MORE VIDEOS CHRIS. MORE VIDEOS FASTER CHRIS. I BUY THERMOMETER CHRIS.
@MadCityVL
Жыл бұрын
W comment
@jasonapplegate4352
Жыл бұрын
How much does it cost for these bad comments?
@MadCityVL
Жыл бұрын
@@jasonapplegate4352 less time than yours
@johnjohnson9431
Жыл бұрын
Funny. Good
@MrGlk
Жыл бұрын
@@jasonapplegate4352 $$$ but they aren't poor value if that helps
@miabussell0229
Жыл бұрын
This just in; local man finds excuse to eat like 15 steaks. Kidding! This is AWESOME! I love this type of A/B testing, something I think we would really only get so accessibly on the internet. You're doing good work and I love this!!!
@PhoenixRising-pc2fv
Жыл бұрын
I'm supposed to have an excuse? 😲
@MrModori
21 күн бұрын
Americas Test Kitchen, this type of A/B testing is their bread and butter.
@Itslvle
Жыл бұрын
Having lost my patience at all the bs in conventional cooking wisdom, seeing people actually test them is so nice. I always want to know WHY should I do X and how much it actually makes a difference and then I can understand when to break that rule.
@EvilPyromaniac
Жыл бұрын
but it still looks like bs. All these graphs were shown without experiments or sources. His experiment showed a significant difference only for 4 hours of tempering, which no one would do. I also bet that if the steak was flipped not once but many times, the grey border would be a lot narrower.
@ExaltedDuck
Жыл бұрын
@@EvilPyromaniac yes, on a skillet use medium-to-mediumhigh heat, high smoke point oil, flip every 90 seconds or so, and if you want to use butter, add in the last 3-5 minutes.
@JohnSmith-oe5kx
Жыл бұрын
@@EvilPyromaniac I take the steak out an hour before and have noticed much better results. And there is obviously a whole spectrum between flipping once and flipping every thirty seconds. Up to a certain point, the more flipping the better.
@leafster1337
Жыл бұрын
think of heating an ice cube to 100f compared to a cup of water exactly the same (pretend the water doesnt flow and move). u will melt much of the outside and heat a lot of it to 100f and still have a frozen core whilst the “cup” of water will warm up a bit more evenly having most of the layers towards the core not needing much energy to reach 100f. the ice cube has each “layer” needing substantial energy and the total needed energy for the whole cube needed to get to 100f is much more and the outer most layers will have been 100f or more for awhile while the core is just warming up. i hope that makes sense
@blitsriderfield4099
Жыл бұрын
There's a similar phenomenon in music composition. in a music degree you take multiple theory classes to learn the "rules" but every great composer knows that these rules only exist to know what rules to break and what effects breaking those rules will have. in essence, the rules exist to be broken. There are also a lot of people in the composition community that treat the rules as set in stone, but we've seen in music history what happens when the rules are set higher than they are supposed to be. you get the baroque period which lasted much longer than it really should have from the point of view of music evolution. We DID get back on track, but only because the evolutions of the classical period happened really quickly before transitioning to the romantic period.
@joeyrogerson83
Жыл бұрын
As someone who has cooked professionally for 20 years I'm going to dispel the idea that this is done in professional kitchens. I'm not saying it never is, but 95% of kitchens other than super high end, Michelin star/ James beard level slow dining restaurants have time to let their steaks sit out to come up to room temperature, it just isn't done. For health and safety reasons steaks are kept in refrigeration until an order comes in and immediately fired. The only extra time that may be taken apart from cooking is to let the steak rest at the end of the cooking process. We would love to have the time to temper steaks but in the commercial setting customers are generally far too impatient to get their food for us to have time to do so.
@Lumencraft-
8 ай бұрын
I can tell you for sure olive garden and golden corral don't do it.
@mrsmartypants_1
8 ай бұрын
Thanks. That’s what I assumed.
@toriless
8 ай бұрын
Yeah, home cooks rush it, steaks should rest on a rack for as long as it cooked. Probably 6-7 minutes but it depends on thickness.
@slain4ever
8 ай бұрын
i love waiting 4 hours for my steak
@rjsmith2007
8 ай бұрын
@@slain4ever Technically you waited all the years and time since you were born to get the steak you are about to eat. What's a couple of extra hours to have a really good steak?
@scottysquicciarini5935
Жыл бұрын
Fantastic video. I asked myself those question many times. Unfortunately tempering meat for 15 minutes in a professional kitchen is very impractical (no customare nowdays want to wait 30 minutes for a steak). So there is a better trick that gives you perfectly cooked steaks and no tempering needed. Instead of flipping the steak only once during cooking, flip it every 30-60 seconds. It seems counter intuitive but it allows each side to cook more gently as it keep cooking and resting consecutively instead of being exposed to a high temperature constantly for few minutes . You'll still get a beautiful browing on your steak and it will have a very even cooking through it.
@aaronb9630
Жыл бұрын
I just watched a video Chris posted 9 months ago where he details this. I'm really curious if an experiment like the one above could be run that compares the tempered steak done properly to one flipped consistently un-tempered, and if flipping rapidly has any effect on a separate tempered steak at all.
@adamcoe
Жыл бұрын
Or just reverse sear it like a normal human, problem solved
@jonc3519
Жыл бұрын
@@adamcoe takes too long in a restaurant.
@jonc3519
Жыл бұрын
Shit I just said the exact thing
@daniellocke4172
Жыл бұрын
I do this to the grill at work. Some times I noticed my steak cooking too fast or almost burning. So I learned to keep it moving.
@Neove989
Жыл бұрын
Hey Chris, I recently discovered your channel and I must say, I'm absolutely blown away by the quality of your videos. I ended up watching all of them at once! Your expertise in cooking a perfect steak and understanding the whole idea of temperature has taught me so much. I was surprised that you are the founder of Jouel, which happens to be one of my all-time favorite kitchen gadgets. I just wanted to express my gratitude for creating such exceptional content and kitchen tools that cater to home cooks and foodies like myself. Keep up the fantastic work!!!!
@ChrisYoungCooks
Жыл бұрын
Thank you for the kind words. Hope to get some new videos out soon.
@toriless
8 ай бұрын
Jouel? Sounds familiar, Is that the Sous Vide stick in Kickstarter? I think it is actually spelled Joule which is a unit of work or energy,
@TheDreamLeaf
4 ай бұрын
@@ChrisYoungCooks Hi Chris! I was hoping to get your clarification on something. Around 6:05 you mention to place the steak in lukewarm water. I noticced that the thermometer seems to be reading the water to be 71 Fahrenheit. Is that lukewarm water for you? Or is it meant to be warmer?
