Gordon Ramsay’s Steak and Fluffy Chix Pan Sauce – a low carb keto love child in the making

Posted by on January 31, 2015 in Easy Button Low Carb Keto Recipes, Gluten Free Recipes, Low Carb Keto Recipes, Main Dishes | 2 comments

Gordon Ramsay’s Steak and Fluffy Chix Pan Sauce – a low carb keto love child in the making
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How do you cook great steak? It’s one of the burning questions on every low carb ketoneer’s mind. Do you broil, grill, pan sear? So many confusing choices, but which one yields the easiest, most dependable and repeatable experience–perfect steak, every time? Join Fluffy Chix Cook as they explore this topic and feature Gordon Ramsay’s technique for cooking the perfect steak, start-to-finish. No grills need apply.

 

 

 

 

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We are Texans and Southerners. We were born with antique silver spoons in our mouths (from our great great grannies’ secret stashes brought over from the old country), and bottles of granulated garlic, kosher salt and black pepper in our grubby little mits. And we are foodies. We know. We feel the cognitive disconnect. Foodies…granulated garlic. *gasp* But, even though we are foodies, we are Southerners first, and taking away our granulated garlic is tantamount to making us cook with our right hands tied behind our backs, because Southernese beats Foodie in the rock-scissors game of DFSW (delicate flower of southern womanhood) life. Seriously. (So continue to expect recipes from the Fluffys that glorify and salute our beloved Southern Trinity.)

 

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Gordon Ramsay demonstrating a super simple method for cooking a great steak. Yum! (Click image to watch YouTube video.) (Photo excerpt from YouTube.)

 

But that’s just what Gordon Bleeding Ramsay challenged us to do with his amazing video that makes cooking a great low carb keto rock star dish, er, we mean steak, super-duper simple. One of the big cooking challenges in a low carb keto lifestyle is adding flavor to quickly cooked proteins without burning the source of those flavorants (ie herbs, spices and condiments). And yet, quick cooking methods should be a staple in a low carb ketoneer’s life. Why? Because it means simple and quick; two qualities we all need, especially on weeknights.

 

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When the Fluffys get down and dirty with quick cooking aka “dry” or high heat cooking methods, we tend to use dried spices. We believe they resist burning a tiny bit more than fresh herbs and spices; plus the dried herbs and spices stay on the protein better. They conveniently live in our pantry, ready to go at a moment’s notice. And dried herbs and spice rubs bring a much more intense flavor, especially to meats. And there you have it, our generationally pre-determined need for the Holy Trinity of Southern Spices: salt, pepper, and granulated garlic. Hallelujah and pass the lard.

 

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Gordon’s technique, a classical French technique known as pan roasting or pan searing (Remember we did that with the chicken a couple of weeks ago on the Fluffys’ Facebook Page?) utilizes fresh garlic and herbs. We were intrigued. And we’ll tell you right now, it’s the best $2.00/pot you’ll ever invest in your cooking—planting your own fresh herbs. (more later) We routinely use Ramsay’s (actually classic French cooking) method when building any type of pan gravy, which we make while the steak rests, because convolutedly, fresh herbs and fresh garlic cloves give a much different and more sophisticated flavor to a pan sauce than dried herbs and spices. It’s just that you guys don’t always have fresh herbs hangin’ out on your patio and we don’t want to create barriers to cooking and enjoying Fluffy Chix low carb keto recipes.

 

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But could using fresh garlic and sprigs of fresh herbs, to season the pan and cooking oils, give the steak enough flavor for our jaded, dried-spice-palates? Could they season the meat enough without having a dried spice rub applied to the surface of the meat? Well Lawd-oh-mighty. You could have knocked the Fluffys over with a feather! Why? Well child, the flavor on this pan seared steak was fabulous and no grills need apply.

 

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There was no need to worry about burning the spices or garlic on the surface of the meat. Because the garlic and sprigs of whole herbs (we used rosemary because the fresh thyme did not make it through the hard freeze at Christmas) applied to the pan fats, imparted their glorious flavor and bounty into the fats, which then basted the meat—adding flavor, delicate flavor to it. It also eliminated the possibility of burning the flavorants.

