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    Home > Meal Type > Main Dishes

    Brasserie Style Steak

    Last Updated: Aug 31, 2023 · First Published: Sep 3, 2016
    Author: Claire | Sprinkles and Sprouts · Comment: 6 Comments

    Jump to Recipe SaveSaved! Pin Recipe
    4.96 from 46 votes

    This Brasserie Style Steak will give you a French bistro vibe right in your kitchen. A perfectly cooked steak topped with compound butter served with a green salad and some french fries.

    With this recipe that's as French as the Eiffel Tower, you'll be transported to Paris with the first bite.

    Whether you like your steak, rare, medium, or well done, we'll show you how to cook a steak perfectly and how to make the classic herb butter topping.

    a fillet steak topped with melting herb butter on a white plate with chunky fries

    How you like steak cooked is definitely a very personal thing and everyone is convinced that their way is the best way. But that is the beauty of cooking, we get to do it our way.
    Are you a solid medium-rare person? Or do you veer toward rare? Or like me, are you a through and through caveman and eat it almost raw? I am what they call a black and blue person. I love a deep crispy char (Black) and a quivering raw interior (blue).

    a steak with a cold disk of butter on top

    This Brasserie style steak is topped off with a pat of compound butter. Which are a great way to add extra flavor to any dish. I have a whole selection of Compound Butters on my site, so feel free to check them out.
    But if we are making a French Brasserie style steak then we have to go with a French inspired butter, so these have been topped with maître d'hôtel butter. A butter containing, garlic, herbs, shallot and seasonings.

    three pictures of butter melting onto of a hot steak

    However you like it cooked and whatever your favourite cut is, there are few rules that will help you achieve steak perfection.

    Temperature

    Never cook a cold steak. A cold steak in a hot pan will usually stick! You want to get the steak out of the fridge at least 15 minutes before you cook it. (I tend to go for 30 minutes unless it is a super hot day.) Take the steak from the fridge, remove the packaging and pat it dry with kitchen paper. Then set it aside to come to room temp. If you have lots of insects about then an upturned colander makes the perfect vented cover.

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    The Pan

    Now the frying pan. You want a nice heavy based frying pan. Personally I love my cast iron frying pan, but I also get great results with a heavy copper based non-stick pan. Whatever frying pan you pick, just be sure it isn't something flimsy that warps under high heat. This is not the time to use your $8 Target special. Also because you need a fierce heat, this also isn't the time to use the specially coated frying pans that say not to use over a high heat.

    Once the steak is at room temp, put the frying pan over a high heat and leave it there. Just let it sit until it is searingly hot.

    Dressing your Steak

    Pour a small amount of oil onto each steak and rub it in well. Then just before you add the steak to the pan season it generously with salt. You salt steak just before you add it to the pan, as if you add it too soon your salt will draw out moisture, which spells disaster on two levels. One you will get a dry chewy steak and two you won't get a nice crispy sear!

    So oil and salt just before you place the steak in the pan.

    Cooking time

    Cook over a high heat for the recommended times below. To ensure you get a nice even cook and a crispy crust I break from tradition and turn my steak every 30 seconds. A trick I learnt from Heston Blumenthal 😉

    For a 3.5cm thick steak:

    Blue: 3 Minutes in total (1½ minutes on each side)
    Rare: 4½ Minutes in total (2¼ minutes on each side)
    Medium-rare: 6½ Minutes in total (3¼ minutes on each side)
    Medium: 9 Minutes in total (4½ minutes on each side)
    Well Done: 11 Minutes in total (5½ minutes on each side)
    For a 2cm thick steak:

    Blue: 2 Minutes in total (1 minutes on each side)
    Rare: 3 Minutes in total (1½ minutes on each side)
    Medium rare: 4 Minutes in total (2 minutes on each side)
    Medium: 6 Minutes in total (3 minutes on each side)
    Well Done: 10 Minutes in total (5 minutes on each side)

    Remember it is always better to err on the lesser side. A slightly undercooked steak can be seared a little longer. But an overcooked steak is something to cry over.

