Rib Eye Steak
Rib Eye Steaks with Mixed Mushroom Sauté
A cracked peppercorn and rosemary coating accents this luscious cut of meat, which is topped with sautéed wild mushrooms and served with onion rings. Start the meal with a salad of mixed greens and tomatoes with your favorite blue cheese dressing. A rich chocolate cake is the perfect dessert.
Smoked Rib-Eye and Goat Cheese Empañadas
This is a terrific make-ahead appetizer. The steak must be coated with the spice rub and chilled overnight before grilling, then the empanadas can be assembled completely one day before baking.
By Guillermo Pernot
Rib-Eye Steaks with Roasted Red Peppers and Balsamic Vinegar
Serve these flavorful steaks with the Polenta with Mozzarella and Parmesan .
By Maria Watson
Grilled Rib-Eye Steaks with Green Chile Mushroom Salsa Butter
The recado is a dry rub that gives a burst of flavor to almost any meat or vegetable but is particularly wonderful on beef and corn.
By Reed Hearon
Steak-Frites
In Belgium, steak-frites is practically one word. A steak without a mountain of Belgian fries and a pint of fresh beer is unthinkable. The two signature dishes of Belgium are moules-frites (mussels with fries) and steak-frites.
My grandfather Charles, a butcher all his life, always said to choose meat that is marbled with tiny veins of fat. A perfect steak is small and plump with a thin layer of fat around the edges. A steak that is too lean and thin will have no flavor and will be dry. Look for meat that is labeled prime or choice.
By Ruth Van Waerebeek
Hickory-Grilled Rib-Eye Steaks with Bacon-Molasses Butter
Sweet cherry tomatoes make an easy appetizer. What to drink: Top off glasses of cold lemonade with a splash of bourbon, and garnish with fresh mint sprigs. For wine drinkers, offer a California Pinot Noir.
Pan-Seared Steak with Mushroom-Merlot Sauce
This elegant entrée deserves special accompaniments, like buttered baby carrots sprinkled with chopped tarragon, twice-baked potatoes (available frozen) and a spinach salad tossed with toasted walnuts. New-York-style cheesecake with strawberries provides the properly indulgent finale.
Grilled Rib-Eye Steaks with Chili Cumin Spice Rub
The spice rub that we have used in this recipe works equally well with other steaks such as sirloin.
Barbecued Cowboy Steaks
Those with Texas-size appetites will require an entire steak; for most others — even the heartiest of meat lovers — half of one of these rib steaks is probably plenty.
By Robb Walsh
Korean Barbecue Beef, Marinade 1
Bulgogi
Editor's note: The recipe and introductory text below are excerpted from restaurateur Jenny Kwak's book, Dok Suni: Recipes from My Mother's Korean Kitchen. Kwak also shared some helpful cooking tips exclusively with Epicurious, which we've added at the bottom of the page.
To read more about Kwak and Korean cuisine, click here.
As you will see when you are barbecuing this marinated beef, its smell will make your mouth water. Once you try Korean barbecue, it will become something you crave — even if you're not usually a beef eater.
Bulgogi is traditionally eaten with white rice and a variety of sides, usually spicy ones. Most important, serve it with fresh red leaf lettuce, thinly sliced raw garlic, and some spicy fresh peppers to make a ssam: holding the lettuce in your palm, make a wrap that envelops the barbecued beef, some rice, the dipping sauce, and, if desired, the vegetables. Feel free to experiment!
By Jenny Kwak and Liz Fried
Salt-Fried Rib-Eye Steaks
This recipe can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.
No oil is needed to sauté these steaks—the juices from the meat mix with the salt to form a delicious crusty coating that prevents them from sticking to the pan.
Rib-Eye Steaks with Béarnaise Butter
Butter melting over a pan-fried steak mingles with its rosy juices, creating a luscious sauce right on the plate. For smaller appetites, these large steaks can be cut in half to serve four.
Grilled Rib-Eye Steaks on Sauteed Onions and Garlic Croutes with Curry Oil
Can be prepared in 45 minutes or less.