The Pillar Guide
The Ultimate
Steak Cooking Guide.
A single resource linking every method, every cut, every temperature target, and every common mistake. Built by a ranch that raises the beef and cooks it the same way we tell you to.
Pick Your Cut
Every cut has a best method. Sometimes two or three. The wrong method on the right cut is the most common reason home cooks blame "cheap meat" for a bad steak.
| Cut | Best Method | Cook Guide |
|---|---|---|
| Ribeye (bone-in / boneless) | Cast iron or reverse-sear | Cook a Ribeye → |
| Tomahawk | Reverse-sear (always — too thick for direct) | Cook a Tomahawk → |
| NY Strip | Cast iron or grill | Cook a NY Strip → |
| Filet Mignon | Pan-sear + oven-finish | Cook Filet Mignon → |
| Porterhouse / T-Bone | Grill (two zones) | Read the Comparison → |
| Picanha | Skewer + open flame (Brazilian) or cast iron | Cook Picanha → |
| Flank Steak | Grill high heat, slice against grain | Cook Flank → |
| Hanger / Skirt | High heat fast, marinade optional | Hanger vs Skirt → |
| Flat Iron | Cast iron or grill | Grilling Guide → |
| Whole Tenderloin / Prime Rib | Reverse-sear or slow-roast | Prime Rib → |
| Wagyu (any cut) | Smaller portions, lower pan temp, no oil | Cook Wagyu → |
Master the 4 Methods
Every steak you'll ever cook can be done with one of these four. The skill is matching method to cut to occasion.
Cast Iron
Smoking-hot pan, oil with a high smoke point, 3-4 minutes per side, butter-baste the last minute. The default for ribeye, NY strip, flat iron, hanger.
Reverse-Sear
Low oven (225°F) until internal hits 115°F. Rest 5 min. Hot sear 60-90 seconds per side. Edge-to-edge medium-rare, no gray band. The default for tomahawk, prime rib, thick ribeye.
Grill (Two-Zone)
One side hot, one side cool. Sear hot, finish cool. Internal temp control. Works on porterhouse, T-bone, bone-in ribeye, tomahawk, picanha.
Sous-Vide + Sear
Bag the steak, water bath at target internal temp for 1-4 hours, hot pan sear after. Foolproof internal temp, but trades some texture. The dinner-party method.
The Internal Temperature Chart
Pull 5°F early. Carryover cooking does the rest during rest.
| Doneness | Pull Temp | Final Temp | Color |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rare | 115°F | 120°F | Cool red center |
| Medium Rare | 125°F | 130-135°F | Warm red center |
| Medium | 135°F | 140°F | Pink center |
| Medium Well | 145°F | 150°F | Slight pink |
| Well Done | 155°F | 160°F+ | No pink |
The 8 Steak Mistakes That Wreck Premium Beef
- Cooking it cold. Out of the fridge 30-45 minutes before. The center won't be ice-cold when the surface is searing.
- Not drying the surface. Wet meat steams instead of searing. Pat dry. Dry-brine 24-48 hours ahead and the surface dries itself.
- Salting too late. Salt now or salt 24 hours ago. Salting 10 minutes before draws moisture and re-wets the surface.
- Pan not hot enough. Cast iron should be smoking. Test with a water drop: it should evaporate in 1-2 seconds.
- Moving the steak. Set it down, leave it alone. Flipping every 30 seconds is a myth that ruins the crust.
- Cutting too soon. Rest is non-negotiable. 5 minutes for steaks, 15-30 for roasts, 60+ for brisket.
- Cutting with the grain. Slice against the muscle fibers. Full guide →
- Over-applying technique to wagyu. Wagyu cooks at lower temps, smaller portions, less oil. Wagyu method →
Source the Steak Worth Cooking Right
No method overcomes bad sourcing. We raise our beef on a single ranch in Mt. Pleasant, Utah. Black Angus, F1 Wagyu Cross, and Full-Blood Wagyu. USDA-inspected at BarW Custom Meats. Shipped vacuum-sealed and flash-frozen.
Keep Reading
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