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Beef Chuck Steak Recipes — Fork-Tender in 90 Minutes

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By Emma Delacourt · March 4, 2026 · 12 min read
Beef chuck steak recipes

Beef chuck steak is the most undervalued cut at the butcher counter. It has more intramuscular fat and connective tissue than sirloin, which means it develops richer flavor when cooked properly — but most people treat it like a premium steak, sear it fast, and end up chewing through tough collagen that never had time to break down.

The fix: a hard sear followed by a covered braise on the stovetop. Total time is 90 minutes, and in my kitchen tests, this produces a more tender result than any oven-roasted chuck method I’ve compared it against.

Prep10 min
Cook80 min
Total90 min
Servings4
Calories420

Why You’ll Love This Beef Chuck Steak Recipe

  • Budget cut, premium flavor. Chuck costs a third of ribeye but has comparable marbling — the fat just needs time to render and the collagen needs heat to convert into gelatin.
  • One pan, start to finish. Sear and braise in the same cast iron skillet. The fond from searing becomes the flavor base for the braising liquid.
  • Fork-tender at 90 minutes. The covered braise at 325°F / 163°C gives collagen enough time to fully convert into gelatin without drying out the meat.
  • Feeds 4 for under $12. Two thick-cut chuck steaks, a few aromatics, and a cup of broth — that’s the entire grocery list.

The Butcher’s Selection — Ingredients

Ask for bone-in chuck steak cut 1.5 inches thick. Thin-cut chuck (under 1 inch) dries out before the collagen converts. The bone adds gelatin to the braising liquid and acts as an insulator that keeps the meat near it especially tender.

Ingredients — Serves 4
  • 2 bone-in beef chuck steaks (about 1 lb each, 1.5 inches thick)
  • 2 tbsp avocado oil (high smoke point)
  • 1 tsp kosher salt + ½ tsp black pepper
  • 1 tsp garlic powder
  • 1 tsp smoked paprika
  • 1 medium onion, quartered
  • 4 cloves garlic, smashed
  • 2 sprigs fresh thyme
  • 1 cup (240ml) beef broth
  • 1 tbsp Worcestershire sauce
  • 1 tbsp cold butter (for finishing)
Dry-brine the steaks overnight: salt both sides and refrigerate uncovered on a wire rack. The salt draws out moisture, dissolves in it, then gets reabsorbed — seasoning the meat through its full thickness.

How to Cook Juicy Chuck Steak

  1. Season and temper. Pat steaks dry. Season with salt, pepper, garlic powder, and smoked paprika. Let sit at room temperature for 30 minutes before cooking.
  2. Sear hard. Heat a cast iron skillet over high with avocado oil. Sear steaks 3–4 minutes per side until a dark Maillard crust forms. Don’t move them during searing — the crust needs uninterrupted contact to develop.
  3. Build the braise. Remove steaks. Reduce heat to medium. Add onion, garlic, and thyme. Cook 2 minutes until fragrant. Pour in beef broth and Worcestershire sauce. Scrape up all the fond from the pan.
  4. Braise covered. Return steaks to the skillet. The liquid should come halfway up the sides. Cover tightly with foil or a lid. Transfer to a 325°F / 163°C oven (or maintain low simmer on stovetop). Cook 60–75 minutes.
  5. Check for doneness. The steak is ready when a fork slides in and twists with zero resistance. Internal temp should be 195°F / 90°C — far past the typical “medium” range, because at this temp, collagen has fully converted to gelatin.
  6. Rest and finish. Transfer steaks to a plate. Reduce the braising liquid by half over medium-high heat. Swirl in cold butter off-heat for a glossy, velvety pan sauce.
Collagen conversion begins at roughly 160°F / 71°C and completes around 190–205°F / 88–96°C. This is why treating chuck like a fast-cook steak (pulling at 135°F for medium-rare) produces tough results — the collagen is still intact and chewy. The braising method holds the meat in the collagen conversion zone long enough for the connective tissue to melt into gelatin, which is what gives braised beef its signature silky, pull-apart texture. Methodology referenced from Serious Eats’ collagen science guide.

Pro Cooking Tips

Thickness Matters More Than Weight

A 1.5-inch cut gives you enough mass to sear the outside hard without the center overcooking before the braise. Thin chuck steaks (under 1 inch) should be pan-fried fast instead — they don’t have enough volume to survive a 75-minute braise.

