Black Powder Cowboy Rib Eyes with Blue Cheese Butter and Rosemary Smoke

  • Level: Intermediate
  • Yield: 4 to 6 servings
  • Total: 4 hr 55 min (includes drying out and chilling time)
  • Active: 25 min
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Ingredients

Blue Cheese Butter:

2 sticks unsalted butter, very soft at room temperature

1/4 cup crumbled blue cheese 

1 tablespoon minced fresh chives 

1 tablespoon honey 

1 tablespoon stone-ground mustard 

Zest from 1 lemon 

Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper

Black Powder Rub:

1/4 cup black sesame seeds

2 tablespoons black peppercorns 

1 tablespoon poppy seeds 

1 teaspoon brown mustard seeds 

1/4 cup kosher salt 

2 tablespoons dark brown sugar 

1 teaspoon granulated garlic 

1 teaspoon dehydrated onion 

Rib Eyes:

Two 2- to 3-inch-thick rib eyes

2 tablespoons vegetable oil, plus additional as needed 

4 sprigs fresh rosemary, left out at room temperature uncovered for a couple hours or overnight to dry out

Directions

Special equipment:
a kitchen torch; 2 cloches or domes
  1. For the blue cheese butter: Whisk together the butter, blue cheese, chives, honey, mustard and lemon zest in a bowl until uniform. Season to taste with salt and pepper. Using a spatula, scrape out onto plastic wrap, then form into a log and refrigerate until firm, about 1 hour.
  2. For the black powder rub: Toast the sesame seeds, peppercorns, poppy seeds and mustard seeds in a dry pan until fragrant, 1 to 2 minutes. Transfer to a small food processor, blender or spice grinder along with the salt, brown sugar, granulated garlic and dehydrated onion and pulse until finely ground.
  3. For the rib eyes: Preheat the oven to 225 degrees F. Line a sheet pan with foil and fit a rack inside.
  4. Brush the steaks with vegetable oil and coat in a good amount of the black powder rub. Place on the wire-racked sheet pan and roast until the internal temperature registers 115 to 120 degrees F, 1 to 1 1/2 hours.
  5. Heat a large cast-iron skillet over medium-high heat. Add a little vegetable oil to the bottom and sear the steak until properly charred, about a minute per side. (Don't forget to hold the steak upright with tongs to sear the edges.) Transfer to a warm plate. (See Cook's Note.)
  6. Slice a medallion of the cold blue cheese butter and place it on top of each steak. Very carefully ignite a rosemary sprig with a torch to get it smoking (blow out any flame; you just want the smoke) and place it on top of the steak and butter. Immediately cover with a cloche or dome to trap in the smoke. Repeat with the remaining steak. Serve and slice tableside, if desired, into manageable pieces.

Cook’s Note

Roasting the steak first, then searing it, is called a reverse-sear, and it yields excellent results on a thick piece of beef.

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Diana W.

Three stars because it was good, but not great. I used two t-bone steaks that were about an inch thick. I cooked one for an hour and a half for those who wanted well done and the other one for an hour. Both were underdone. The black powder rub was good, but it lacked salt, which I think steak really needs. So, I added some ground black salt for next time. The recipe makes a lot of the spice. The butter was too sweet , so next time will not add the honey. The rosemary smoke was a great idea. Next time I will cook at 250*.

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