Ask a pitmaster, a fine dining chef, and a competition judge how to season a steak and you'll get three different answers.
Here's what separates a good steak seasoning from a great one — and which approach wins under competition conditions.
The Three Methods
1. The Salt & Pepper Purist (Fine Dining)
Method: Coarse sea salt + freshly cracked black pepper, applied 40 minutes before cooking.
Why it works: Salt penetrates the muscle fibers and seasons throughout, rather than just sitting on the surface. Pepper releases its oils as the steak sears, building a complex crust.
Best for: Premium cuts (ribeye, NY strip, filet mignon) where you want the meat's inherent flavor to dominate.
The catch: Requires precision — too much salt and you've oversalted the whole steak. Too little and it tastes flat.
Pro move: Use 16-mesh coarse black pepper instead of table pepper. The larger particles integrate into the crust during cooking rather than burning.
2. The Dry Rub (BBQ Competition)
Method: A balanced blend of salt, spices, and sweet elements (brown sugar, paprika) applied 1-3 hours before cooking.
Why it works: The sugar caramelizes during searing, creating a bark. The spice blend builds layers of flavor. The entire surface seasons at once.
Best for: Competition judging, grilling (not fine dining), and getting consistent results.
San Felipe's angle: Ironclad Steak Rub was built by BBQ competition teams. It's salt-balanced, spice-forward (black pepper, garlic, paprika), with just enough sugar to bark without becoming candy.
Pro move: Apply to the meat 2 hours before grilling. Let the salt penetrate. Don't apply it right before you cook — the flavors won't have time to integrate.
3. The Compound Butter (Restaurant Steakhouse)
Method: Minimal seasoning on the meat (just salt & pepper), then top with seasoned butter as the steak rests.
Why it works: The butter melts across the hot surface, carrying herbs, garlic, and spice flavors that coat every bite.
Best for: Luxury presentation. The visual of butter melting across a finished steak impresses.
The catch: Works best on thicker cuts (1.5"+). Thin steaks cool before the butter has time to melt properly.
Pro move: Make compound butter with Cowboy Butter Seasoning mixed into softened butter. Let it set, then top your rested steak.
The Head-to-Head: Competition Results
| Method | Flavor Depth | Consistency | Ease | Winner For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Salt & Pepper | Medium | High (skill required) | Hard | Premium cuts at home |
| Dry Rub (Ironclad) | High | High | Easy | Competition & Grilling |
| Compound Butter | High | High | Medium | Thick steaks, presentation |
The Verdict
If you're grilling one steak for yourself: salt & pepper, be precise.
If you're cooking for four people and want everyone equally impressed: dry rub with Ironclad. Apply it 2 hours before, get consistent bark and flavor across every plate.
If you're building a steakhouse experience: compound butter finish on a premium cut.
In competition settings? Dry rub wins every time. Judges taste consistency first.