This guide covers everything you need to know about sous vide steak, from temperature guidelines to FAQs to searing and serving tips.
Steak is one of the most popular foods for first-time sous vide enthusiasts to cook, and with good reason. Cooking steak the traditional way, in a cast iron skillet or on the grill, leaves lots of room for error, and an over- or undercooked steak is a big mistake to make when there’s a prime-grade dry-aged ribeye on the line. Sous vide cooking takes all of the guesswork out of the process, delivering steaks that are cooked to precisely the temperature you like each and every time. Not only that, because sous vide is such a gentle cooking process, you’ll be able to achieve steaks that are more evenly cooked from edge to edge than what you’ll find in even the best steakhouses in the world.
Of course, this information should prove useful to anyone who owns a functional sous vide device, or even someone hacking it with a home rig or a plain old beer cooler.
With traditional high-heat cooking methods, hitting that perfect medium-rare sweet spot is about as tough as bull’s-eye-ing a womp rat in a T-16. A moment too short or too long on the fire, and your steak will come out under- or overcooked. Sous vide precision cooking methods solve that issue completely.
Why Sous Vide Your Steak?
Sous vide precision cooking offers unparalleled control over your steak, letting you very precisely cook the steak to the level of doneness that you prefer. No more guesswork to guarantee a medium-rare temperature. No poking with a thermometer, no cutting and peeking, no jabbing with your finger—just perfect results every single time.
It also increases the flexibility of your schedule. With traditional methods, your schedule is at the mercy of the steak. Once you start cooking it, it’s a straight, nonstop shot until the finish line. Sous vide steaks, on the other hand, can be held for several hours before you finish them by searing and serving, which means that your steaks are ready when you and your guests are.
Finally, sous vide offers results that are not attainable by traditional methods. With standard high-heat cooking, you develop a temperature gradient within the meat. The very center may be perfectly medium-rare, but the steak will be increasingly more well-done as you approach the exterior. With a sous vide steak, your meat is evenly cooked from edge to edge.
Cooking steak sous vide is a two-phase process. The first phase involves sealing the steak in a plastic bag and cooking it to the desired final temperature using your sous vide device. The second phase is searing the meat to develop color, flavor, and textural contrast on its surface, and to help render and soften its fat.
The temperature of the sous vide bath during the initial cooking phase is what determines the final doneness of your steak.
How to Select the Right Steak for Sous Vide
Sous vide precision cooking is a great method for cooking any type of steak, whether it’s a tender cut, like the tenderloin, strip, ribeye, or porterhouse, or a butcher’s cut, like the hanger, flap, or skirt. For more info on selecting a good steak, check out my guide here.
Ideal Thickness for Sous Vide Steak
The thickness of a steak is not just about portion control. Without an adequately thick steak, it’s very difficult to get that perfect contrast between exterior and interior. Very thin steaks will tend to overcook before they can finish developing a nice crust, even over the hottest fire you can build. With sous vide in particular, using a thicker steak will help you maintain more of that perfectly cooked interior during the searing process.
I try to get steaks that are at least an inch and a half thick, if not a full two inches. This does mean that each steak ends up weighing between 12 ounces and a pound—that’s big, even for someone with a healthy appetite for red meat. But remember this: It’s better to cook one large steak for every two people than to cook two smaller steaks. Learn how to share.
How to Select the Right Temperature for Sous Vide Steak
Temperature can have a major impact on the juiciness and texture of a steak. Here, I’ve collected juices expelled by three nearly identical steaks cooked to different temperatures:
Here’s a rough breakdown of how steaks feel at different degrees of doneness.
- Rare sous vide steak (120°F/49°C): Your meat is still nearly raw. Muscle proteins have not started to contract much and will have a slippery, wet texture. Chewier cuts, like hanger or flap meat, will be particularly tough at this stage. Fat has not yet started to render, so fattier cuts will have a waxy texture. I recommend cooking only very lean, tender cuts, like tenderloin, to rare.
