Some knowing people in my life were in disagreement about which cut of beef to lose my virginity to (recall the choice between the strawberry and banana condom? No?) A Classicist-turned-Commis-Chef made a persuasive case for the rib-eye, while My Northern Friend made an uncharacteristically restrained case for the fillet. I purchased both, taking a typically vegetarian disinterest to the difference, and a positively cavalier eeny-meeny-miny-moe approach to choosing between them.
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| The fated rib-eye |
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| Meatslab |
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| Waiting for Godot (too right I name my beef) |
Now, as a thoroughgoing meat-n00b, lacking all meat common-sense, I knew the cooking of this thing would test me. It was at least a short test, with Google (again -- this time as a noun) telling me that for a medium-rare steak, three minutes of hot-skillet action on each side was all it would take. Surely I had six minutes of competence left in me to complete the mission?
I tossed a spoonful of butter into an iron frying pan (my true skillet dreams persist, vainly) and I watched nervously as my pan began to smoke, quite menacingly, like a brooding Heathcliff. I lobbed the rib-eye forth and heard a snare-like sizzle.
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| Action shot |
Three minutes seems like an eternity when you don't know what you're doing. It's like forgetting your lines in GCSE drama and being entirely without crutch or prompt when no inspiration comes. I flipped the steak over, feeling unfathomably out-of-my-depth when pandemonium struck. In that ham-fisted flip, my pan burst into flames, which, while strangely exhilarating to this self-confessed adrenaline-phobe, was so-not-in-the-script-don't-the-fuck-do-that-again-you-stupendous-moron. My confidence plummeted. Why hadn't I just gone up to Gaucho in London, where the use of fire, if employed at all, is intentional and controlled?
I feebly blew/sighed on the pan and impatiently kept the steak sizzling in the incendiary smog for two more minutes. My hopes for medium-rare were extinguished with the blaze. My premier boeuf would be brûlé.
With the fire alarm bleating, I poured myself a glass of Cabernet Sauvingon and removed the rib-eye from its Le Creuset crematorium. Gospel has it that you should let meat rest, and after the unpremeditated flambé, I needed to sit down and think about what I'd done. Meanwhile, the pre-fabricated peppercorn sauce (fanx Sainsbury's) was heating up on the stove and, when I finally re-entered the theatre of conflict, I spooned it over the steak and carried it to the dining table. There was a ceremonious trial-by-ordeal aftermath calmness in the air, or maybe it was the red on my yet-empty stomach.
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| Unironically well-done |
So, despite bearing all the hallmarks of a botch job par excellence, I managed to serve an edible (fat maybe excepted) hunk of meat, which I chowed down with audible, and authentic, gusto. Nevertheless, I'm really looking forward to having a steak cooked properly.
A table for two at Gaucho, please.





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