@valerief1231
Жыл бұрын
This really helps settle a difference of opinion my husband and I had. We’ve been married 13 years, and he’s cooked approximately 5 times for me, (he’s NOT lazy, but requires forearm crutches to stand and walk) but recently purchased a NICE grill. He went all out and when he wanted to let the steak “rest” BEFORE cooking and I was unsure about it. Now he can temper his steaks for a short while in confidence. I’m sending him your video now so he can say “ha haaaaa I was RIGHT!” Which up to this point has been about the same number of times he’s cooked 😂😋
@SansNeural
Жыл бұрын
Freeze frame at 5:32 ... He stuck the thermometer much closer to a pan-edge in the 15 minute and 4 hour tempered steaks. Inconsistent test conditions is not good science.
@anonymike8280
Жыл бұрын
@@SansNeural It's not hard science anyway. It's just a piece of dead cow.
@TheAllMightyGodofCod
Жыл бұрын
@@SansNeuralgood point and that would totally alter the cooking times, making the experiment well, worthless
@LS-fc7nx
Жыл бұрын
It’s always fun to take shots at your s.o when they are not around. Bad look btw
@darnit006
Жыл бұрын
@@LS-fc7nx I dont think you are reading the situation correctly. Shes sending the video to him so he can have the satisfaction of being right. And in all likelihood, he has also read the comment himself. Good look btw.
@oneanddonetzone3673
Жыл бұрын
As a matter of habit I always just left mine in the refrigerator until I was ready to throw it right on the fire. Really this was a survival technique as I’m easily distracted and I’m usually drinking copious amounts of wine when I decide to put flame to meat. This way I know at least some portion of the burnt morsel will still be pink. Good job nice video!
@conorobrien2712
Жыл бұрын
I really appreciate the inclusion of Celsius alongside the Fahrenheit when discussing temperatures. Fantastic content as usual.
@mcdouche2
Жыл бұрын
Chad Fahrenheit vs. Virgin Celsius
@beantown_billy2405
Жыл бұрын
The metric system brings nothing to the table
@PhantomFilmAustralia
Жыл бұрын
@@beantown_billy2405 And Fahrenheit brings inefficiency to the table.
@DISOPtv
Жыл бұрын
@@PhantomFilmAustralia F brings over 2x the gradient than C - 100c = 212f
@w.o.jackson8432
10 ай бұрын
It's pointless because steak is for Americans, Europeans can't even afford to heat their homes in the winter let alone eat meat. Fahrenheit all the way.
@RichardSkokowski
Жыл бұрын
Tip for speeding up tempering: Sit the meat in a room-temperature skillet for 15-20 minutes. Remember the "Miracle Thaw"? It was basically a slab of aluminum, and that is basically the same as an aluminum skillet. The skillet is just good at absorbing heat from its surroundings (air, counter top, whatever) and also good at conducting it to the meat.
@GrimK77
Жыл бұрын
basically a radiator
@EdwoodCA
Жыл бұрын
@@GrimK77 Yep. I was thinking: heatsink. But, I'm mixed up on the direction of higher to lower temps, haha!
@-303-
Жыл бұрын
@@EdwoodCA - think of it this way: take two objects, one of which is warmer than the other. The atoms in the warmer object are bouncing around more than the molecules in the cooler object. Just like bouncing balls can transfer their energy to balls at rest, heat transfers from more energetically moving molecules to those that are moving less. The “warmer” atoms lose as much energy as the “cooler” atoms gain. This is how heat transfer works. I hope that visualization helps you with a mental model of the “direction” of higher to lower temperatures. Cheers!
@maximkuleshov8852
11 ай бұрын
I think that's one of the reasons why cold steak doesn't work so well. When Chris says "While the pan was at the same temperature - a constant 375F for both of these steaks", I'm not sure it is true. The pan gets colder when we put a cold steak on it and we need to heat it up back as well. Probably on a grill the difference will not be as dramatic
@RichardNutman
11 ай бұрын
@@maximkuleshov8852absolutely correct. A big cold steak will suck heat out of the pan.
@apocryphgaming9995
Жыл бұрын
I was always taught "temper for about 20 minutes for a more even cook", but this is the first time I've seen it not just explained, but demonstrated. I probably won't risk the full 4 hours, but after seeing the 15-minute temper I can see why I was taught 20 minutes. It's a reasonable compromise.
@jiahaotan696
Жыл бұрын
My takeaway from the video was to use a dish to hold the steak when it's resting so the juices don't bleed all over my cutting board and soak in. And I get to use the meat juice for a pan sauce afterwards.
@toriless
8 ай бұрын
I use a grill / grid. I hate when I see so-called chefs put steaks on a cutting board to "rest", pure amateur idiocy. If you pre-season do the same and salt both sides.
@fsaldan1
4 ай бұрын
@@torilessWhy is it amateur idiocy. They are professionals.
@KatzenjammerKid61
Жыл бұрын
What a great explanatory video, thank you. As a classically trained cook I used this technique as a professional. I was ignorant until today that the term "tempering" is used. I was used to seeing it used in chocolate making - which of course makes total sense!
@toriless
8 ай бұрын
It goes snap in that case.
@hjewkes
Жыл бұрын
This is the second time youve brought up this aspect of thermodynamics and it continues to blow my mind
@ChrisYoungCooks
Жыл бұрын
Thermodynamics sets the rules for our world. Being able to think through the thermodynamics is kind of like having a super power.
@EKaneGrant
Жыл бұрын
I've worked 4 years for a major steakhouse casual fine dining franchise and we definitely don't "temper" the steaks.
@tomaskuchar9139
5 ай бұрын
Yeah, it's myth.
@UnderTheMillkyWay
Жыл бұрын
I'm one of those that I like to pull my meat out to get room temperature before I cook it only because that's what my grandmother taught me. She was the best cook to date so I listened even though when she was teaching me I didn't fully understand because I was still very young like 7 years old. It's good to see videos like that that show you why certain techniques are better.
@edjarrett3164
Жыл бұрын
Banquet cook. We presear our meats and temper them for firing. Whatever the party size is, we cook to medium rare in Combi ovens. We normally pull our proteins out an hour prior so they come up to a reasonable temp. Tempering makes a huge difference in quality of finished product. You are spot on why tempering makes a difference.
@ThorsMjollnir0341
Жыл бұрын
In heat transfer physics, the heat flow rate between two bodies (in this case the pan and the steak) is a function of the temperature difference between the two bodies. The cooler the steak, the greater the rate of heat transfer from the pan to the steak.
@ChrisYoungCooks
Жыл бұрын
Technically it’s the temperature gradient, which is why warming the surface makes a big difference even if the core only warms a small amount. This reduces the heat flux through the food, resulting in a more uniform gradient when cooked.