- Medium-rare (129°F/54°C): Your steak is still nice and red, but muscle proteins have begun to tighten and firm up. You lose a bit of juice due to this tightening, but what you lose in juice, you gain in tenderness. Medium-rare steaks have a cleaner bite to them: Instead of muscle fibrils mushing and slipping past each other, as they do with very rare steaks, they cut more easily between your teeth. I recommend medium-rare for all types of steaks, though steaks particularly high in fat benefit from being taken closer to medium.
- Medium sous vide steak (135°F/57°C): Your steak is a rosy pink throughout and has lost about four times more juices than a rare steak. With a well-marbled piece of beef, however, the rendering, softened fat should more than make up for this extra juice loss. Coarsely textured cuts, like hanger, skirt, and flap meat, also become firm and juicy at this stage. I recommend cooking very fatty or coarse pieces of beef to the cooler side of medium.
- Medium-well sous vide steak (145°F/63°C): Your steak is well on its way to dryness. At this point, you’ve lost nearly six times as much juice as a rare steak, and the meat has a distinctly cottony, grainy texture that no amount of excess lubricating fat can disguise. If you must have your meat cooked medium-well, I suggest using very rich cuts, like short rib, skirt steak, or hanger, which suffer less than finely textured cuts, like ribeye, strip, or tenderloin.
- Well-done sous vide steak (156°F/69°C+): I get it. Some people like their meat well-done. However, there is no real reason to use a sous vide precision technique if you like your steak well-done. Just grill or pan-roast until it’s as done as you like it.
Does Timing Matter for Sous Vide Steak?
To figure out exactly what happens when you cook steak sous vide for extended periods, I cooked identical steaks at 130°F (54°C) for periods ranging from one hour all the way up to 48 hours. I found that the most important differences typically occurred between the four- and 24-hour marks.
Take a look at these slices of steak I’ve cut off and torn:
As you can see, the steak cooked for just one hour stretches and pulls when you tear it. This gives the steak a pleasant amount of chew. It’s still tender, but it tastes like a steak. By the time we hit four hours, that chew has been reduced a bit. Connective tissue has broken down, and individual muscle fibrils split apart easily instead of sticking together, though a four-hour steak is still pretty decent.
Head all the way over to the 24-hour mark or beyond, and your steak ends up nearly shredding as you pull it apart. It’s a strange mouthfeel: The steak is still plenty juicy (a steak cooked 24 hours loses barely any more moisture than a steak cooked for one hour), but the meat shreds instead of offering resistance or chew.
For the best results, I strongly suggest following the temperature and timing charts below. I’ve included two separate charts to cover different categories of steak cuts.
Temperature and Timing Charts for Sous Vide Steak
Temps and Times for Sous Vide Strip, Ribeye, Porterhouse/T-Bone, and Butcher’s Cuts
Highly marbled cuts, like a grain-finished, prime-grade ribeye or strip, should be cooked a few degrees Fahrenheit higher than leaner steaks like tenderloin, since their copious intramuscular fat helps keep them moist while delivering plenty of flavor. I prefer ribeyes and strip steaks cooked medium-rare to medium, around 129°F (54°C) to 135°F (57°C). Fattier steaks also have natural insulation, which means they’ll take slightly longer to reach the correct internal temperature.
Porterhouse and T-bone steaks contain a large section of strip and a smaller section of tenderloin. Since both sides must be cooked together, it’s better to select a temperature and time based on the side you like to eat better. Personally, I like to optimize cooking time and temperature for the strip. It means my tenderloin comes out slightly more cooked than I generally prefer, but the insulating bone helps it stay plenty moist and juicy.
Timings are all given for steaks one and a half to two inches thick. For steaks one inch thick or less, initial cooking time can be shortened to 40 minutes. Steaks cooked under 130°F should not be cooked longer than two and a half hours at a time, for food-safety reasons.
