Martini steak is not about alcohol flavor.
It’s about control.
This technique uses cold, acid, salt, and fat
to engineer tenderness and crust at the same time.
Start with a thick-cut steak.
Ribeye, New York strip, or sirloin work best.
Thickness matters.
Thin steaks overcook before crust forms.
Pat the steak completely dry.
Moisture is the enemy of sear.
Season both sides generously with kosher salt.
Salt first.
Always salt first.
Let it sit at room temperature for twenty minutes.
This starts surface drying and protein relaxation.
Now the martini element.
In a chilled bowl, combine
dry vermouth,
a splash of olive brine,
fresh cracked black pepper,
and a thin drizzle of olive oil.
No vodka.
Vodka adds nothing.
Vermouth brings acidity and aroma.
Brush the mixture lightly onto the steak.
This is not a marinade.
This is a surface treatment.
Heat a cast iron skillet until it is smoking hot.
No oil yet.
Let the pan get angry.
Add a small amount of high-smoke oil.
Place the steak down and do not touch it.
That silence is crust forming.
Sear for two minutes.
Flip once.
Sear again.
Now add butter, crushed garlic, and rosemary.
Tilt the pan.
Baste continuously.
Butter carries flavor.
Heat creates texture.
Lower the heat.
Brush one final light coat of the martini mixture.
The alcohol flashes off instantly.
What stays is aroma.
Pull the steak at medium-rare.
Rest for five minutes.
Resting redistributes juices.
Cut too early and you lose everything.
Slice against the grain.
Finish with flaky salt.
This steak doesn’t taste like a cocktail.
It tastes clean, sharp, rich, and intentional.
That’s martini steak.
Not gimmick.
Technique.
Published on 2 weeks, 1 day ago
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