Strip House Restaurant Celebrates National Steakhouse Month In June

Strip House at Planet Hollywood shares eight skillful steps to grilling perfection in honor of National Steakhouse Month. The mission statement behind the June occasion is to celebrate the most notable American restaurant, the steakhouse, and to recognize and promote the art of expert grilling.

Strip House Steakhouse
Strip House Las Vegas Steakhouse

Strip House Corporate Executive Chef John Schenk provides professional insight including meat selection, seasoning advice and specific meat handling instructions. Novice grillers will impress with the guidance of Schenk’s personal tips and tricks just in time for summer grilling season.

Those wanting to leave the grilling to the professionals can visit Strip House during the Steakhouse month to try the off-the-menu, 32 day dry aged 16 oz Prime Rib Eye Steak special for $54.

Grilling: 8 Basic Steps to Meat Nirvana

1: Make it marbled.
The best steaks for home grilling are nature’s perfectly marbled beef rib eye steaks or bone-in rib eye steaks often called Cowboy Steaks. The marbling enhances the flavor of these cuts while basting the meat in the cooking process to ensure a juicy steak.

2: Oil it. Use a canola and olive oil blended oil to coat the steak before seasoning it. Either an 80/20 or 90/10 blended oil will get the job done. Be sure to lightly coat the steak. The oil will allow the surface temperature to get seared fast ensuring a juicier final product as well as greatly aiding the charring of the meat’s surfaces. Save your expensive olive oils for salads where their subtle flavors will shine brightest.

3: Season Simply:
A well-marbled steak needs only coarsely ground black pepper and kosher salt to bring flavor perfection. It really is a case of the sum being greater than the parts. Be sure to season a bit more than you might regularly season a sautéed item. Some of the steak’s seasoning will be lost in the grilling process. You want to be sure to have enough on the steak to get the job done.

4: Don’t spare the BTUs:
It is all about heat. High heat sears the cooking surface of the meat ensuring a juicier steak and allows the charring to happen. With high heat, one can get a nicely charred rare steak. A little flame is your friend; a lot of flame is a definite concern. Keep two sides of the grill hot and move the steak to the second hot spot if the first grilling area is aggressively flaming up. Dousing with water is a last resort; you want to keep the grill as hot as possible. But if it’s between the house going up and a well charred steak, I’d give a nod to keeping the house intact.

5: Don’t flip out:
Flipping the steak too often can sabotage the charring of the meat and eliminate most of the seasoning on the steak. Don’t drag the steak over the grill when turning. Pick it up in one motion and place it back with the same motion.

6: Rest and Relax:
Once you have achieved the desired temperature, remove the steak from the heat and allow it to rest for at least 5 minutes on a grate over a pan before cutting it. You want to make sure there is air all around the steak to stop the cooking process. The internal juices will redistribute throughout the steak and the steak will relax and become tender. Cutting too soon will allow the juices to spill out turning a medium rare steak into a medium plus steak. I have done this and I was sad.

7: Real Men Sizzle and Use Sea Salt aka Good News/Bad News
The Good News: After the steak has rested, return it to the grill for about 30 seconds on each side just before serving to get a surface sizzle going. A little sprinkle of a grey sea salt on the steak allows for a gentle and focused re-seasoning of the steak. The Bad News: People will make you do all the grilling from now on.

8: You’ve Been Schooled:
So get out there and buy a well-marbled steak and make me look good. I’d do it for you.


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Strip House Las Vegas steakhouse is open Sunday – Thursday 5 pm - 11 pm and Friday - Saturday 5 pm – 11:30 pm. For more information please contact 702-737-5200

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Bill Cody is an entertainment, technology and luxury travel reporter in Las Vegas. He reports on celebrities, events, tech, food, Las Vegas and luxury travel.

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