Dry Aged Beef

1/3 Boneless Ribeye, Dry Aged with the end heal cut off into 1 steak.

The Best Steaks

I’ve learned several different things about cooking great steaks, over the years, and the one constant, that everyone can agree on, is it’s got to have flavor. I have discovered that achieving this result varies with preference and style. Grilled, pan fried, oven baked/broiled or a combination of the three are among my favorite ways to cook steak. So, other than variations of added ingredients, flavor can come from the fire and whatever you choose to fuel the flames on a grill or whatever you decide to throw in a pan. But, what if you could achieve flavor just as good with out any other ingredients than basic Kosher Salt and Ground Black Pepper. Dry aging your beef is a really great way to do it.

One raw 6 lbs Boneless Beef Ribeye ready for Dry Aging.

What is Dry Aged Beef?

One of the greatest kept secrets in gourmet cooking is how to properly age beef. It’s something that our ancestors had knowledge of but, because of refrigeration, the practice was no longer necessary to pass on to the following generations. It’s quite expensive now and considered a luxury. Steaks that would normally cost the average grocer $5 to $6 dollars per lbs can cost upwards of $20+ per lbs after dry aging.

Dry Aging Wraps for aging beef.

This process was once done outdoors, where unpredictable weather, temperatures, and humidity made it difficult to perfect aging and prevent spoilage. Meat had to be shielded from predators like carnivores and insects. Now, with a scientific understanding of this incredible process, we can use refrigeration to control conditions and achieve consistent results.

I use Dry Aged Wraps or Bags to protect the meat from other ingredients in the fridge and vise versa. Healthy Bacteria’s and Molds containing Penicillin form on the outside of the meat just like aging cheese but you don’t want to add any off put flavors or spread mold anywhere else in your refrigerator. That’s why I’m recommending these Dry Aged Bags. I found that you get more for your buck with this particular brand because the others are almost twice as much for less bags.

Boneless Beef Ribeye incased in Dry Aging Wraps, ready to start aging.

Now, Dry Aged Beef is simply a controlled atmosphere of humidity and temperature that ages the meat like a fine wine or cheese. The best meat for dry aging are sub-primal cuts on the bone like a strip loin, ribeye or sirloin. Water evaporates from the muscle and safe bacteria’s, with a variety of penicillin’s that form a harden surface around the beef as it ages for a period, on average, 21 to 28 days. Beef cuts with large fat portions can protect the meat from drying out to much as the enzymes in the dry aged beef break down the tissue, leaving the meat quite tender.

Dry Aged Boneless Beef Ribeye aged 28 days.

Preparing and Cooking Dry Aged Steaks

After the beef ages properly, cut the steak into portions at your desired thickness. Most people will trim off the outside layer, all around the steak, before cooking. Only about an 8th of an inch is necessary but, if cooked properly, it’s safe to consume. I like to use the trimmed fat to grease pans when I cook my steaks.

I highly recommend minimizing the added ingredients to your steaks when cooking. If you’ve never had aged beef steaks you should try it with Kosher Salt and Pepper only, at least for the first time. I love garlic, butter, herbs and grilling as much as the next guy but, dry aging adds flavor that doesn’t require any of those things. If you add them or even barbecue these steaks first you’re going to cover up the natural flavors that dry aging adds to your steak and you’ll never fully understand or appreciate the process if you do because that taste will be berried and lost to the fire and/or other ingredients.

I would recommend cooking your dry aged beef steaks in a straight pan fry with the aged fat on the stove and maybe the oven(like I show you in the video) or a full cook under the broiler in the oven. Cooking time will vary upon steak thickness.

Dry Aged Beef cut into a few Steaks, ready for trimming.

A word of caution

Most professionals won’t advise folks to try dry aging beef at home because of the technicalities.

For example:

You should keep a high humidity of 80% and an average temperature of 33° to 38° Fahrenheit at all times. This means, NO PEAKING. Don’t use your family refrigerator. Use one that will stay closed and away from other ingredients. The last thing you should have is other foods contaminating the process.

A drawer and a crisper is best because it allows you to control the humidity for fruits and vegetables. I’m aging meat instead but vegetables favor a higher humidity so I adjust the fruits and vegetable setting to vegetables. Don’t worry about the refrigerator temp. It should already be cooling at the right temperature. If it isn’t, adjust it. Then follow the instructions in my video tutorial and be patient.

If all goes well, you’ll have a perfectly aged portion of beef. However, if there’s a real funny smell to your beef and it smells spoiled it most likely is. Properly aged beef will smell almost like nothing. It will, however, have a small hint of nuttiness’ to it, which is normal and how it should be.

How to Dry Age Beef at Home video tutorial by PoorMansGourmet.

Check out my other steak recipes: Pan Fried Ribeye Steak, Grilling Thick Ribeye Steaks, Chicken Fried Steak, Philly Cheesesteak.

Recommendations

Beef, Dry Age Bags, Knives, Cutting Boards, Meat Racks, Pans, and Grills.

Published by

Trenton Holland

Poor Man's Gourmet Kitchen

I'm just a regular guy in search of his bliss and I find that bliss in food and all of its many cultural differences. A very seasoned and experience chef taught me how to use my pallet to best serve and prepare a dish with all of its natural flavors from other foods before ever introducing “forced flavoring”, such as salt. My goal isn’t just to teach how to incorporate these products into simple gourmet dishes but to show, how easy, it can be done from anyone's Kitchen with cheaper, convenient substitutions that will not only blow your mind, but insure that most no one will be able to ever tell the difference! Welcome to The Poor Man’s Gourmet Kitchen!

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