Pan searing steaks is a method anyone with a frying pan can successfully accomplish. And easy. Did we mention easy? Eight minutes start to finish, including the quick pan sauce. Low carb keto bliss. No need for a grill. No need to kvetz over broiling times or which rack to broil it on, just an easy six in a skillet on top of the burner, cranked to high. We will now be cooking steaks this way 50% of the time. The other 50% of the time will still be given to our grill, cuz we can.

 

 

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A Word About the Meat

Buy the best steak your pocketbook can afford. We’d stop here, but Denny would go cra cra. Ribeye, nay, prime grade ribeye, that prince of steaks “be” the Fluffy choice on any given Sunday. It’s frequently on sale, and a pound of ribeye yields two generous portions plus enough leftovers for steak and eggs or egg breakfast tacos the next day. Yes, you heard me, steak-egg-cheese breakfast tacos are low carb keto when made with a Psylli Wrap.

You know your preferred cut; people often have a very strong connection with a particular cut: ribeye, Del Monico, chuck eye steak, Porterhouse, tenderloin, t-bone, flat iron, flank or skirt, sirloin, or strip. Any of these cuts work well with Gordon’s steak technique, although a bone-in variety will likely require a brief finish in a 400° oven.

We happened to try a prime sirloin with Ramsay’s method. They are presently on sale for $5.98/lb at the HEB. P-R-I-M-E, for $5.98/lb=BONANZA (better call Hos, now). Can you say, melt-in-your-mouth tender? Holy moly. Big, rich flavor, because let’s face it–sirloin is packed with big flavor. It’s just normally tough as boot leather unless prepared rare or blue (very raw rare with a cold center). But this prime sirloin was super well-marbled and so tender you could cut it with a fork. Pat LaFrieda of Pat LaFrieda Meats, purveyors of fine meats since 1922, and author of the best selling book, MEAT, would have wept tears of joy. Maybe depart from the usual family fave and try the next sale on anything prime. Let us know what you think…drop a comment to us, below.

 

(Click on the image to purchase from Fluffy Chix Cook's trusted Amazon partner.)

(Click on the image to purchase from Fluffy Chix Cook’s trusted Amazon partner.)

 

You can use your grama’s cast iron skillet or use our jazzy number, an enameled cast iron skillet. We actually prefer enameled cast iron because you don’t have to worry about cooking acidic foods in them, and because we believe the enamel helps reduce the level of iron leaching into our food from the pan. Extra iron can present a problem, because iron continues to build up in peoples’ blood (unless they donate blood or get wounded and bleed a lot). Too much iron causes a host of problems and increases the chances of heart attacks. We also love how enameled cast iron pans cook: consistent, no/few hot spots, holds heat better than ordinary pans, heavy, durable, and easy clean-up.

Le Creuset makes a line of enameled cast iron cookware that’s considered the gold standard in enameled cookware. They are pricey. But they will last you the rest of your life and will still be kickin’ it when your great grandchild is ready to get their low carb keto cook on, Swearsies. The Le Creuset pans even have a lifetime warranty against chipping.

If you can’t afford Le Creuset skillet or Dutch oven, there are many knock-off cast iron enamel pans ranging from $20-$40. They chip a bit, but are still heavy duty hitters and will also last you a lifetime. They may not make it to your great gran’kids.

 

 

 

 

 

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Copyright © 2010 Fluffy Chix Cook. All rights reserved.

 

 

 

 

2 Comments

  1. Wow, wish I had a plate of that steak in front of me right this minute! I do have a grass fed sirloin steak in the freezer, so will use it via this method!!

    Beautiful info, beautifully presented and shared.

    As always, FCC, thank you so very much!

    Hugs,
    Alice

    • You are so welcome! But be sure to thank Gordon, it’s his technique. We just made the pan gravy from Dad’s old recipe he used for venison backstrap! xoxo

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