Beef, Dinner

Cast Iron Skillet Reverse-Sear Ribeye Steak II

This version uses an oven oven. Just 25 minutes or less in a cast iron skillet in the oven followed by a 2-minute sear for the perfect Ribeye Steak.

EQUIPMENT: Thermapen One, cast iron skillet, trivet, fish flipper, temperature controlled induction burner

Reverse-Sear Filet Mignon

Recipe by Anna Stockel Difficulty: Average
Servings

2

servings
Prep time

10

minutes
Cooking time

42

minutes
Resting Time

15

Ingredients

  • 2 1 1/2-inch-thick Ribeye Steaks (about 8 ounces), room temperature

  • 2 teaspoons kosher salt

  • freshly ground black pepper

  • spray avocado oil

  • compound butter

Directions

  • Preheat the oven to 225° F, or s low as it will go.
  • Season steaks on both sides with salt and pepper and place on a trivet set inside a cast iron skillet.
  • Cook for 15 – 25 minutes checking temperature until internal temperature is 10°F below your desired final temperature. Check internal temperature after 10 minutes. Final temperature for rare is 125°F. Medium-rare is 130°F. The cooking time depends upon the thickness of the steak and the lowest oven temperature setting. Grass-fed or corn-fed will also make a difference.
  • Remove trivet and steaks from skillet and rest uncovered for 10 minutes. Do not skip this step.
  • Meanwhile, place a dry 12-inch cast-iron pan over high heat until it reaches at least 600°F, about 10 minutes. (You’ll know you’re close when a half teaspoon water dropped into middle of pan is completely evaporated in 5 seconds).
  • Spray a very light coat of avocado oil onto both sides of steaks.
  • Sear steaks for about 2 minutes per side using a fish flipper to turn over every 30 seconds to achieve Maillard reaction* on both sides.
  • Rest steaks on a rack 5 minutes. Do not skip this step.
  • Spread compound butter over steaks.
  • Slice diagonally against the grain.**

Notes

  • *The Maillard reaction creates brown pigments in cooked meat in a very specific way: by rearranging amino acids and certain simple sugars, which then arrange themselves in rings and collections of rings that reflect light in such a way as to give the meat a brown color.
  • **Before you cook the fillets, slice a tiny piece from one end which is against the grain. It’s much easier to tell when the meat is raw.

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