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Conventional wisdom holds that frozen steaks should be thawed before cooking, but we wondered if you can cook frozen meat straight from the freezer. Cook’s Illustrated Senior Editor Dan Souza explains our cooking experiments.
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Recipe for Ultimate Charcoal-Grilled Steaks:
Recipe for Grilled Frozen Steaks:
Recipe for Pan-Seared Thick-Cut Strip Steaks:
EXPERIMENT
We cut a strip loin into eight steaks, cut each steak in half crosswise, put the pieces in vacuum-sealed bags, and froze them. We then thawed half of each steak in the refrigerator overnight and kept the other half frozen. Using our preferred method, we seared both sets of steaks in a hot skillet for 90 seconds per side and then transferred them to a 275-degree oven until they reached 125 degrees, or medium-rare. To track moisture loss, we weighed each steak before and after cooking.
RESULTS
Not surprisingly, the frozen steaks took longer to finish cooking through in the oven (18 to 22 minutes versus 10 to 15 minutes for the thawed steaks). What was surprising was that the frozen steaks actually browned in the skillet just as well as, and in the same amount of time as, the thawed steaks. Furthermore, they had thinner bands of gray, overcooked meat directly under the crust than the thawed steaks had. We also found that these steaks lost on average 9 percent less moisture during cooking than the thawed steaks did. Sampling the steaks side by side, tasters unanimously preferred the cooked-from-frozen steaks to their thawed counterparts.
EXPLANATION
A fully frozen steak is extremely cold, which prevents overcooking while the surface reaches the very high temperatures necessary for browning reactions. As for the difference in moisture loss, we know that when meat is cooked to temperatures higher than 140 degrees, its muscle fibers begin to squeeze out a significant amount of moisture. As its slightly thicker gray band indicated, the steak that had been thawed had more overcooking around the edge, so it made sense that it also had greater moisture loss.
THE TAKEAWAY
While we prefer to start with steak that’s never been frozen for the best texture, if we do have frozen steaks on hand, from now on we’ll cook them straight from the freezer. (But if you can choose between frozen vs. fresh, definitely go for fresh.)
Here’s what to do for the best frozen steaks: Freeze steaks, uncovered, overnight on a baking sheet (this dries them out to prevent excess splattering during cooking), then wrap them tightly in plastic wrap, place in a zipper-lock bag, and return to freezer. To ensure that the steaks brown evenly, add oil to the skillet until it measures 1/8 inch deep. And because frozen steaks will splatter more during searing, use a large skillet.
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Thank you for writing it out at the end 🙏🏻
Thank you. 😀
just curious if this technique works for cooking frozen chicken or fish steaks (e.g Salmon, Tilapia loins)?
1:16 — “A fully frozen steak is extremely cold.”
This is for all democrats/leftists out there struggling with truth.
Ordinarily, the general consensus, is to thaw out steaks before cooking. Which leads to loss of the steak's myoglobin (the reddish liquid puddle). Cooking frozen steaks will retain moisture lost in the thawing.
I love this but they never say what oil to use?!
gemini$speak: going to cook frozen to delish time stamp a nigg@
Yohhhhhh!!!
The frozen steak tip with a grass fed ranch filet ($10 lb) had my family saying it tasted better than the $38 lb grass fed filet mignon I cooked!!!
Thank you!! Just awesome.
I had already started thawing for a few minutes but realized I wouldn’t have enough time. Blown away!!
I will murder your children and parents by feeding them frozen steak until their stomachs burst
Oh no just keep fresh and then room temp. All of this elaborate nonsense for a frozen steak no
small tip: If your steaks are covered with ice crystals, simply wipe them with kitchen paper soaked in hot water
Interesting idea, I prefer the method of planning ahead so that I don’t need to cook from the freezer. Pull the steak out of refrigeration a half hour ahead at least, pat super dry, hot oil with a little butter until it foams and sear.
Abso-fucking-lutely not.
So I tried a version of this for the first time but I reversed the order because I read in one of the science lab books that you could do that … and I did that because I wanted fond at the end to make a pan sauce with.
With the over at 275, it took at least 40 minutes to get an internal temperature of 125. Then I seared both sides until I got a temp of 135. What I found when I cut into it (note, I was using a rib eye) was one end was a bit overcooked and tough (though still juicy). The other end was a medium.
I'm wondering I should raise the heat of the oven if I'm not searing first, only use a strip, or accept a 40 minute oven time?
I dunno.. I cook steak all the time on grill and stovetop fresh and thawed. Tried this method from frozen and maybe I didn't have enough heat on initial sear but it took 40 minutes in oven at 275 to get to 125 internal.
Steak (ribeye) was rubbery. Not very good. After resting it then eating half I ended up searing it again for 45 seconds each side
Wrong…….. Real cave men know how to cook a steak. 🥩
I just did this tonight and it turned out great (I froze the steaks yesterday). Really good steaks. The only thing is, even though I froze them flat like in the video and then stored them as shown, some of the steaks still formed a tiny amount of small ice crystals on them. This caused a bit of splatter when I put them into the hot oil. Would it be possible to use a blow dryer or other heat source (like very quickly waving them over the gas stove flame) to just melt those ice crystals followed by patting it dry before cooking to reduce splatter even further?
I’m definitely not a professional cook but I’ve never seen steak cooked in that much oil
I've tried cooking steak/burgers with that much oil before and it tasted too fried for my liking
How long can you store the steaks frozen wrapped like that?
Gwapo mo.
Also a great way to get a good sear without overcooking a thinner steak, great if you are on a budget and buying from the supermarket!
Can this also be done using a deep fryer? Wouldn't it cause more wear and tear or stress to the deep fryer due to the clashing of temperatures between the frozen food and hot oil?
Is this a healthier way to fry? Because although the oil is 1/8 inch deep, it wouldn't be able to penetrate into the meat as much as when the meat was thawed, right? I'm saying this in consideration of the health advocates' advice that too much oil can cause clogging of our arteries which can lead to heart disease.
I've also been doing something similar to this, for years, with my pot roasts. Even in a crockpot, the centers are always beautifully pink and more med rare.
What about basting and flavoring the steak with butter thyme and garlic?
Best steaks I’ve made came right out of the freezer. Awesome!
WOW!
the downside is this method turn your apartment into a smoke house
I like to sear my steaks first and use the Sous vide method. I am going to try this with a frozen steak. Wish me luck!
When do you salt them?
Another possible freezing method: Dry brine the steaks (season with around 3g salt per pound of meat, then place them on a wire rack on top of a baking sheet and put in your fridge overnight), then vacuum seal and place in the freezer. The dry brining will remove surface moisture, allow the seasoning and water to penetrate deeper into the steak, and create a much more flavorful steak. The vacuum sealing and dry brining will prevent the ice layer.