How to cook the ultimate steak, according to the top chefs
How to cook the ultimate steak, according to the top chefs
Ella WalkerSun, May 3, 2026 at 8:20 AM UTC
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The culinary director of Gaucho, the celebrated Argentinian steak brand known for its grilled beef since 1994, harbours a surprising secret: he didn't always enjoy meat.
French-born chef Anthony Ekizian, who has called London home for two decades, was far from carnivorous in his youth.
If forced to consume it, he recalls, "it was well done".
His journey into the world of high dining was equally serendipitous; leaving school at 16 without a clear path, he found himself working at Saint Tropez's exclusive Club 55. "I really didnāt choose to be a chef," he admits, yet somehow, meat ultimately found its way to him.
Chef Anthony Ekizian at Gaucho in central London (PA)
āWhen I started as an apprentice, there were some steaks on the grill, on the wood fire. I remember the [team was] showing me. I was just putting vegetables next to it, I was observing, and the head chef there was talking to me about cuts. I didnāt know anything really about it, but he cooked it rare, I remember it was very rare inside.ā And that was it, he became a meat lover.
Since then, Ekizian has travelled the world, worked in a number of Michelin-starred restaurants, including in Cannes, and now heads up Gaucho, for whom he has written a new cookbook, Gaucho: The Spirit Of Argentina: A Cookbook. The title is a bit of a mouthful but inside, essays on the history of the Gaucho (traditional Argentinian cattle herders) and the incredible landscapes they rear their cows on, sit alongside recipes for steak that go beyond a slab of meat and fries (although, it doesnāt knock the basics in the least).
So what are Ekizianās quick, foolproof tips for getting steak right at home?
The major mistake home cooks make when it comes to steakā¦
It comes way before you even start cooking. ā[They] buy the wrong quality of beef. You need to buy quality,ā says Ekizian. āI know thereās some good supermarkets, but beef in the supermarket is never really good. Itās not just that, we need to also support our farmers and individual businesses, like butchers and farms. It needs to be about quality, the right product from the beginning.ā
He says thereās incredible British beef available, although, it may not quite compete with Argentinian cows. āYou go to Argentina and the beef is exceptional. Everything is kilometres and kilometres of pampas grass and hills, and you have these cows moving every day to a different patch to eat different types of grass or herbs. They are just outside. Thereās no barn. Theyāre like wild cows, really, and when you get that, itās gonna be great.ā
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Donāt be swayed by trendy cuts
āFor me, the perfect steak is obviously a cut that you like,ā says Ekizian. So what if the flat iron steak is everywhere?! If you like a T-bone, get a T-bone. Your butcher will be able to talk you through the different cuts, from skirt to fillet, sirloin to rump, and from there, itās about working out what your tastebuds appreciate the most.
Let it hang out in the fridge for a bitā¦
Once youāve picked the right cut for you, and it has the āright provenance and quality, then what I do, usually, is I put my steak on a wire rack in the fridge so thereās air going through ā I let it air-dry,ā says Ekizian. āIf I donāt have time, for a couple of hours, or ideally, overnight. It always helps to take out the moisture, so itās a bit dry but itās not dry-aged. It means thereās less moisture when it goes in the pan and it gives you a nice crust.ā
Donāt forget the seasoningā¦
He says that with seasoning, there are ādifferent schools of thoughtā to consider. āYou can season it a bit before, like a minute before, or you can season it directly on the grill, which I do.ā Either way, salt is non-negotiable.
Whack it on the grill, or barbecueā¦
When itās time to start cooking ā once your beef has come up to room temperature ā you need a āvery hot grill or a very hot pan,ā says Ekizian. And the ideal scenario is to be cooking on real fire. āThere is something about cooking over a wood fire that makes it better,ā he says, almost wistfully. You get a smokiness and a char that cooking on an induction hob, for instance, isnāt going to give you.
Itās all about timingā¦
How long you sear your steak for on either side depends on the thickness of it, and how well done you like your meat. Regardless, āit needs to rest. If you cook a steak for four minutes, two minutes on each side, then leave it to rest for a good minute, minute and a half, and thatās gonna be just perfect,ā says Ekizian.
āDone-nessā can be a pretty confusing area, especially when people start prodding their thumbs to work out what the meat should feel like. āMeat probes are great when youāre not sure,ā reassures Ekizian. āSomeone like me whoās been doing this for years, we know by touching, or by looking at the meat, but I do recommend people use a probe.ā
Sides and saucesā¦
Fries and baked potatoes are the obvious, delicious accompaniments (and if youāre going retro, grilled tomatoes and portobello mushrooms), but with sauce, āIāll be honest with you, Iām not a sauce person, so I like to have my steak with a bit of salt,ā says Ekizian, upsetting peppercorn sauce fans everywhere. āIf I do have a sauce, it will be a chimichurri, because this is just brilliant: oregano, a bit of olive oil.ā
Try not to feel overwhelmedā¦
Whether youāre new to grilling steak, have incredibly high steak standards or just feel youāre prone to messing up when cooking meat, Ekizian agrees āitās scary when you donāt know [what youāre doing completely]. When you cook a bigger piece of meat, or you grill on the barbecue, it can be overwhelming, like you donāt have control.ā But, he says, once you understand the basics āit can be very simple. Actually, itās not that difficult, just a couple of steps that you need to take. Itās really about practice.ā
(Sam A. Harris/PA)
Gaucho: The Spirit Of Argentina: A Cookbook by Anthony Ekizian is published in hardback by Bloomsbury Publishing, priced £35. Photography by Sam A. Harris, available October 23.
Source: āAOL Breakingā