I've given up judging others for their tastes, but you're tempting me here....I'll take it anywhere from medium rare to medium well. And - don't give me any guff for this - my favorite steak sauce is good old-fashioned ketchup.
Johnathan

I've given up judging others for their tastes, but you're tempting me here....I'll take it anywhere from medium rare to medium well. And - don't give me any guff for this - my favorite steak sauce is good old-fashioned ketchup.
Johnathan
Not necessarily, you can cook at very low temps and do a reverse sear that will turn out as good if not better.Oh definitely. Another lesser- known secret about steaks is that fattier, marbled cuts of meat need more heat to melt that fat and get all juicy and tender.
I swear by the reverse sear. Best technique if you have the time I think.Not necessarily, you can cook at very low temps and do a reverse sear that will turn out as good if not better.
Rare, and I used to be snobby about it (and about not using sauce) but a couple things have loosened me on that, most recently having a greek place cook the naughty word out of a steak kabob and dipping that into some spiced German ketchup. And that well done steak with (spiced) ketchup was still really good.
Do you remember the name of the ketchup? Was it maybe curry ketchup? That stuff is great.Rare, and I used to be snobby about it (and about not using sauce) but a couple things have loosened me on that, most recently having a greek place cook the naughty word out of a steak kabob and dipping that into some spiced German ketchup. And that well done steak with (spiced) ketchup was still really good.