Braise Low and Slow

Keep the oven at 325°F, not higher. Above 350°F, the liquid boils instead of simmering, and the agitation tightens the muscle fibers faster than the collagen can dissolve. The result is meat that’s simultaneously tough and falling apart — dry and shredded rather than tender and sliceable.

Rest Before Slicing

Let the steak rest 10 minutes after braising. Cutting immediately pushes gelatin-rich juices out before they can redistribute through the muscle fibers.

Recipe Variations

Slow Cooker

Sear on the stove, transfer to slow cooker with broth and aromatics. Cook on low 6–8 hours. The low, steady heat is ideal for collagen conversion.

Instant Pot

Sear using sauté mode. Pressure cook on high for 35 minutes with natural release. Faster than oven braising with comparable tenderness.

Asian-Style

Replace broth with ½ cup soy sauce + ½ cup water. Add star anise, ginger, and brown sugar. Braise as directed for a soy-glazed chuck.

Grilled Chuck

For a grilled beef chuck approach, use reverse-sear: indirect heat at 250°F until 120°F internal, then sear over direct flame. Best for thinner cuts.

What to Serve With This Dish

  • Creamy mashed potatoes — they absorb the reduced braising sauce and complete every forkful.
  • Roasted root vegetables (carrots, parsnips, turnips) that can cook alongside the chuck in the same oven.
  • Crusty sourdough bread for mopping up the butter-finished pan sauce.
  • Simple green salad with red wine vinaigrette to cut the richness of the braised meat.
  • Full-bodied Cabernet Sauvignon — the tannins stand up to the fat and the dark fruit matches the browned fond.

Storage & Meal Prep

❄️
Refrigerator
Store in braising liquid up to 4 days. The gelatin sets into a jelly when cold — that’s normal and melts back to sauce when reheated.
❄️
Freezer
Freeze chuck and sauce together for up to 3 months. Thaw overnight in fridge. The collagen-rich sauce freezes and reheats cleanly.
🔥
Reheating
Warm gently in a covered skillet with a splash of broth. Low heat — reheated braised beef often tastes better on day two as flavors continue to meld.

Nutritional Information

Per serving (4 servings, chuck steak with pan sauce). Values from USDA FoodData Central.

NutrientAmount
Calories420 kcal
Protein42g
Carbohydrates4g
Fat26g
Iron30% DV
Zinc45% DV

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Treating chuck like a fast-cook steak. Pulling at 135°F (medium-rare) leaves the collagen intact and chewy. Chuck needs 195°F+ to convert that connective tissue into gelatin.
Braising uncovered. Evaporation dries out the top half of the steak. A tight-fitting lid or foil seal traps steam and keeps the cooking environment moist throughout the full 60–75 minutes.
Using too much liquid. The broth should come halfway up the steak, not cover it. Submerged meat boils instead of braising, and the exposed top develops a concentrated glaze from the steam — that’s where the best flavor lives.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why is my beef chuck steak tough?
Almost always insufficient cook time. Chuck is loaded with collagen that only converts to gelatin above 190°F / 88°C. If you pulled it at steak temperatures (130–145°F), the collagen is still intact and chewy. Braise longer.
Can I grill chuck steak instead of braising?
Yes, but only thin-cut chuck (under 1 inch). Use high direct heat for 4–5 minutes per side to medium. The collagen won’t fully convert, but thin cuts have less of it. For thick cuts, braising is the right method.
What temperature should I cook chuck steak to?
For braised chuck: 195–205°F / 90–96°C — well past “done” by steak standards, but this is where the connective tissue melts into gelatin. The fork test is more reliable: if it slides in and twists easily, it’s ready.
Is chuck steak the same as chuck roast?
Same primal cut (shoulder), different thickness. Chuck steak is sliced from the roast, usually 1–1.5 inches thick. The cooking principles are identical — both need low, slow heat for tender results.

A hard sear, a low braise at 325°F, and patience until the fork slides in with no resistance — that’s the entire method for juicy chuck steak.

Cook’s Notes

This article consolidates all beef chuck steak recipe variations into one comprehensive guide. If you were looking for a specific variation that redirected here, every method — grilling, braising, slow cooking, and pan-searing — is covered in the sections above.

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Emma Delacourt

Emma Delacourt

Recipe Developer & Founder, MeatRecipesBox

Emma has been developing and testing meat recipes since 2019. She focuses on temperature precision, food science, and making restaurant-quality results accessible for home cooks. Every recipe on this site is tested multiple times before publishing.

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