Another tip:
I still like Ruth's Chris Steak House the best, good quality, great side dishes, and they have a broiler set at 1,600 degrees that can sear and cook a great steak. If you are at home, only one way to cook like Ruth's Chris. Take a cast iron skillet, yes an old cast iron. Get it smoking hot and I mean smoking. Take your steak, salt and pepper, just a bit of garlic, and coat with a thin layer of olive oil and sear the steak on each side about three minutes. After browning both sides(always remember brown food taste good) place the pan with the steak in a very hot oven, about 425-450 for about another eight minutes. Take the steak out of the oven and remove from the pan and let it "rest" for about 10 minutes. This depends a lot on the thickness of the steak. Originally Posted by durango95
Steaks from nicer restaurants are good because they are dry aged. It isn't special meat from a special cow (unless it's Wagyu), it is just dry aged. You can do this at home and turn a five dollar sirloin from Albertson's, into something that is as tender and flavorful as a filet. Do it with a ribeye, and no one will believe you didn't go to a steakhouse and pick up dinner to-go.
Just take a casserole dish, and place some skewers across the top of it or use a wire rack. You want air to be able to circulate beneath the steak. Then, place some paper towels on top of the skewers or rack. Season with salt and place them on the paper towels. Put another layer of paper towels on top of the steak, then sit the casserole dish in the fridge for 24 hours. Take em out, change the towels, flip the steaks and put them back between the paper towels, and on top of the rack/skewers. Put em back in the fridge for 24 hours, then cook them like durango suggests.
If you can wait three days, even better. They won't look great when you go to cook them, but you aren't used to seeing dry aged meat, either. When they cook, they will be gorgeous. No worries. The goal is to get excess water out of the steaks. No, it doesn't make them less juicy. It does, however, concentrate flavor. The salt pulls the water out and also helps carmelize the steaks and gives them a beautiful crust. Trust me. You can thank me later. I do this all the time and it's the only way to go, if you are going to spend money on steaks from the store.