@nancybyrd2221
Жыл бұрын
Another excellent vid, Chris! I've always wondered if I was doing the right thing by tempering (because I DO temper all the proteins I cook) and now you've reinforced why! As a side note, cooked a ribeye the other night using the rapid flip method.....HOOOWEEE! Stunningly spectacular results so THANKS AGAIN!!
@stonewalljackson337
Жыл бұрын
Rapid flip has become my new favorite way to grill my meats...
@fvtown
Жыл бұрын
Lan Lam has an instructional video for a cold sear steak, which has worked reasonably well for me. It involves salting the day before, drying the steak, and then flipping every two minutes for the heat to come into the meat at a slower pace so as to avoid the uneven cooking and the grey band of overcooked stead. Any thoughts on this technique?
@danielriley7380
Жыл бұрын
I did my own experiment in a similar manner to prove 20 minutes isn’t long enough to be significantly different. A 1 1/2 inch sirloin starting 4.5C took 3 hours to reach a room temperature of 18C (England in winter folks!) For safety reasons I’d certainly recommend seasoning your meat with salt for the tempering period and also brushing with some cooking oil.
@bloodlove93
Жыл бұрын
salt it regardless of safety, always dry brine steaks.
@KatzenjammerKid61
Жыл бұрын
@@bloodlove93 Unnecessary steps - dries out the meat and over seasons it.
@dierandomdie
Жыл бұрын
@@KatzenjammerKid61 that is not at all true. Dry brining pulls moisture out and the meat pulls it back in. Don't use more salt than you need and you won't have an over seasoned steak.
@jonsher7682
Жыл бұрын
@@KatzenjammerKid61 Learn the science. While salt can be used to cure meet and dry it out, that is a process that takes weeks and months, not minutes or hours. Salting up to 24 hours of time does NOT dry out the interior of the steak at all; it only dries out the exterior -- which is precisely want you want to brown the steak and create a more robust Maillard reaction. Just make sure to salt steaks at least 45 minutes before cooking, because that's how long it takes for the salt to draw out some surface moisture, then be re-absorbed.
@danielriley7380
Жыл бұрын
@@KatzenjammerKid61 oh, I’m sorry. I thought my 14 years experience in curing meats as a butcher might count for something…
@thrasherdtmwtbr5915
Жыл бұрын
Thank you Chris! Your instructions have VASTLY improved my in house Steak cook for any steak. My Wife loves the 2 inch thick ribeye steaks with the reversed seared method. Three Cheers for you and your videos!
@ChrisYoungCooks
Жыл бұрын
🙏
@snapgab
Жыл бұрын
I feel like I pretty much always did this already, not on purpose but because I'm busy seasoning and cutting up vegetables and I leave the meat lying on the counter while I do that. But it's still good to know that this actually improves the cook of a steak and that I should be doing it on purpose!
@bertsteen2014
Жыл бұрын
The term you are looking for is Delta T. That’s the difference temp of the steak and pan. Thanks for the video. Never gave it much thought. Will be tempering from now on.
@Leto_0
7 ай бұрын
Delta T is usually the difference in time if you're working in math and science
@MBKill3rCat
Жыл бұрын
5:30 regardless of the evenness of the cook, you can definitely see that the untempered steak had by far the best crust on it, with the 4-hour tempered steak having barely any crust at all.
@DovidHorodny-dy6yi
Жыл бұрын
The graphics on these videos are always amazing!! So good to see the graph showing the visual gradient! Well done
@g1234538
Жыл бұрын
Great experiment Chris! I recall Kenji with SeriousEats had done this experiment and reached the opposite conclusion. As such, I'm curious if there are other factors at play in your setup. For example, another commenter mentioning the salt. Also, the water trick is very good for bringing frozen meat or cold eggs up to temp as well!
@ChrisYoungCooks
Жыл бұрын
Didn’t know Kenji ran the experiment, so can’t comment on why he reached a different conclusion. As I pointed out, it wasn’t until about 15 minutes that I started to get a meaningful difference as you can see in the video.
@phisgr
Жыл бұрын
Quoting Serious Eats: "After 1 hour and 50 minutes, the steak was up to 49.6°F in the center." "After two hours, I decided I'd reached the limit of what is practical"
@ChrisYoungCooks
Жыл бұрын
Yeah, then I got a different result. You’ll have to judge from the video yourself whether the 15-minute temper is visibly better than no-temper. To my eye, it was more evenly cooked. 🤷♂️
@phisgr
Жыл бұрын
I think the more important question is: does that even matter if you do constant flipping?
@ChrisYoungCooks
Жыл бұрын
It matters much less. They’re attempting to accomplish the same end, reducing the rate that energy flows into the steak.
@LebaneserScrooge
8 ай бұрын
I've never heard it called tempering. I've always heard it called "blooming". The best restaurants I've worked at always bloom for 2-4 hours (at 4 hours bacteria starts to build). And I was taught the reason for it is not even cooking, but to allow the fat to "bloom" and expand through the meat more. I love this channel. I've been a chef for 30 years and it's nice to learn the science behind all the things I've been doing my entire life.
@RobertPayne-q1i
Жыл бұрын
One way to get a more evenly cooked steak is to flip it three times while you're cooking. When the meat cooks it tenses up where the heat is being applied to. Flipping it (and letting each side rest a little while not under active high heat) allows the center to become more defined.
@juniper646
Жыл бұрын
kzitem.info/news/bejne/unym1IKfsZ9miag
@Chris-cv1yh
Жыл бұрын
That's an awful suggestion. Everyone who's works in a kitchen you don't touch the steak until it's ready to turn or flip. Moving it or flipping it any extra time produces a shit sear.
@RobertPayne-q1i
Жыл бұрын
@@Chris-cv1yh you're more than welcome to look in The Food Lab and/or try it for yourself. J. Kenji López explains it much better. There are plenty of ways to get that great sear regardless of how much you flip it. At least my 15 years of restaurant experience has taught me as much. It just takes a little knowledge and skill is all.
@synocrat601
Жыл бұрын
My grandmother tempered her steaks by pouring boiled water into one of her cast iron pans to get it warm and then added the seasoned steak to it, letting sit for about half an hour covered with foil and then flipping it with a fresh pour of hot water to the pan in between. This was 30 years ago.
@JimNortonsAlcoholism
Жыл бұрын
Oh my God. She was boiling the steaks. Disgusting
@ND-er1bo
Жыл бұрын
Tempering just seems like an extremely inefficient way to let a steak come to room temp. I'm wondering why you weren't using the constant flipping technique that you demonstrated to be superior in this video? Since using that technique I have had no issues with cooking steaks straight out of the fridge.
