You stick it into the middle of the thickest part of your steak while it’s cooking so you know the internal temperature. Then you know when to take it off the heat to let it rest. That way you can get the exact doneness you want every time.
Yep, I prefer a proper foldable probe and it’s extremely versatile around the kitchen.
The “fingers to the ball of your thumb” to check doneness of a steak is bullshit, most of the time. It only really works on steak that has a consistent grain throughout, sometimes. (Just showed this to my daughter on a reverse seared NY Strip that felt completely different across the cut.)
I bought a used thermopro off eBay (used because they’re crazy expensive) and it was game changing. I use it for everything from meat to checking the water temperature for making tea.
The secret to a perfect steak is a meat thermometer. If you don’t have one, you need one.
I do have a thermometer, I bought it as I started learning how to cook. Yet, I never used it…
How would it be useful in this case?
You stick it into the middle of the thickest part of your steak while it’s cooking so you know the internal temperature. Then you know when to take it off the heat to let it rest. That way you can get the exact doneness you want every time.
Yep, I prefer a proper foldable probe and it’s extremely versatile around the kitchen.
The “fingers to the ball of your thumb” to check doneness of a steak is bullshit, most of the time. It only really works on steak that has a consistent grain throughout, sometimes. (Just showed this to my daughter on a reverse seared NY Strip that felt completely different across the cut.)
I bought a used thermopro off eBay (used because they’re crazy expensive) and it was game changing. I use it for everything from meat to checking the water temperature for making tea.