What’s your favorite steak sauce?

Gorgonzola butter sauce. Or gorgonzola wine sauce as seen above. Particularly for wild game such as venison and duck. My personal position is berry sauces dont accentuate the red meat of venison and duck the way an earthy sauce like gorgonzola does. Again just IMHO.

I second the request for the chantrelle and morel sauce recipe
 
Deglaze your pan with red wine. Add a splash of high quality balsamic vinegar. Add 2-3 tablespoons of butter. Reduce slightly. Poor over steak.
Cool the pan bit before adding the butter so it emulsifies without separating. Took me a few tries to get that part right.
 
I eat venison sauceless most of the time but it doesn’t mean we don’t like a great sauce. Steak Diane is excellent and a favorite. Another top favorite is Hank Shaw’s Morel steak sauce. We save our stockpile of Morels for the sauce.

Same for me. 75% of the time it’s salt and sit in the fridge for several hours, add some fresh cracked pepper and then sear in cast iron with clarified butter. Then baste with some butter and aromatics (garlic, thyme, rosemary) at the end and put on the plate. But I do like to mix it up and try some different things like sauces on occasion. I’ve gotten to where I can read a recipe and almost taste it before I make it. Food should be an adventure.

Due to the lack of fat in game meat, butter goes a long way in enhancing the preparation IMO.
 
did anyone mention anchovy hollandaise?

just came across it and i'm liking the sound of it
 
Mushroom and red wine sauce. Look up “buerre rouge” to finish with cold butter and thicken.

Au poivre- brandy/whiskey, coarse cracked peppercorns, heavy cream, reduce.

Horseradish and sour cream
 
Would love to see your recipes for that!
Have to throw in a disclaimer: I never write down my recipes and usually go by the seat of my pants and tastebuds. With that all clear here is what I do, if I can remember everything:)

Sauté mushrooms in butter, maybe add a bit of diced onion, salt and pepper and fresh garlic to taste, add heavy cream and simmer until thickened, stir in the dried ground parmesan cheese, maybe a 1/4 cup total, just enough for flavoring. Don't want too much seasoning to mask the mushroom flavors. This works well with meat that has been run through a tenderizer 3-4 times, dipped in egg and Italian season breading and then fried. About the best way to eat wild pig loin cutlets.
 
Once I had grilled some backstraps and as they were resting I freelanced a caramelized blueberry and red wine reduction.
It was phenomenal. I really ought to try and replicate that some time.
No one in our house uses sauce and we hosted some friends a while back and they both were distraught that we didn't have any A1 on hand when I grilled them steaks. They survived and enjoyed their steaks.
 
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saying you can't accompany steak with sauce is like saying you can't put anything but ketchup and mustard on a burger.
I put neither on mine...

You can always break a rule; it adds variety, but rules are in place for a reason. Hank's sauce is probably the bomb, as all his recipes are delicious, but when you say it's awesome, you mean the sauce is awesome, and the steak is merely the vector used to eat the sauce. You cannot taste the steak anymore, at best you can still experience the texture, which, while great, lessens the steak. Never lessen the streak.
 
I put neither on mine...

You can always break a rule; it adds variety, but rules are in place for a reason. Hank's sauce is probably the bomb, as all his recipes are delicious, but when you say it's awesome, you mean the sauce is awesome, and the steak is merely the vector used to eat the sauce. You cannot taste the steak anymore, at best you can still experience the texture, which, while great, lessens the steak. Never lessen the streak.

bro is raw doggin burgers over here.

freak.
 
I put neither on mine...

You can always break a rule; it adds variety, but rules are in place for a reason. Hank's sauce is probably the bomb, as all his recipes are delicious, but when you say it's awesome, you mean the sauce is awesome, and the steak is merely the vector used to eat the sauce. You cannot taste the steak anymore, at best you can still experience the texture, which, while great, lessens the steak. Never lessen the streak.
The point of a great sauce is to accentuate the steak-- a fatty, buttery or creamy sauce like an au poivre for a leaner cut, a sharper, acidic sauce like a chimichurri to complement a ribeye-- not to lessen it.
 
I put neither on mine...

You can always break a rule; it adds variety, but rules are in place for a reason. Hank's sauce is probably the bomb, as all his recipes are delicious, but when you say it's awesome, you mean the sauce is awesome, and the steak is merely the vector used to eat the sauce. You cannot taste the steak anymore, at best you can still experience the texture, which, while great, lessens the steak. Never lessen the streak.
While I agree with this sentiment and I feel the same way about too much stuff on burgers. I recently had a burger in wyoming with the a Chipotle aioli (spelling?). Dear god, that was so good. So never say never I guess.
 
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While I agree with this sentiment and I feel the same way about too much stuff on burgers. I recently had a burger in wyoming with the a Chipotle aioli (spelling?). Dear god, that was so good. So never say never I guess.
Rules are meant to be broken, but they still exist for a reason.

The pinnacle of a burger does not need any sauce at all. And certainly nothing with "mayo"

KISS
 
Ah if it only were a rule.

One should never conflate preference with objective superiority.

You guys are buying Ferraris and leaving the limiters on.
 

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