
Originally Posted by
tonioyantao
what cut of beef did you use? how thin is it? how long did you cook it?
in a usual setting local beef is naturally poor and tough.
but even if you buy that beef steak cut from the grocery kanang for bistek tagalog. if you cook it well it turns out to be very tender.
the important rule in cooking beef like frying or just sauteing it, is never ever ever over cook it.
a thin slice of beef similar to bistek tagalog has a cooking time of 1 min maximum. around 30 seconds each sides.
you can only do so much as for tenderizing and marinating the meat to make it tender but at the end if you don't cook it right your still going to end up with a dry, hard and chewy cut of meat.
another tip try to avoid using olive oil for any high heat cooking. since olive oil has a relatively low smoke point. "it burns easily", butter too if not clarified burns so fast. if you still want that buttery taste you can fry your beef in vegtable oil and as soon as the cooking stops you can finish it with a small amount of butter thus preventing it from burning.