Filet Mignon at home
- EatinAintCheatin
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Filet Mignon at home
How do you cook your filets at home? I've been using the same method for a while and it works pretty good, but I'm always looking for improvement. Here's my method:
Let the steaks come to room temp. Grind some Penzey's tellicherry black pepper corns, coarse. Just before putting the steaks in the skillet apply a little melted butter on each side sprinkle some coarse sea salt and the pepper.
I have a gas grill with a 12,000 BTU side burner. I light the grill and side burner and put a cast iron skillet on the side burner. When the skillet is as hot as I can get it with 12K BTU's, and the grill is preheated to about 375, I put the steaks in the skillet. I don't really time it...just feel them every so often and check the bottom for a nice crust. When I do flip the steaks I pop the skillet into the grill, which is pre-heated to about 375. Remove the steaks when they are medium rare. Carry over will usually take them to between medium rare and rare, just where we like it.
The whole process usually around 5-7 minutes.
I used to use my crawfish burner and skillet but found that it was too hot and the pepper burned.
Any handy suggestions or tips? It's what's for dinner tonight...along with a bottle of Boarding Pass Aussie Shiraz.
Let the steaks come to room temp. Grind some Penzey's tellicherry black pepper corns, coarse. Just before putting the steaks in the skillet apply a little melted butter on each side sprinkle some coarse sea salt and the pepper.
I have a gas grill with a 12,000 BTU side burner. I light the grill and side burner and put a cast iron skillet on the side burner. When the skillet is as hot as I can get it with 12K BTU's, and the grill is preheated to about 375, I put the steaks in the skillet. I don't really time it...just feel them every so often and check the bottom for a nice crust. When I do flip the steaks I pop the skillet into the grill, which is pre-heated to about 375. Remove the steaks when they are medium rare. Carry over will usually take them to between medium rare and rare, just where we like it.
The whole process usually around 5-7 minutes.
I used to use my crawfish burner and skillet but found that it was too hot and the pepper burned.
Any handy suggestions or tips? It's what's for dinner tonight...along with a bottle of Boarding Pass Aussie Shiraz.
Re: Filet Mignon at home
My crummy grill side-burner is too weak to do anything other than warm sauce. I rub good olive oil all over the filets, grind on some sea salt & pepper, then crank the gas grill up to high. When it is good-n-hot, I stick the filets on the hottest part, wait for a good sear, then flip over and then do the sides, too. If you move the meat around (using tongs) as it gets a nice sear, the insides stay nice and rare. Squeeze a tiny bit of lemon juice over each one before serving.
Re: Filet Mignon at home
I used to do my steaks in the iron skillet and under the broiler until I switched to a charcoal grill and started using hardwood charcoal exclusively. I can get the grill up to about 700 degrees and I can taste a huge difference in the meat. It's easy to get a nice sear on the outside without overcooking the inside.
Re: Filet Mignon at home
Lea & Perrin's, garlic powder, salt, pepper and a ton of Tony's. Grilled on hot charcoal grill for about five minutes a side. Remove and sit to retain juices for 5 minutes. Perfect every time. But does anyone sell decent filets for less than $20 a pound, other than Sam's?
- EatinAintCheatin
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Re: Filet Mignon at home
Winn Dixie had a sale, that just ended. USDA Choice beef tenderloin for $9.99/lb. I picked up a couple that are about 1 1/2 inch thick.jimbeaux wrote:Lea & Perrin's, garlic powder, salt, pepper and a ton of Tony's. Grilled on hot charcoal grill for about five minutes a side. Remove and sit to retain juices for 5 minutes. Perfect every time. But does anyone sell decent filets for less than $20 a pound, other than Sam's?
For me personally, butter, salt and pepper is all I want on my filet.
I can get my grill to 650+ degF, but that's still not like a smokin' hot cast iron skillet.
I have one of those Jenn Air (made by Nexgrill) models from Lowe's that I bought in 04. I tricked it out with several mods to get more heat. But I still like using the skillet for better contact when searing.
Re: Filet Mignon at home
I've been doing all of my steaks in a cast iron skillet based on a post from UptownKevin years ago. I also do the blue cheese butter he posted about the same time.
Our charcoal grill has not made it out of the garage since Katrina. I don't even know what is left of it. Isn't that sad? Husband just lost the desire, and the charcoal was his thing. So my steaks are done stovetop in cast iron and thrown into the broiler for a minute or so.
I miss the flavor of charcoal cooked steaks.
Our charcoal grill has not made it out of the garage since Katrina. I don't even know what is left of it. Isn't that sad? Husband just lost the desire, and the charcoal was his thing. So my steaks are done stovetop in cast iron and thrown into the broiler for a minute or so.
I miss the flavor of charcoal cooked steaks.
- edible complex
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Re: Filet Mignon at home
lemon pepper, on the grill 5 mins each side, topped with a healthy slice of molten saga blue.
After Mon & Tues, even the calendar says W-T-F!
- UptownKevin
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Re: Filet Mignon at home
Happy to hear I've left a lasting impression! You'd be shocked at the emails I get from all over the country about something I wrote almost 5 years ago.Shannon wrote:I've been doing all of my steaks in a cast iron skillet based on a post from UptownKevin years ago. I also do the blue cheese butter he posted about the same time.
Our charcoal grill has not made it out of the garage since Katrina. I don't even know what is left of it. Isn't that sad? Husband just lost the desire, and the charcoal was his thing. So my steaks are done stovetop in cast iron and thrown into the broiler for a minute or so.
I miss the flavor of charcoal cooked steaks.
Cooking a Steak in a Cast Iron Skillet
For the record, I still cook them the exact same way with fantastic results. Still much better than charcoal (though my charcoal Weber is used for everything else).
-Kevin
http://www.NolaFoodie.com
http://www.GoodFoodTampa.com
- EatinAintCheatin
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Re: Filet Mignon at home
Kevin,UptownKevin wrote:Happy to hear I've left a lasting impression! You'd be shocked at the emails I get from all over the country about something I wrote almost 5 years ago.
Cooking a Steak in a Cast Iron Skillet
For the record, I still cook them the exact same way with fantastic results. Still much better than charcoal (though my charcoal Weber is used for everything else).
-Kevin
http://www.NolaFoodie.com
http://www.GoodFoodTampa.com
Thanks for the link. I like that you preheated the skillet in the oven. I'm going to put the skillet into my grill since I can get the grill to 650. Then transfer it to the side burner for searing. I don't have the broiler part figured out so I may just put it back into the grill. It's just too hot to use the oven broiler today.
EAC
- Isabella Maja
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Re: Filet Mignon at home
Hey Kevin!UptownKevin wrote:Happy to hear I've left a lasting impression! You'd be shocked at the emails I get from all over the country about something I wrote almost 5 years ago.
Cooking a Steak in a Cast Iron Skillet
For the record, I still cook them the exact same way with fantastic results. Still much better than charcoal (though my charcoal Weber is used for everything else).
-Kevin
http://www.NolaFoodie.com
http://www.GoodFoodTampa.com
Will you go ahead & post your method for bleu cheese butter so we can have it in the archives here?
Thanks!
Hope married life is treating you well!
Isabella