Strip, Ribeye, Porterhouse/T-Bone, and Butcher’s Cuts: Temps and Times
Doneness | Temperature Range | Timing Range |
Very rare to rare | 120°F (49°C) to 128°F (53°C) | 1 to 2 1/2 hours |
Medium-rare | 129°F (54°C) to 134°F (57°C) | 1 to 4 hours (2 1/2 hours max if under 130°F/54°C) |
Medium | 135°F (57°C) to 144°F (62°C) | 1 to 4 hours |
Medium-well | 145°F (63°C) to 155°F (68°C) | 1 to 3 1/2 hours |
Well-done | 156°F (69°C) and up | 1 to 3 hours |
Temps and Times for Sous Vide Tenderloin Steaks
Lean tenderloin is easily overcooked and, lacking intramuscular fat, will become dry. I cook my tenderloin steaks at several degrees Fahrenheit lower than fattier cuts, like ribeye or strip. I like my tenderloin in the very-rare-to-rare range, between 120°F (49°C) and 128°F (53°C), for optimal tenderness and moistness.
The timings here are all given for steaks one and a half to two inches thick. For steaks one inch or less, initial cooking time can be shortened to 30 minutes. Steaks cooked under 130°F should not be cooked longer than two and a half hours at a time, for food-safety reasons.
Tenderloin: Temps and Times
Doneness | Temperature Range | Timing Range |
Very rare to rare | 120°F (49°C) to 128°F (53°C) | 45 minutes to 2 1/2 hours |
Medium-rare | 129°F (54°C) to 134°F (57°C) | 45 minutes to 4 hours (2 1/2 hours max if under 130°F/54°C) |
Medium | 135°F (57°C) to 144°F (62°C) | 45 minutes to 4 hours |
Medium-well | 145°F (63°C) to 155°F (68°C) | 45 minutes to 3 1/2 hours |
Well done | 156°F (69°C) and up | 1 to 3 hours |
How to Cook a Steak Sous Vide, Step by Step
Step 1: Preheat Precision Cooker
Step 2: Season the Steak
Season the steak generously with salt and pepper.
Make sure to get the edges as well!
Step 3: Add Aromatics
Step 4: Seal Bag
Step 5: Cook Steak
Step 6: Remove Steak From Bag
Remove the steak from the bag, and place it on a paper towel–lined plate. Pat it dry very carefully on both sides.
To Finish on the Stovetop
Steak cooked completely sous vide will not have any browning on its surface, so this must be added afterward for improved flavor and texture. The stovetop is a great way to add a nice, well-browned crust to your meat. Skip this section if you prefer to finish your steak outdoors on the grill.
Step 7: Preheat a Cast Iron or Stainless Steel Skillet
Turn on your vents and open your windows. Add one tablespoon of vegetable, canola, or rice bran oil to a heavy cast iron or stainless steel skillet set over the hottest burner you have, and preheat the skillet until it starts to smoke.
Step 8: Start Searing
Step 9: Add Aromatics
If desired, add aromatics, like whole thyme and rosemary sprigs with the leaves still attached, sliced shallots, or crushed whole garlic cloves.
Step 10: Flip and Repeat
Step 10a: Torch if Desired
Immediately after flipping the steak, start torching the first side, working in slow, even strokes back and forth across its entire surface, until it’s pale brown with a few darker, singed spots. Repeat the torching process with each flip.
I suggest using either an Iwatani trigger head on a butane canister (the inexpensive option) or a Searzall attachment rigged to a Bernzomatic trigger-start torch head on a propane cylinder. You can read our review of the best torches right here.
Step 11: Get the Edges
Step 12: Rest and Re-Crisp
To Finish on the Grill
Step 7: Light the Grill
Super-high heat is essential here. Your goal is to sear hard and fast, so that the exterior of the steak gets color, without overcooking that perfectly finished interior.
To do this, light one chimney full of charcoal. When all the charcoal is lit and covered with gray ash, pour out and arrange the coals on one side of the charcoal grate. Set the cooking grate in place, cover the grill, and allow it to preheat for five minutes. Alternatively, set half the burners on a gas grill to the highest heat setting, cover, and preheat for 10 minutes. Scrape the grill grates clean with a grill scraper, then oil the grates by holding an oil-dipped kitchen towel or paper towels in a set of tongs and rubbing them over the grates five to six times.
