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Simply Decadent Beef Tenderloin Steaks

A small splurge every once in a great while can sometimes be good for the soul – or at least that is what I told myself in the grocery store the other day. I was buying items to have a beef tenderloin steaks for dinner the next day.

My extravagance was not the beef tenderloin steaks, in fact they were already thawing in my refrigerator at home. The steaks did not cost me any more than a pound of ground beef since we buy our grass-fed beef by the side from an area farmer. It was the butter to put on top of the steak that had me stewing in the aisle.

After much debate, I decided to buy truffle butter to put on top of the steaks after cooking them. A very small container of the butter was just over five dollars and I don’t usually spend five dollars on a pound of butter. However, I had been wanting to try truffles and I knew that the five dollar price tag was not bad for anything that contained real truffles.


They had black truffle butter and white truffle butter. Each contained butter, truffle oil and some shavings of actual truffles. I finally decided to go with black truffle butter as I vaguely recalled reading somewhere that black truffles were stronger and paired well with meat.
The next day, I made the steaks for dinner. They were the best steaks I have ever made (even if I do say so myself). Although I only used a small amount of the truffle butter after removing the steaks from the pan, the flavor was very apparent. I think it probably is because the butter also contained truffle oil and I chose the black truffle butter.
Although the butter added to the steaks, they did not make them the best steaks I have ever cooked. What made them the best was that they were melt-in-your-mouth tender, flavorful, and cooked to the temperature that I like – three things that I have struggled to achieve simultaneously.

Here is how I made it:

How much did my small splurge cost me in the end?
Four steaks in the package…about a pound more/less… rounded way up $4.00
Entire package of truffle butter (only a small amount was actually used)….$5.10
Entire lb of bacon (although only four slices of bacon was used)…$3.50 (on sale)
Entire loaf of sourdough mountain bread (less than half used)…$3.50
Package of organic frozen peas…$1.25 (on sale with coupon)
Package of organic frozen broccoli…$1.25 (on sale with coupon)
Total Cost : $18.60 with lots of truffle butter, bacon, and bread leftover

Considering the only local restaurant that I know of that currently serves any dish with black truffles (a risotto) charge between $24 and $33 dollars for one serving their main courses…I don’t think less than twenty dollars for four servings plus is that much of a splurge.

Now, my problem is figuring out how to use the rest of my truffle butter before its May expiration date. Any thoughts?

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