San Diego Union-Tribune

Seared perfection

- BY STEVEN RAICHLEN

Foolproof reverse-sear method combines low temp cooking with high-heat charring for a steak you can sink your teeth into

The quest to cook the perfect steak has been a challenge since slabs of meat were roasted over fire. But what constitute­s a great steak? ■ It should take you through a complex strata of textures and flavors: dark crust, rosy meat, tenderness balanced by chew. You want a steak you can sink your teeth into. There should be a perfect ratio of meat to fat — and there should be blood. Without those luscious steak juices, a steak would be merely delicatess­en roast beef. ■ Tri-tip delivers all of that. A cut popularize­d in Santa Maria and the surroundin­g area, this crescent-shaped steak from the bottom of the sirloin slices like brisket and eats like steak,

with a rich, beefy flavor. But like all thick cuts, it poses a challenge: Grill it directly over high heat as you would a strip or skirt steak and you risk burning the exterior while leaving the center undercooke­d. Cook it low and slow, as you would brisket, and you lose the caramelize­d crust.

Enter reverse-searing — an ingenious grilling method that combines the low and slow smoking of traditiona­l barbecue with the high heat charring practiced at steakhouse­s. It takes the guesswork out of grilling steak, rewarding

you with a juicy, perfectly cooked slab of beef every time.

With this simple twostep process, you first cook the steak slowly — for 30 minutes or so — at 250 degrees, the temperatur­e used by pitmasters to barbecue brisket. Once you’ve warmed the center of the meat to 110 degrees, you rest the steak on a platter and raise the grill’s heat to a searing temperatur­e of 600 degrees. You then char the exterior of the steak directly over the fire until sizzling, crusty and dark brown, bringing the meat’s internal temperatur­e to 125 degrees (for rare) or 135 degrees (for medium-rare).

Reverse-searing offers

several advantages over traditiona­l direct grilling over high heat, in which steak goes from undercooke­d to overcooked in a minute or two, requiring precise timing that inexperien­ced grillers may find daunting. During the initial stage of reverse-searing, the internal temperatur­e of the meat rises gradually, so it’s easier to monitor and achieve the doneness you desire. Also, the meat cooks more evenly this way, ending up with uniform color

and doneness from top to bottom, not a gray-brown ring of meat just beneath the crust and a reddish-blue bull’s-eye in the center.

Because the meat rests between the two stages, which allows it to relax and become juicier, the steak can be served hot off the grill right after its final sear. That means no more lukewarm steak and not having to keep hungry people waiting.

Perhaps the biggest advantage to reverse-searing is the ability to smoke the steak by adding hardwood chunks or chips to your low fire. That step infuses thick cuts like tri-tip with the haunting flavor of barbecue and adds a spectacula­r dimension of flavor.

The resulting tri-tip steak is perfectly cooked and intensely flavorful — and the cut, also known as Newport, Santa Maria, triangle and bottom sirloin tip, is mercifully inexpensiv­e. Food prices are rising, and reverse-searing works great for other inexpensiv­e thick cuts, such as top round, sirloin or picanha. (It can be applied to threefinge­r-thick porterhous­es and tomahawks, too.)

If you’re going to splurge on steak, you certainly want to nail it. Reverse-searing is as close to foolproof as grilling a steak gets.

 ?? ANDREW PURCELL NYT ??
ANDREW PURCELL NYT
 ?? ANDREW PURCELL NYT ?? Reverse-searing allows thick cuts of steak to cook to an even doneness and develop a charred crust.
ANDREW PURCELL NYT Reverse-searing allows thick cuts of steak to cook to an even doneness and develop a charred crust.

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