    Leave it to rest

    Once you have cooked your steak, leave it to rest. This allows any juice to redistribute and gives you a tender steak.

    a knife cutting into a brasserie style steak, on a white plate on a wooden table

    Enjoy x

    Get the Recipe

    a steak with butter on top on a white plate with fries and salad

    Brasserie Style Steak

    Claire | Sprinkle and Sprouts
    This Brasserie style steak will give you a French bistro vibe right in your kitchen. A perfectly cooked steak topped with compound butter served with a green salad and some french fries.
    4.96 from 46 votes
    Print Recipe Pin Recipe
    Prep Time 15 minutes mins
    Cook Time 4 minutes mins
    Total Time 19 minutes mins
    Course Main
    Cuisine French
    Servings 2
    Calories 470 kcal

    Ingredients
      

    • 2 Ribeye/New York Strip/filet mignon steaks 10oz/300g each
    • 1 teaspoon salt
    • 1 tablespoon neutral oil

    Instructions
     

    Prevent your screen from going dark
    • Take the steaks out of the refrigerator for at least 15-30 minutes before planning to cook.
    • Place a skillet over high heat and leave it to get smoking hot.
    • Pat the steak dry using kitchen paper. Repeat until the kitchen towel is almost sticking to the meat.
    • Oil both sides of the steak.
    • Just before you add the steaks to the pan, generously salt both sides of the steak.
    • Cook for 2 minutes on one side, then flip and cook for 2 minutes. (or as per the notes below for your cooked preference)
    • Pick up your steaks and use tongs to sear the strip of fat on the side.
    • Remove from the pan and place on a plate. Cover loosely with foil and let them rest for 4 minutes.

    Notes

    For a 3.5cm thick steak:
    Blue: 3 Minutes in total (1½ minutes on each side)
    Rare: 4½ Minutes in total (2¼ minutes on each side)
    Medium-rare: 6½ Minutes in total (3¼ minutes on each side)
    Medium: 9 Minutes in total (4½ minutes on each side)
    Well Done: 11 Minutes in total (5½ minutes on each side)
    For a 2cm thick steak:
    Blue: 2 Minutes in total (1 minutes on each side)
    Rare: 3 Minutes in total (1½ minutes on each side)
    Medium rare: 4 Minutes in total (2 minutes on each side)
    Medium: 6 Minutes in total (3 minutes on each side)
    Well Done: 10 Minutes in total (5 minutes on each side)
    Tried this recipe?Let us know how it was!

    Nutrition

    Calories: 470kcalProtein: 45gFat: 32gSaturated Fat: 14gPolyunsaturated Fat: 2gMonounsaturated Fat: 15gCholesterol: 138mgSodium: 1297mgPotassium: 606mgVitamin A: 34IUCalcium: 17mgIron: 4mg

    Nutrition is per serving

    For more great recipes follow me on PinterestFollow @sprinklessprout

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    Comments

    1. volcanos says

      October 30, 2018 at 8:37 pm

      What a bunch of great info! Thanks

      Reply
      • Claire McEwen says

        November 04, 2018 at 8:24 am

        Thank you, when you have a good steak you have to cook it right! But I guess I am talking to the converted there 😉

        Reply
    2. Allie | In This Kitchen says

      September 05, 2016 at 5:34 am

      This looks so, so good. Learning to cook a perfect steak (or any piece of meat or fish) is one of my main cooking goals. I NEVER know when it's done, and I hate sticking a thermometer in it... thank you for this guide, haha.

      Reply
      • Claire McEwen says

        September 05, 2016 at 1:03 pm

        I agree, sometimes the meat thermometer is a great tool. But when you are cooking a steak you don't want a big hole in it do you? 😉
        I use this as a guide whenever I am cooking steaks for other people. I know what my black and blue steak should look like and feel like. But I don't cook medium or medium/well often enough to know by sight and touch.

        x

        Reply
    3. Dorothy Dunton says

      September 03, 2016 at 10:25 pm

      Hi Claire! I totally am with you...I am also a "black and blue" person! Or, as Gary says "rare as you dare". Anything past really rare is just a waste of good meat in my opinion! Now I want a steak and some swedes! I think that would be perfect for Monday, it's Labor Day here which is our last official holiday of summer.

      Reply
      • Claire McEwen says

        September 05, 2016 at 1:06 pm

        Rare as you dare!!! Yes!!!

        My brothers made me eat it pretty much raw once - it was a dare - think I wrote about it in one post (just not sure which!!!)
        I don't think they expected me to eat it, let alone like it! Ha Joke was on them!!!!

        Have a great Labor Day. Sorry it is the end of your summer, but I am thankful that I am heading into Spring 😉 x

        Reply
    4.96 from 46 votes (46 ratings without comment)

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