My original post–
So I smoke a steak for a while until it's almost done. Then I sear it to finish for a Maillard reaction brown or possibly char. Did any of that smoke flavor survive the searing?
I made three separate tests; two rib-eye tests and one T-bone test. Here are my results–
How Deep Does The Smoke Flavor Penetrate a Steak?For each test I cut out a bite-sized piece of a smoked steak and discarded as little of the top and bottom surfaces as I could, probably 1/32 to 1/16 of an inch. We then tasted the remaining meat for smoke flavor. Marcia and I tested every test. Four other family members participated once each.
The consensus was that the smoke flavor doesn't seem to penetrate a steak at all. I thought that it might penetrate as deep as a typical smoke ring. Nope. It appears to sit on the surface. On to the next test step.
Does the Smoke Flavor Survive Searing?For this test I cut out a bite-sized piece of a smoked & seared steak and trimmed off about 3/16" of the two surfaces. We tasted them, searching for smoke flavor. We found Maillard reaction browning flavor and some char flavor. It was difficult to differentiate between those and a smoke flavor. We all took our best guesses but the votes were split evenly.
So, to answer my question, "Is it worth doin'?" Free Mr Tony suggests on this thread's page one that, "You can almost get edge to edge doneness like sous vide..." That hasn't been my experience.
Either reverse seared or seared first, my steaks look like this, cooked more on top and bottom than in the middle.
A steak seared after sous-vide cooking usually looks like this. (Of course smoke flavors will be absent.)
My conclusion (YMMV), we all like what we like and we'll probably continue to cook our steaks in the same fashion. For me, I'm going to sear first and then smoke.