Step 8: Sear the Steak
Place steak directly over the hot side of the grill and cook, turning every 15 to 30 seconds, until a deep, rich crust has formed, about one and a half minutes total. If the fire threatens to flare up as the steak drips fat into it, suffocate the fire by closing the grill lid until the flames die out. Alternatively, transfer the steak to the cooler side of the grill, using a set of long tongs, and let it cook there until the flames subside. Do not allow the steak to become engulfed in flames.
Step 9: Serve
Frequently Asked Sous Vide Questions
None! Just kidding. Sous vide–style precision cooking is a technique, another tool in your arsenal, and, as with all techniques, there’s a trade-off. Here are a few of the most immediate:
- It takes longer. A traditionally cooked steak goes from fridge to plate in 15 to 20 minutes (a bit longer if you have to preheat your oven). A sous vide steak will take an hour or more, though, with sous vide cooking, this time is almost 100% hands-off.
- You will not achieve the exact same sear. Flag-waving sous vide zealots may claim otherwise, but the rapid sear you achieve after cooking sous vide will not be as thick or crusty as the sear you get from a traditional cooking method. Some folks prefer a thicker sear; others prefer the thin sear achieved after sous vide cooking.
- It requires more equipment. Cooking a steak sous vide requires a precision cooker and a plastic bag or vacuum sealer, in addition to all the tools required for more traditional methods. Chances are, if you’re reading this article, you already have those extra tools.
Remember this: Sous vide is not a silver bullet, or a panacea meant to solve all of your cooking problems or to replace more traditional methods. It’s a tool meant to expand your options.
Q: Can a sous vide steak get a good crust?
Sure can! I mean, just look at this baby here:
Q: When should I season my steak?
In either case, only the exterior of the steak will be seasoned, so it’s always a good idea to serve your steak with coarse sea salt, such as Maldon, for sprinkling at the table as your guests slice.
Q: What happens if I leave a steak cooking sous vide for longer than the maximum time recommendations? Is it dangerous?
So long as you’re cooking at above 130°F, there are no real health risks associated with prolonged sous vide cooking. You will, however, eventually notice a difference in texture. For best results, I don’t recommend cooking any longer than the maximum recommended time for each cut and temperature range. See the section on timing above for more details.
Q: Should I put olive oil or butter in the bag?
Intuitively, you may think that adding a flavorful fat, like butter or olive oil, will in turn help create a more flavorful steak. In fact, it turns out that this achieves the opposite goal: It dilutes flavor. Fat-soluble flavor compounds dissolve in the melted butter or oil and end up going down the drain later. Similarly, flavors extracted from aromatics end up diluted. For best results, place your seasoned steak in a bag with no added fats.
Q: Can I add aromatics, like herbs or alliums, to the sous vide bag?
Yes, you can. I like to add thyme or rosemary sprigs, along with sliced shallots or garlic cloves, to the bags with my steaks during cooking. Adding the same aromatics to the pan as you sear the steaks will bolster that flavor.
Q: Can I add a spice rub to my steak?
Yes, you can, but spice rubs behave quite differently under sous vide conditions compared with standard cooking conditions. Normally, aromatic compounds will dissipate into the air in the kitchen or over your grill as a spice-rubbed steak cooks. At the same time, moisture dissipates, which means what’s left of your spices sticks firmly to your meat. With sous vide cooking, there’s no way for that flavor to escape the bag. Meanwhile, spices rubbed on the surface of the meat have a tendency to get rinsed off by any juices that are being expressed.
The short answer is that it’s very tough to predict exactly how spices are going to react in a sous vide bag. I’ve found that if I want spice flavor, it’s better to rub the spices into the meat after the sous vide cooking phase and before the final searing phase.
Q: Should I pre-sear my steak?