@timrushing81
Жыл бұрын
Exactly. This wasn't the only issue I had with his experiment, too. It's pretty obvious looking at the sears that both steaks had that the colder steak had had more cook time total vs the tempered steak. Typically, you see cooks finish a pan seared steak (especially as thick as the ones he had) with a basting of butter, which allows the steak to be heated quicker because the whole steak is being heated at that point. The butter also heats it at a lower temperature than the direct contact with the pan surface, which is much much higher temperature. It's the high temperature of the pan for such a long cook time that causes the large gray bands. This experiment is bad because it doesn't even consider other cooking methods, like how nice steakhouses would normally do which is sear in the pan then finish in an oven. Honestly, there's so many variables which he didn't account for, that I'm honestly pretty disappointed.
@flolwaq
Жыл бұрын
I can imagine him not using these techniques this video, exactly because they diminish the effect of tempering when using them. After seeing this video, I could easily grasp how tempering works and could see clear differences between steaks that have been tempered or haven't been tempered without making it too complicated for the experiments sake. I can imagine the techniques working, but you would probably still have more grey band on an untempered steak using the constant flipping technique, or basting it. What I do agree on is that he could have at least mentioned those techniques like he did with sous vide and reverse searing
@smoll.miniatures
Жыл бұрын
Yeah Heston uses the constant flipping technique also.
@leafster1337
Жыл бұрын
@@timrushing81 u just artificially make a normal steak “thicker” and must compensate…while u could use such superior methods on a tempered steak achieve better results, right?
@DavidWMiller
Жыл бұрын
@@leafster1337 Yeah, this is useless. I'm all for being consistent for a controlled experiment to make a point, but what good is that point is if you don't even use the method that you would actually use when cooking? Flipping is like accelerated tempering while you cook. Gives time for heat to work it's way in and come down a bit before hitting it again. He's explained why it works himself, and those same arguments apply to this scenario.
@yellowdog2181
Жыл бұрын
I tempered a roast recently and it blew mind how well it turned out. I wish my mom knew about this when I young her roasts were well let’s just say they were rough
@pantopia3518
Жыл бұрын
One thing that's important to consider is that professional chefs use much thicker steaks normally. A lot of these tips from professionals on how to cook steak(temper, constant flipping) only work on steaks an inch thick or more. I've been able to cook a steak from the supermarket medium rare with a beautiful crust only by completely disregarding the advice from chefs and cooking it on the absolute highest heat I can straight from the fridge and only flipping it once, I don't even have time to baste. As soon as the crust is good enough it's done inside
@fr201
Жыл бұрын
Stop buying 1/2" steaks.
@tdtommy196
Жыл бұрын
100%! Even if it's an inch and a half, this is absolutely fine. They make such a big deal about that little grey band. I guarantee that if I took 2 1 1/2 inch cuts of ribeye from the same roast, and put one in the pan right from the fridge, and the other sat in a bag in luke warm water for 15 min before it went into the pan, then blindfolded you and asked you to pick which was which, you CANNOT tell.
@yummychips_
Жыл бұрын
@@fr201 Why? people should eat how they want to eat. My family hates souvide and medium rare. Most people don't like medium rare, they just say it because of steak purists who tout it as better, along with the 1 inch minimum bullshit to. Surprise, surprised, did you know that most beef is ate with seasoning beyond just salt, pepper, and garlic? No? Then don't tell people what to buy or not buy, if you don't know jack shit.
@paulpeterson4216
Жыл бұрын
My process is to season the meat a couple of hours before cooking, and putting it into the refrigerator. That leaves the salt to pull the moisture to the surface and let the surface dry. It takes about an hour to get the moisture to the surface and another hour to get it dry. The dry surface is vastly more important for the crust than any other consideration. Depending on the weather, tempering the meat for an hour or four may leave the surface wet. Cooking very hot will give an excellent crust and will not overcook anything more than the outside of the steak. The remaining heat will penetrate and cook the interior relatively evenly. Tempering is fine, if the humidity is low and you have several extra hours; but chefs, are in professional kitchens and they are not waiting for 15 or 20 minutes, let alone 4 hours, for meat to "temper" before they cook it and serve it.
@ryanjay6241
Жыл бұрын
Informative video. I've always noticed it's easier to cook a steak evenly when it's closer to room temperature but hadn't really though about it this much. I usually just take it out of the fridge around 30 minutes before I cook it - any longer than that and I get too hungry thinking about eating it.
@toriless
8 ай бұрын
That is actually too long for burgers, they get limp, 10 than form the shape than warm up the grill which takes 5-10 minutes.
@therationalanarchist
Жыл бұрын
I like the idea of tempering in water but if you are going to do that you might as well just cook it in the water sous vide and then just sear it at the end for the best results.
@ChrisYoungCooks
Жыл бұрын
Presuming a circulator is available, that’s not unreasonable.
@ChrisYoungCooks
Жыл бұрын
Presuming a circulator is available, that’s not unreasonable.
@danielriley7380
Жыл бұрын
I bodged a sous vide bath by placing a small cake rack at the bottom of a large sauce pan, keeping the water a medium-high heat (checking the temperature with a food probe and adjusting with water either from the kettle or the tap). The result was exactly the same as a sous vide bath but massively more labour intensive. Just buy a circulator.
@nofilter2091
Жыл бұрын
Really interesting, well thought out and executed video. I can tell you that my girlfriend does this and we battle all the time over it. My thinking (like the rest of the planet) was keeping the center cold would allow for more of a buffer zone. I'm going to say this out loud, but don't let her hear it- I WAS WRONG.
@DominicZelenak
Жыл бұрын
It is a well known fact that gradually heating a piece of meat will give you better uniformity. That's why people use reverse sear or sous vide. But you do not need to leave the steak outside of the fridge for several hours to get this result. Many cooks and chefs have proved that it does not improve the quality of the cook. Doneness uniformity is totally dependent on the way you cook it. I've cooked reverse sear and sous vide steaks with LESS uniformity than charcoal grilled steaks that use scorching hot heat. Even cooking, in my opinion, is far more important than simply letting the steaks sit in 70F air for hours.
@Lithilic
Жыл бұрын
Tempering in tepid water seems like a nice solution for the time and inefficiency it takes to warm them sitting on the counter (not to mention the food safety concerns). I'll have to try it out.
@tvviewer4500
Жыл бұрын
Eat raw meat
@alexblaze8878
Жыл бұрын
Go with sous vide, it’s he only way I’ve found to get my steaks to perfect medium rare all the way through.
@mgntstr
Жыл бұрын
food safety lol! millions upon millions of people eat meats butchered on cross contaminated chopping blocks, are hung on hooks washed with sewer water and are displayed in the open air at 20-40c temperatures for hours and hours for centuries without any issues what so ever
@MrSoarman
Жыл бұрын
It's all about conduction, a cold steak is cooked 2 min, flip, 2 min flip, 2min flip, 2 min flip, the steak will be gold crust, and a beautiful med rare ALL THE WAY THROUGH.
