Dustin Dorsey
TVWBB Hall of Fame
I've seared on cast iron in the house several times when it's raining or I'm being lazy. It will smoke up your house if you are doing it right. You may not have a happy wife. Mine thankfully doesn't mind.
Try smash burgers on a smoking cast in the house.........I thought the neighbors were going to call the fire department.I've seared on cast iron in the house several times when it's raining or I'm being lazy. It will smoke up your house if you are doing it right. You may not have a happy wife. Mine thankfully doesn't mind.
This is what I do.Hot metal (cooking by conduction) browns more powerfully than hot air (convection). Conduction is what produces grill marks.
So on my gas grill I sear on the flat side of GrillGrates to get edge to edge browning. A griddle or cast iron pan does the same thing.
Radiation browns second best. So IR burner or cooking direct over charcoal.
#science
Very helpful, thanks Brett.Do you have butter in the CI pan? The basting of the butter helps build crust and a more even sear. And a medium to medium high temp in the CI is fine.
Baste and flip and baste and flip. That should build crust without overcooking the outside sear.
I personally like a charcoal sear instead of a CI sear. Flipping and flipping, you can develop a sear quicker and warm-through the steak.
Your grey layer is coming from the steak taking on too much heat, thus drying out the crust layer.
Become one with the steak. Imagine your arse is on fire and keep moving your steak. This way you won’t “stand still” in one position because your arse is on fire, cooking and moving that steak is key.
I’d still eat what you’ve made there. Add a nice Cabernet Sauvignon to the menu and you’ve got pure happiness.
Flip flip flip flip is a good way to get crust without over cooking.
Allows one side side of the steak to cool off while the browning is happening to the other side.
This strip steak was no butter or ci. Indirect to 90 then seared on coals to 135 and then foil tent 20 minutes. I’m finding a medium well tented steak is more tender and not as tough as a rarer steak. It is just as juicy and my taste buds can’t differentiate between rare and med well. They both taste the same. So I prefer the more tender steak.Very helpful, thanks Brett.
I find the dripping fat causes a lot of bit flare ups/flames on when doing charcoal sear. Is that OK? Or if not, how do I avoid it? Thanks!