeyes.
Pan sauce and serving
- Peppery tallow leaves the pan after searing so burnt pepper does not dominate the sauce.
- Butter, thyme, shallot, and briefly cooked crushed garlic form the aromatic base.
- Garlic must stay pale because brown garlic quickly turns black and makes the dish taste burnt.
- Ice cools the pan and supplies water for a butter emulsion, giving a simple water-butter sauce.
- Bias slicing, butter sauce, and ribeye fat make medium doneness acceptable.
- The result is not ultimate prime beef; it is a choice ribeye made very good through control of meat, heat, and method.
References
- [00:00] Good Eats Steak Your Claim Highlights — https://www.foodnetwork.com/shows/good-eats/videos/steak-your-claim
- [10:07] CookTek — https://cooktek.com/