@MarcDoughty
Жыл бұрын
Great video. Two things come to mind: Cooking causes phase changes and chemical reaction, and those require input of heat, not just changing the temperature. It's the difference between bringing water up to 210 and actually boiling it. That's one reason why tempering helps, you're getting rid of one phase change in some of the fat, and making the rest easier to accomplish. The other is that tempered meats are going to be more pliable and have more surface area in contact with the cooking surface. More even heat application. Think of how hard it would be to cook a tortilla chip vs. a soft tortilla. Tempering makes the meat flexible and puts more in contact with the pan. Also helps prevent bigger temperature gradients which will 'curl' the meat down towards the edges, where there's less to dissipate it. I'm sure we've all cooked a cold steak or burger that ends up with a ring of char along the edges and none in the middle.
@keving7773
10 ай бұрын
if you already have a sous vide but want to grill it. simply put it on the sous vide at 75 degrees for 20minutes and you're good. No need to wait 60-180 minutes to temper
@barrywise7185
Жыл бұрын
Absolutely loved the graphics at 3:40 to show viewers what it looks like inside the steak due to Newton's Law of Cooling in regards to thermal conductivity. Well done.
@palco22
Жыл бұрын
Someone has to say it so I'll say it. My mom, rest her soul, would always take out the red meat from the fridge one half hour before putting it in the pan and a bit less time for chicken. For frozen meat she would immediately wrap it in aluminum foil and put it in the fridge in the morning the take it out one half hour before cooking. Why ? I never asked so I will never know. ... yes I did too, years ago but since the kids are gone we don't do that anymore. Being a much older couple we don't eat as much now. We rarely temper our oatmeal ! ! ! Always a great video !
@curtisbme
Жыл бұрын
So leave your steak out for 4 hours.. you I don't know, just suis vide them? These type of things all feel like "Here are a bunch of tricks to try to get close to suis vide even doneness" Think I'd just fire up my Joule. ;-) I would think that, aside from the warm bath, a heat defuse/defrosting plate would be a better way to go than just leaving it on a standard plate or cutting block to temper.
@MarcEsadrian
Жыл бұрын
Very useful information. I like the warm water technique a lot: cuts down on time and keeps the meat sealed.
@crazymk6
Жыл бұрын
What a great video. Like your initial thoughts I always assumed that starting with a colder steak was the way to go. Truly spectacular info.
@toriless
8 ай бұрын
No, but that works for meatballs in a sauce.
@rudolphvanthoff1391
Жыл бұрын
My trainer (mum) showed me cooking 20-30 seconds per side until cooked as desired. I recently tried allowing the steak to warm a little (maybe 20 minutes) to not fridge temp! I think turned on the heat, allowed butter to start melting and wiped it around the pan. Then put the steak in as per my mother’s instruction…. Worked beautifully. The pan and constantly flipping meant the tempering continued and the heat was constant on both sides resulting in a well browned, evenly cooked to just under medium and tender to eat sirloin steak
@andrina118
Жыл бұрын
Your science-y approach is bang on. Like Kenji, Ethan C et al, your scientific method combined with food knowledge is a winner! Thanks man
@isabelleblain6263
8 ай бұрын
Last year I took a cooking MasterClass and the Chef kept repeating to temper meat, even chicken (though for a shorter period of time). I have been following this advice since. Thank you for confirming through your experiment.
@adamcoe
Жыл бұрын
That was definitely an eye opener and I was surprised that even a 15-20 min hangout on the counter would make that big a difference. I'm not sure I'd be wicked into leaving chicken out that long but most of the time I'm reverse searing chicken anyway so likely not a huge deal. Great test!
@BernStoogin
Жыл бұрын
For sure isn't worth it to temper chicken. You don't want it reaching 40° for any amount of time, and it needs to be cooked 155°-165° anyway so there is a 10° buffer between safe and overcooked
@addammadd
Жыл бұрын
lol reverse searing chicken
@cosmicraysshotsintothelight
Жыл бұрын
I have seen chicken sit in display cases out in the front of the store in the morning sun in Tijuana, Mexico. But I do not think our immune systems is as good as theirs... apparently. Nasty. Every time I ever ate when I was down there I got sick.
@vdd1001
Жыл бұрын
@@cosmicraysshotsintothelight yeah chicken is something very dangerous in terms of pathogens
@snapgab
Жыл бұрын
The health risk of leaving chicken out on the counter for 20 minutes is at worst negligible.
@beernmetal6964
Жыл бұрын
I've put a couple of steaks between two cast iron skillets to speed the tempering. Aluminum is a great heat sink too if it has a lot of surface area like a full or half sheet pan.
@jonathanbradley2056
Жыл бұрын
I’m genuinely curious to see what it would look like when you normalize the two results on cooking time to achieve the same internal temperature? What was the variable difference to reach True Core temp between the two steaks? And did that have a variable difference on the crust, in these visuals it did indeed look like the crust of the cold steak was more browned than that of the tempered. Furthermore, was steaming taken into account in this experiment, I imagine a vast amount more moisture would be held in the cold steak versus the tempered steak, would you not agree? And if so, as a cooking expert, you know that a considerable amount of steaming in a pan leads to the greying of meat, rather than allowing for Maillard browning, but doesn’t necessarily correlate with a more well-done toughness of meat but less visually presentable product.
@virtuous-sloth
Жыл бұрын
I warm my steak (after seasoning, before grilling) using the soften-butter setting on my microwave multiple times over a half an hour. The setting is *very* gentle and the time between runs allows less-cool/warm spots to spread out. It's quicker form of temper and I always thought of as a lazy half-sous-vide. I sous-vide and reverse-sear on other occasions.
@seangdenver3547
9 ай бұрын
Microwave. Someone call the police
@bullethelldemon
Жыл бұрын
could you do a video on if butter basting a steak while cooking actually makes it taste more buttery? and perhaps explore different methods of applying the butter, like cooking the butter alone with herbs while the steak rests and pouring it on after. i would love to see an objective approach from you on the subject
@jeweltorkelson
Жыл бұрын
I'd settle for butter baste vs butter resting vs butter injecting
@Un1234l
Жыл бұрын
Pretty sure Guga already tried this. Guga Foods. Sous Vide Everything.
@bullethelldemon
Жыл бұрын
@@jeweltorkelson yes, all great ideas!
@bullethelldemon
Жыл бұрын
@@Un1234l oh im a massive guga fan! i've seen all his videos and hes one of my favorite food channels (well, two channels i guess haha). but guga isnt exactly scientific about his methods, which i honestly love about him. it would just be cool to see a different approach thats a bit more of a controlled and considered approach to the question using food science :)
@Un1234l
Жыл бұрын
@@bullethelldemon Surprised you say that about Guga. His experiments have been very controlled using thermometers and precise temperature control and same cut on the same cow.
