Dan Cooks
Cast Iron Ribeye That Tastes Like a Steakhouse — Made Right at Home
Butter-basted ribeye with golden herb-roasted potatoes and honey-glazed carrots. This is the dinner that makes the whole family go quiet at the table — in the best possible way.
Some nights you want to do something special for the people you love — not a reservation, not takeout, but something you made with your own hands that hits the table still sizzling. This is that dinner. A thick ribeye, seared hard in a cast iron skillet until it builds a deep mahogany crust, then finished in a pool of foaming butter with smashed garlic and fresh herbs. On the side, baby potatoes roasted cut-side down until they're crispy and golden, and carrots glazed with honey until the edges caramelize into something almost candy-sweet. It's the kind of meal my grandmother would've called 'company food' — except we make it on a Tuesday because life's too short to save the good stuff.
The Sear Is Everything
Here's the truth about cast iron ribeye: the pan does most of the work, but only if you let it. Start by patting the steaks completely dry — and I mean bone dry, every bit of surface moisture gone. Moisture is the enemy of crust. Season generously with kosher salt and black pepper, pressing it in, then let the steaks sit out for 30 minutes. A cold steak hitting a hot pan steams instead of sears.
When it's time to cook, get that cast iron screaming hot — two to three minutes over high heat until you see the first wisps of smoke. Add the avocado oil (it handles that heat without burning), then lay the steaks away from you into the pan. Don't touch them. Don't peek. Don't move them around. Let the Maillard reaction do its work and build that deep, mahogany crust. After three minutes, flip once. Two more minutes on the second side.
Now comes the magic: drop the heat to medium, add your butter, smashed garlic, rosemary, and thyme. As the butter melts and foams, tilt the pan and start basting — spooning that fragrant, herb-infused butter over the steaks continuously for 60 to 90 seconds. The butter carries all those herb and garlic flavors straight into the crust. This is the step…