Q. What about deep-frying the steak instead of searing after cooking sous vide?
Deep-frying a steak cooked sous vide can be a lot of fun, and it’s true that you’ll get a very quick, evenly browned crust on your meat, but there are a few downsides. First, the obvious: It requires you to have a large vessel filled with hot oil for the frying. If you’re anything like me, you like to keep deep-frying to a minimum at home for that reason.
Perhaps more importantly, deep-frying has a relatively low maximum temperature that is defined by the oil’s smoke point—generally around 450°F (232°C) or so. Oil in a skillet or a steak on a grill, on the other hand, can achieve temperatures a couple hundred degrees higher than this, allowing your steak to char rather than simply brown. For me, this charring and the intense flavor it brings are among the hallmarks of a great steak experience.
Q: Can I use a torch alone to finish a steak?
I would strongly recommend against it. Torches are extremely intense heat sources that basically follow the inverse square law: Their intensity dissipates with the square of the distance from the torch head. What this means is that any unevenness in the surface of your steak gets amplified; areas that are slightly elevated will singe before areas that are lower will even begin to brown properly.
While it’s possible to get reasonable browning with a torch by holding it at a distance great enough to minimize this effect, and by making multiple slow passes across the surface of a steak, I find the hassle and time it takes so much more of a headache than simply cooking a steak in a hot skillet, with the torch as an added heat source. Besides, a steak cooked with a skillet-and-torch combo comes out with a better crust in the end.
Q: What’s the best torch for searing steak?
Standard propane torches with trigger-start ignition heads have trouble staying lit when inverted. This can be a problem when you’re frantically trying to relight a torch as your steak sears in a hot skillet. Adding a Searzall unit will not only ensure that the flame stays lit, but will also diffuse the flame, allowing you to get a more even sear.
Want to keep things on the cheap? I find that a standard butane gas canister with a high-intensity torch head, like the Iwatani Torch, does a more than adequate job. It’s what I pack in my travel cooking kit.
Q: Does steak finished with a torch acquire any off aromas?
Finishing a steak with nothing but the naked flame of a propane or butane torch can indeed leave an off, gasoline-like aroma on the surface of the meat due to imperfect combustion. However, if you’re using the skillet/torch combination method, the added heat from the skillet will help the fuel combust more completely, while the dilution of any un-combusted fuel by the fat and juices in the pan will render them completely imperceptible.
If, for some reason, you do choose to sear with a torch alone, a Searzall unit will improve combustion efficiency and completely eliminate those odors.
Q: Can I chill and reheat my steak after cooking it sous vide if I haven’t opened the bag?
It’s true that given a high enough temperature (130°F or higher) and a long enough time period (several hours), the contents of a sealed sous vide bag should be close to sterile, which means that rapid chilling via an ice bath followed by rapid reheating should pose no health risks, though I still strongly recommend against it whenever avoidable. It’s not doing any favors for the quality of your steak.
Word of warning: Never chill and reheat any food that has been cooked or held at a temperature lower than 130°F. These temperatures are not hot enough to destroy dangerous bacteria.
Q: Can I cook a steak straight from the freezer?
Yes! I often seal seasoned, ready-to-cook steaks in sous vide bags and stack them in the freezer. For steaks an inch to two inches thick, when you’re ready to cook, allow an extra hour for the steak to fully thaw in the hot-water bath before you begin timing it for doneness.
Q: Does sous vide steak need to rest?
Traditionally cooked steaks need to rest; that is, they need to be placed aside for five to 10 minutes before they’re cut and served. This resting period is to allow time for the temperature gradient within the steak to even out. The cooler center is gently heated by the hotter outer edges, while the edges in turn lose some of their heat to the outside world. Even temperature is important: It’s what prevents a steak from leaking its juices everywhere the moment it’s been sliced open.
Because a sous vide steak cooks from edge to edge with more or less perfect evenness, there is no temperature gradient inside. A medium-rare steak should be 130°F from the very center to the outer edge, with only the outer surfaces hotter after searing. Sous vide steaks can be served immediately after searing. The very minimal resting they need will happen on the way from the kitchen to the table.
Thanks to https://www.seriouseats.com/food-lab-complete-guide-to-sous-vide-steak