@HelloAndyTung
Жыл бұрын
Always love the videos! Even paced instruction/education that doesn't bore or is distracting. Great Video Chris!
@putumban96
Жыл бұрын
Hi Chris! Great video! However, are you sure that your results aren't due to the excess water pulled from the cold steak since the salt was just applied and would draw out moisture? I'm not fully sure if this affects your experimental setup, but evaporation of water requires magnitudes more energy compared to heat conduction. To me it seems like the 4 hour steak would have more time to dry-out and this would affect the amount of energy that gets transfered into the meat, which in turn might explain the difference in results.
@CoolJay77
Жыл бұрын
Meat is around 75% or so water, when you dry brine, you would see a relatively small amount of water inside the container that holds the steak. I doubt that it would play a significant factor.
@putumban96
Жыл бұрын
@@CoolJay77 Just to clarify, im not saying that the steak itself will be significantly dryer. Just that the salt will pull out moisture on the steaks surface which may affect the cooking process due to excess steam production. However, I'm not sure if the excess steam will contribute to more or less heat transfer. My guess is more, and this might explain why the edges get overcooked quicker.
@Prexow
Жыл бұрын
@@putumban96 After about 45 minutes or so the water is reabsorbed into the steak, see Kenjid article on salting steaks
@CoolJay77
Жыл бұрын
@@putumban96 The water on the surface of the steak would dissipate within seconds as it comes in contact with the hot pan. By your reasoning, you could spray water to the surface of the steak.
@putumban96
Жыл бұрын
@@CoolJay77 Yeah i might be incorrect here, you and @prex both raise good points. It's just that salting/seasoning the steak adds another confounding factor to the experiment, and I'm curious if this affects the results somehow.
@MarcesAurelius
Жыл бұрын
i find this is a good compromise - steak in cold carbon steel pan and cold oven, turn on oven to 200F, cook to 100F-115F (depending interest final temperature [after resting temperature [FRT]] and steak thickness, sear medium 90-120 seconds per side, eg oven-cook-to 100F with 1.25” Ribeye 130F FRT)
@gabelstapler19
Жыл бұрын
Fascinating! I think I and others have dismissed tempering due to the large temperature gradient between the pan and the steak (only about a 10% change going from 40F - > 375F vs. 70F->375F). But from the perspective of internal temp to finish temp, it's much more dramatic. Thanks as always!
@CoolJay77
Жыл бұрын
That makes sense, it is more about the internal temperatue, 40F to 125F, vs 70F to 125F
@donkiker
8 ай бұрын
I figured this out when I was 21 years old back in 1987. I ran a char grill for 2 years in a beach restaurant in Florida! The only steaks that came back were the dreaded well-done, and always frustratingly way over cooked steak!
@coachmcguirk6297
Жыл бұрын
If you get mad at the chef for not leaving out your steak before cooking it, would that be considered a temper tantrum?
@iamafractal
Жыл бұрын
I’ve been playing with variations on this method with pork chops. I found i really liked putting a pork chop into sous vide at 115f for about 10-15 minutes then turning the bath down to 100f then frying in a press-pan-with butter, salt and pepper, to 115f which Carries over to 140 or so…setting it to 100f and waiting 30 minutes also has been great. I’ve read all of mc and it has been very helpful for me for years, so it’s great to Glen more nuggets of knowledge from you, Chris. Thanks for everything!
@nicknssud
Жыл бұрын
Hi Chris thanks for the experiment. Just to add little, but maybe 4 hours to temper is a bit long. The FDA recommends, "Never allow raw meat, poultry, seafood, eggs, or produce that requires refrigeration to sit at room temperature for more than two hours; the limit is one hour if the air temperature is above 90 °F. (If you're not sure whether certain produce requires refrigeration, ask your grocer.)"😊
@ChrisYoungCooks
Жыл бұрын
Actual FDA food code allows 4 hours in the danger zone, which is why I used that as my limit. See see 3.501.19: www.fda.gov/media/164194/download
@farab4391
Жыл бұрын
yep, my grandad and my dad used to do this and I do it now, definitely the best way. what I'm shocked about is that you season the meat before cooking it. we never do this, because we strongly believe it makes the meat tougher. if you want to keep a lovely tender piece of meat as tender as you can, cook first then season. I specifically mean salt. If you want to put some pepper or garlic on before cooking that's fine, but salt goes on after. Maybe this could be your next test, but you have to start with two pieces of meat you're confident has the same tenderness.
@TheAutumnNetwork
Жыл бұрын
Dude your channel is absolutely amazing!! The information I'm learning from your vids is awesome and makes cooking so much more fun and enjoyable with great results. Amazing work!
@ricatiman
Жыл бұрын
I worked right at the BBQ style grated grill of a major restaurant in Whistler, as the Escargot guy - I also Tempered the steaks - we had a long wire shelf, almost a meter above the grill, 3 meters long and when an order appeared, I would grab the required cut of steaks and put them up at the far end of the shelf from the grill. The line of steaks was usually at least 25-35 steaks long, so they had plenty of time to warm up. It as fairly hot up on the shelf, (maybe 100F) but the Grill Chef would keep an eye on the meat. Generally they would sit out for an average 15 - 20 mintes before they hit the grill. When the order came off the grill, it was given the Snails if ordered, and placed on another shelf to the area where all the sides were added to the meat, and sent to service.
@briankronberg
Жыл бұрын
The grey is caused by steam. So the more important thing to do is dry brine your steaks (assuming they are not already aged) for at least 40 minutes prior to cooking. Ensure the surfaces are dry before searing.
@bostonbesteats364
Жыл бұрын
Chris, I sometimes pre-sear meat cold out of the fridge before sous vide cooking it (if I'm cooking it in a sauce, or it is easy to over cook during searing like a pork chop), sometimes combined with a post-sear to refresh the crust. The rational being that the meat being colder will minimize the grey band that forms during the brief pre-searing step. Am I wrong? Should I be doing the pre-sear on tempered meat?
@mahbuddykeith1124
Жыл бұрын
…Why are you pre-searing if you’re just going to sog it with sous-vide? Even if you do it again to re-crisp it, it’s just more work…
@bostonbesteats364
Жыл бұрын
@@mahbuddykeith1124 I explained that above, if you read my comment
@mahbuddykeith1124
Жыл бұрын
@@bostonbesteats364 Rhetorical question, Boston. Don’t bother with a pre-sear if you’re going to sous it. Sear after, because at that point it’s already well-tempered.
