Anonymous wrote:Good meat only needs a little salt and maybe pepper, and ONLY AFTER you cook it never before like many dumbdumbs do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good meat only needs a little salt and maybe pepper, and ONLY AFTER you cook it never before like many dumbdumbs do.
You can absolutely salt steaks before you cook. And you should.
Agreed. It's pure nonsense that you should never salt your steak before you cook it.
Good meat only needs a little salt and maybe pepper, and ONLY AFTER you cook it never before like many dumbdumbs do.

Anonymous wrote:Bring the raw steak to room temp first so it cooks evenly. I salt both sides, leave it on the counter for 2-3 hours, and then sear for ~4-5 mins each side using a hot cast iron (can be longer if steak is thick). I use a thermometer to check temp. Once it hits 125 I take it off. Let it rest for 10 mins.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I finally achieved steak house quality steak at home with a sous vide, reverse sear on a cast iron pan and butter,
You just ruined that steak by cooking it in plastic. Ugh.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good meat only needs a little salt and maybe pepper, and ONLY AFTER you cook it never before like many dumbdumbs do.
You can absolutely salt steaks before you cook. And you should.
Agreed. It's pure nonsense that you should never salt your steak before you cook it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good meat only needs a little salt and maybe pepper, and ONLY AFTER you cook it never before like many dumbdumbs do.
You can absolutely salt steaks before you cook. And you should.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good meat only needs a little salt and maybe pepper, and ONLY AFTER you cook it never before like many dumbdumbs do.
You can absolutely salt steaks before you cook. And you should.
Of course you "can". You "can" also drag it in the dirt before cooking. Don't recommend either myself.![]()