Temping Steak

9 Comments

  1. That’s interesting I’m not good at steaks I like mine cool in center so to get every ones Done right is hard but I’ll be getting your probe soon.

  2. Thank you so much for doing this research. There’s fewer sins in this world worse than over cooking a good steak. Especially if you’re a pro and cooking for money. This is probably one of the best applications for the MK 4 and it’s nice to know that you’re pulling the steak at exactly the right temperature (and not guessing).

    Also, I’m experimenting with the reverse sear method, either in the oven or sous-vide, and like the idea that you can sear the steak and eat/serve it without resting.

    I’d like to see you do a similar test on the best way to cook brats.

  3. What a beautiful research project. You should present this at local or national meeting of Institute of Food Technologists.

  4. I applaud your methods and scientific rigor to demonstrate the fallacy of an old wives tale which ranks right up there with you can’t wash a cast iron skillet with soap and water and microwaves cook from the inside out. It should be intuitively obvious to the most casual observer that steaks don’t lose all there juices when probed by anyone who has ever eaten a steak. A steak knife exposes more open surface area than a probe hole and steaks don’t “drain out” on your plate with the first or subsequent cuts. Keep up the great work

  5. Since resting meat before it is cut is supposed to reduce the amount of juice lost, It seems that group 2 should have been probed as soon as it reached the correct temperature. The reason that the amount lost is less than group 1 is because you let it rest before probing it.

    1. Dorothy,

      We probed it as soon as it came out of the bath, before resting. It is true that the second and third pokes were made after resting, so that data may not be the most accurate, but the initial probing was done immediately as the steaks were removed from the baths.

  6. Since the masses of the steaks were all different, comparing the mass of liquid lost doesn’t make sense. If we look at the loss as a percentage of initial mass, then the control lost a total of 20.05%, the probed steaks 18.39%, those cooked to 135 deg 20.04% and the 140 deg steaks 20.53%.
    If we can say that “the juice that is lost by probing is statistically insignificant”, then the data shows that the juices lost by overcooking 10 degrees is even less significant.
    It’s also interesting to note that the “doneness guides” lost less than half of the liquid of the other steaks. The other steaks lost about 7.5% during the sear and another 13.5% during the sous vide cook. These weren’t seared, but lost only about 8.5% total.

    1. JWACKS,
      Valid points, and I struggled with these questions when coming up with the experimental procedure. Ideally, a very wide range of steak masses would be cooked.
      Most moisture loss in these cases seemed to come from the sear, but all steaks should be seared, so that is a loss that I think we must take. I surmise, though, that moisture loss for probing will not be proportional to steak size, as the moisture loss should be local to the probing site. Loss due to cooking, however, should be proportional, as the protein pressures will be exerted over the whole steak.
      It could be argued that what we have here is borders on anecdotal. If I ever have the chance to cut up 2-3 whole striploins, I’ll get better data.

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