@bostonbesteats364
Жыл бұрын
@@mahbuddykeith1124 You are completely missing the point. Perhaps watch ChefSteps video today, which will explain it to you
@friedmule5403
Жыл бұрын
New trick many may not know is to use your kitchen sink, in most homes are the kitchen sink made of metal, such as steel, put your meat in a bag, lay it in the sink, the steel will lead the temperature out of the meet, even faster that if you use water. This trick can even be used for frozen meat, it is insanely fast, compared to most other methods. Another way is to heat your meat up on a skillet, pot or oven to less than what the meat needs to get done in the center.
@RickyWallace
Жыл бұрын
Interesting, Guga just did a video a few weeks ago saying he doesn’t temper since it only raised the temp a couple degrees over 30 mins or so. Curious if you find that difference more noticeable. May have to experiment myself…good reason to have a few steak nights. Thanks for the video!
@Epicloa
Жыл бұрын
Guga very often does a reverse sear though (even regarding his grill method) so it would still line up. Not much of a reason to do it with that method or sous vide.
@illtellulatta03
Жыл бұрын
In this video it says it was tempering for 4 hours. Obviously far longer than Guga's 30 minutes.
@digitalworkbench
Жыл бұрын
That's because Gugu didn't have the balls to let a steak sit out growing bacteria for four hours before cooking it.
@Boyetto-san
Жыл бұрын
It may also make a difference that Chris here is only flipping the steak once, whereas Guga always does the constant flipping method. That may by itself already help overcome at least some of the need for tempering the meat by preventing the sides from developing as sharp a gradient during heat transfer.
@ChrisYoungCooks
Жыл бұрын
So, I haven’t watched Guga’s video yet. But as you can see in the second half of my video, there is a noticeable difference at 15 minutes. I also say I don’t recommend more than 4 hrs, and I specifically choose this number because 4 hours is the FDA Food Code limit for time without refrigeration. Finally, the amount of warming at the core doesn’t actually matter as much as how much the surface warms up. The flow of heat from the pan into the steak is controlled by the temperature difference between the pan and the surface of the meat, so warming the surface reduces how quickly energy flows into the steak, resulting in a shallower temperature gradient. I cover this in more depth in my frequent flipping video.
@grasshoppasstuff8752
Жыл бұрын
Another option; put your steak on a cooling rack in the oven with the light on for an hour or 2. It'll both dry out the steak and provide a warmer environment than your average kitchen. You can also use this method for the bulk ferment for doughs.
@JimNortonsAlcoholism
Жыл бұрын
And grow bacteria on the surface
@hizzeist
Жыл бұрын
I'd be interested to see the same experiment with constant flipping
@phisgr
Жыл бұрын
My thoughts exactly. With constant flipping, the extra heat can move towards the cold centre or dissipate into the air, instead of overcooking the grey band. If the steak is even enough with constant flipping, the video is a moot point.
@johnvrabec9747
Жыл бұрын
I grill on my Weber kettle. I salt the steaks with kosher salt and put them on an open rack and pan in the fridge for a few hours before grilling. When I'm ready, I fire up the oak coals which take ~35 mins to ash over, and pull my steaks out at that time. The ion exchange of the salt is done, I lightly coat all sides of the meat with olive oil, then season with garlic powder and fresh cracked pepper. I use a small amount of mesquite, pecan and hickory chips on the coals and grill until internal 125. Pull and rest and they are phenomenal.
@johnvrabec9747
Жыл бұрын
Just to be clear I pull the steaks ou t when I start the coals so they begin tempering then for about a half hour. The internal rises about 3 or 4 F°.
@Sveakungen
Жыл бұрын
Once again you tell us the reality of things not the "facts"! Thx
@ExaltedDuck
Жыл бұрын
15-20 minutes on the countertop, season right away, then go get cooking instruments ready. If you're cooking on a skillet like this, just bring the heat down by about 10-20% and flip every 90 seconds or so until done, rotating around to avoid burning oil and fond to hot spots. You'll be amazed at how even it is in the end, and how much deeper and flavorful the crust is. If they're going on a grill, build the fire to one side, and start the steaks on the other (and season before/ temper while building the fire) Keep your chamber temps between about 225-275F, and flip/twist every 4-5 minutes. Should take 20-30 minutes to get to medium rare, then straight over the fire a minute or two to brown. Guaranteed - will be some of the best steaks you've ever had. Edge-to-edge doneness almost as perfect as sous vide but with that subtle hint of smokiness and extra tenderness you can only get from CO and NOx in choked combustion...
@philipps4322
Жыл бұрын
But the real question is, who cooks their steak in a pan and only flips it once? Flipping often after you have established a nice crust on both sides, makes a steak straight from the fridge cook just as evenly as your 4h tempered one 😅 Establish crust on high heat, reduce to medium and cook until medium rare while flipping as Many times as you like
@EnterTheFenix
Жыл бұрын
Something i stumbled upon, which works for me and the cuts that i generally buy (your mileage may vary) ... is taking a cold steak from the fridge, seasoning and lightly oiling... and putting it in a cold oven, then setting the oven on fan forced at 200 C, for 25 mins... as the oven gradually warms, so does the steak.. and results in a nice even cook with a light crust. depending on your cut you'll need to experiment with the time though if you plan to try it.
@hkyt21
Жыл бұрын
I can't stop laughing out every time he mentions his thermometer, he never misses the chance to detail about it.
@ChrisYoungCooks
Жыл бұрын
Gotta fund making these videos!
@xipalips
Жыл бұрын
Whatever gets me more of the most knowledgeable scientific cooking videos on this site!
@Metalmachine18
9 ай бұрын
Looking at the difference between the 0, 5, 15 and 4 hours. Seems like the old 'get your steaks out of the fridge about half an hour before cooking' advice is actually pretty spot on
@RobVarley
Жыл бұрын
I never temper my steaks and my steaks have never looked that bad after resting. They look like the one you tempered. Something wasn’t done right.
@MiniDevilDF
Жыл бұрын
Cooking temp too low. 375F is a very low temp. Closer to 450-500 will give more crust with a hint of charring. Allows the outside to get done quickly before enough heat is transferred to the center of the steak.
@StevenAakre
8 ай бұрын
If I'm not using the charcoal grill, I cook mine in a ripping hot cast iron pan 1 minute per side and then flip again and into the 400F oven to finish. Don't see gray banding like that.
@Cptnmorgan226
Жыл бұрын
Cold pan method. Place steak in a cold pan. Turn on burner on high two minutes. Flip, turn pan down to medium low. Flip every two minutes till desired doneness. No need to temper, just place your steak in a position where it doesn’t steam instantly. Results in color doneness is similar to sous vide but you get the texture and crust as all pan fried.
@bubkabu
Жыл бұрын
Hey Chris. If i stick in the thermometer half way how does it still find the correct core temp? I assume it looks for the lowest temperature across the sensor array. Is there a threshold to filter out possible ambient temps?
@ChrisYoungCooks
Жыл бұрын
Yes, works exactly like this.
@ChrisYoungCooks
Жыл бұрын
Yes, works exactly like this.
@ChrisYoungCooks
Жыл бұрын
Yes, it works like this. And yes, it does sone filtering to distinguish between sensors inside and outside the food.
@bubkabu
Жыл бұрын
@@ChrisYoungCooks sounds great. i believe you're really onto something with this feature. i will definitely look into buying one.
@SF-fb6lv
Жыл бұрын
I have been doing this with eggs for years. Right out of fridge into the pan is too much temperature gradient from bottom to top, so by the time top is done, panside/bottom is overcooked, plus if tempered to RT, the eggs will 'flash' easier when they hit the hot pan, which prevents sticking.
@stewartstewartstewart
Жыл бұрын
Why has this become a new question? It’s always best to cook everything from room temp. That’s the basics 😂
@nichtsistkostenlos6565
Жыл бұрын
There are many other people that have done this and gotten very different results. Four steaks is not a proper sample size to make any kind of judgement, and flipping only once during cooking is also ill-advised, because it's difficult to develop a proper crust. Also, when you flip multiple times, it allows a more even cook throughout because you're allowing each side to cool temporarily in between flips. This doesn't really provide enough evidence to convince me of anything.
@themrmaiorca
Жыл бұрын
My brother owns a grill restaurant in Sardegna Italy, they take the thicker steaks (2 inches or more) out of the fridge 4 to 6 hours before service starts, makes a world of difference.
@Adamscommabrett
Жыл бұрын
Was skeptical of tempering for years. Thanks for the video!
@MorZaiderman
Жыл бұрын
3:50 This is known as heat transfer rate and you're spot on. The higher the difference between the pan and the steak, the faster heat will flow or transfer, thereby cooking much faster and overcooking the outside.
@TastyMunky
Жыл бұрын
This video makes no sense to me. Heat transfer itself does not cause cooking. Heat transfer also has no inertia. So starting cold only results in a more uneven gradient and a slower total cook time. The tempered steak must have been cooked for much shorter, or it would be beyond overdone.
@MorZaiderman
Жыл бұрын
@@TastyMunky Also, Heat transfer doesn’t have inertia, the medium does (the steak) which affects heat transfer coefficient, k. Assuming they’re similar steaks, k, a constant, can be ignored.
@vrnvorona
Жыл бұрын
You're so straight and no BS. Instant sub. Calm, no bait, no clout chasing, actual testing and controllable environment. Bliss.
@TomJones-tx7pb
Жыл бұрын
Another way to increase tempering speed is to put the meat on a thick metal sheet. I sometimes put it on a thick granite counter and flip the meat and move it to another spot on the counter as the counter under the meat gets cooled. The water bath would work and you can always replace the water to speed the process.
@macmurfy2jka
Жыл бұрын
And its best to use aluminum
@BPFACTS88
Жыл бұрын
granite or other natural stone countertops work great too
@lawrencefranck9417
Жыл бұрын
Lemon juice and left on the counter 6-8 hours add salt and pepper. Heat the grill to 450-600 sear both sides for about 4 minutes for a 2 inch thick steak done.
@TheRadler
Жыл бұрын
Just watched all your steak videos, I'm loving the "science" aspect and hope to see more of these styles of videos with different meats and food in general. 10/10
@vdd1001
Жыл бұрын
Short video, very well explained (in a simple way so everyone can understand too), straight to the point and some actual examples for evidence. This was a great video, no long ass explanations no one cares about
@valcvetanoski9105
4 ай бұрын
All of this can vary from your ambient room temps to the thickness of the steak. I always cook directly from the fridge if its a thinner steak cut. A thicker steak of an inch or over I temper. The thicker the steak, the longer I temper.
@TCR_710-Cap
Жыл бұрын
The next topic could be "cold searing". I would like to know your opinion about it. I tested it, and I can say it's great for keeping the smoke detector quiet, and it drastically reduces the greasy mess around the pan. Flipping every two minutes was essential for even cooking. Steak was about 5cm in thickness (about 2 inches), and was taken off the fridge about 30mins before laying it into the cold pan. I was VERY sceptical when I heard about cold searing the first time, but it worked out very well. Crust builds up throughout the whole process, not in the first two minutes. Please keep this in mind...
@mgntstr
Жыл бұрын
cold searing... must be american for that is the stupidest word combination i have ever heard 🤣🤣
@jiahaotan696
Жыл бұрын
You cook in a nonstick?
@mgntstr
Жыл бұрын
@@jiahaotan696 cast iron is nonstick, so yes.
@LemonySnicket-EUC
Жыл бұрын
@@mgntstr Damn son ! Why the hate on American ? Maybe you should educate yourself before you leave a reply. Cold-searing a steak is a cooking technique in which a cold steak is placed in a cold pan or grill that is then brought up to temperature. The idea behind this technique is to brown the exterior of the steak while keeping the interior as rare as possible. After the sear begins to develop on both sides of the steak, you then turn the steak every couple of minutes till it is done. This technique is quick and has the advantage of easy clean-up. Since there's no butter or oil used in the pan, there's no spattering of dangerously hot oil or billowing smoke to fill your kitchen.
@bleve97
Жыл бұрын
Hey Chris, love the detail you go into, as a former chemical engineer, it's one of those myth-dispelling thing that I really appreciate. I also, love a blue porterhouse steak! Given that we know there's 100's of ways to do it, and they all work, finding the "best" is a task. I've tried the cold sear method of late, and it seems to work pretty well, and the 30s flip, the 2 min flip, leaving it on for ~5 mins and flip etc. The cold sear seems to work pretty well, would be interested to see what you think of it, and how it would compare to 30s flip, reverse sear etc.
@toriless
8 ай бұрын
Eh, I prefer mid-rare but rib less cooked, any cut version.
@puzzlegal17
8 ай бұрын
I discovered this by accident, when i had a small fridge and had to leave some stuff out. I now have plenty of fridge space, but like to bring meat up to cool room temps before cooking. Nice to see a structured experiment and the science behind it. Also, i bought your thermometer.
@holyseraph7850
Жыл бұрын
Max the Meat guy did a similar test and both steaks ended up the same after cooking and got to temp at same time. Though he had a hotter pan and his cold steak was coming from the fridge rather than freezer. I really wonder why there is a such a contrasting test result.
@ChrisYoungCooks
Жыл бұрын
My steak also started from a fridge, not a freezer.
@Deuk
Жыл бұрын
This content is great. I just found the channel and really happy to find a channel doing some quality experiments. I imagine it's a lot of work to prepare it. Please dont stop making videos :)
@dannyarcher6370
Жыл бұрын
This guy's presentation style, geeky humour, intonation, body language and even looks remind me sooooooooooo much of Matt O'Dowd from PBS Space Time.
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