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Cooking Steak in a Pizza Oven: Temperature, Timing & Pro Tips

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By Emma Delacourt · April 24, 2026 · 13 min read
Cooking steak in a pizza oven
Reader Rating★★★★★
Total Time14 mins
Servings2 servings
Cooking Steak in a Pizza Oven: Temperature, Timing & Pro Tips

If you own a wood-fired or gas pizza oven and you’ve only ever used it for flatbreads, you’re leaving the best steak of your life on the table. Cooking steak in a pizza oven unlocks temperatures that no cast iron, grill, or home oven can match — we’re talking 700–900°F (370–480°C) ambient heat with a stone floor that radiates intense bottom heat simultaneously. In my kitchen tests, this combination produces a crust so mahogany-dark and crackling that it’s genuinely difficult to achieve any other way, while the intense radiant heat cooks the interior to a perfect rosy medium-rare in under four minutes. Here’s exactly how to harness that heat safely and consistently.

Prep Time
10 min
Cook Time
4 min
Total Time
14 min
Servings
2
Calories
~430

Why You’ll Love This Method

A wood-fired pizza oven operates at temperatures that make conventional cooking equipment look timid. The stone floor conducts heat directly into the steak’s bottom surface while the domed ceiling radiates heat from above — you’re effectively cooking the steak from all directions simultaneously. This triaxial heat transfer means the Maillard reaction fires across the entire surface of the steak in seconds rather than building gradually from one side as in a pan. The result is a crust that professional steakhouses spend thousands of dollars on infrared broiler equipment to replicate. If you already have the pizza oven — the crust is yours for free.

The Butcher’s Selection

Ingredients (Serves 2)
  • 2 ribeye or strip steaks, 1 to 1½ inches thick (10–12 oz each)
  • 1 tbsp beef tallow or clarified butter (smoke point 480°F+)
  • 1½ tsp coarse kosher salt
  • 1 tsp freshly cracked black pepper
  • ½ tsp garlic powder
  • Flaky sea salt (Maldon) for finishing

Cut choice is critical here. Choose well-marbled cuts — ribeye (18–22% fat) or New York strip (12–15% fat) are ideal. The intense pizza oven heat cooks fast, and marbling provides internal moisture and basting fat as it renders. Leaner cuts like top sirloin can work but require even closer temperature monitoring and precise pull timing.

How to Cook Steak in a Pizza Oven

  1. Bring the oven to the right temperature zone. For wood-fired ovens, build your fire 45–60 minutes ahead. Let the fire burn down to embers and push them to one side — you want 700–800°F (370–425°C) ambient temperature. Avoid cooking at full blast (900°F+) unless you want a very thin cut done in under 2 minutes. Use an infrared thermometer to read the stone floor temperature.
  2. Prepare the steaks. Pat steaks completely dry. Season generously with salt, pepper, and garlic powder. Let rest at room temperature for 30–45 minutes. Brush the top surface lightly with beef tallow — its 480°F (249°C) smoke point handles pizza oven temperatures without burning off immediately.
  3. Use a cast-iron or carbon steel pan. Never place steak directly on the pizza stone — fat dripping onto the stone causes flare-ups and uneven scorching. Place the seasoned steaks in a cast-iron skillet preheated inside the oven for 5 minutes, or use a dedicated pizza oven steak pan (carbon steel with no plastic handles).
  4. Cook with the door partially open. Slide the pan to the center of the oven floor. For a 1-inch ribeye at 750°F (400°C), sear for 90 seconds, then flip and cook another 60–90 seconds. At these temperatures, doneness changes by the second — stay at the oven and watch the crust color.
  5. Check temperature with precision. Pull the steak when internal temperature reads 120°F (49°C) for medium-rare (it will carryover cook to 130°F during rest). For medium, pull at 130°F (54°C).
  6. Rest on a wire rack. Remove from pan and rest on a wire rack, not a cutting board — resting on a flat surface traps steam under the crust and softens it. A rack allows airflow underneath, preserving that shattering crust you worked for.
  7. Finish with flaky salt and rest 5 minutes. Sprinkle Maldon sea salt over the crust immediately after pulling. The residual heat dissolves the salt slightly into the crust surface, enhancing the savory impact of every bite. Slice against the grain and serve immediately.
Meat Science
At 700°F+ surface temperatures, the Maillard reaction accelerates exponentially — the same browning compounds that take 4–5 minutes to develop in a cast-iron pan form in under 90 seconds. This speed means the interior barely heats during the crust formation, producing the dramatic contrast between a deep mahogany exterior and a cool, rosy center that’s characteristic of wood-fired steak. The wood smoke also contributes phenolic compounds — guaiacol and syringol — that deposit on the meat surface and add the distinctive smoky complexity you can’t replicate with gas or electric.

Pro Cooking Tips

Infrared thermometer is mandatory. Pizza oven floor temperatures vary significantly across the surface. Read the stone in multiple spots before cooking — the area directly in front of the fire runs hotter than the center or far wall. Cook your steak in the sweet spot between 700–800°F (370–425°C) for a controlled, predictable result.

For the best Omaha steak seasoning blend to use before the pizza oven cook — that recipe’s salt-forward, herb-light formula works exceptionally well at extreme heat since herbs tend to char and turn bitter above 600°F.

The Food Network has documented a reliable pizza oven steak method with tested timings for both gas and wood-fired models — their steakhouse steak in a pizza oven recipe provides useful reference timing to cross-check against your specific oven model.

Pro Tip
The carryover cooking in a pizza oven is more aggressive than in a conventional kitchen due to the residual heat absorbed by the cast iron at extreme temperatures. Always pull 10–12°F (5–7°C) below your target doneness temperature and let the pan do the final work during the rest period.

Cut Variations

🥩 Tomahawk Ribeye

Reverse sear first in a 250°F (120°C) conventional oven to 110°F (43°C) internal, then flash in the pizza oven for 90 seconds per side to build crust. Perfect for thick, showstopper cuts.

🔪 Filet Mignon

More delicate — cook at a slightly lower zone (650°F/345°C) for 60 seconds per side. The lower fat content means faster moisture loss, so pull at 115°F (46°C) and rest well.

🌿 Herb-Crusted Strip

Press coarse rosemary and thyme into the steak before cooking. At pizza oven temps, the herbs char slightly, adding a bitter-smoke edge that works beautifully with the mineral flavor of strip steak.

🥑 Keto / High-Fat Version

Finish the rested steak with a generous pat of garlic herb compound butter. The butter melts immediately on the hot crust surface and pools into the slices, adding fat and flavor with zero carbs.

What to Serve With This Dish

  • Wood-fired roasted garlic potatoes
  • Charred broccolini with lemon
  • Simple arugula salad with shaved Parm
  • Grilled sourdough brushed with tallow
  • Bone marrow with toasted bread
  • Classic béarnaise sauce

Storage & Meal Prep

❄️
Refrigerator
Store rested, whole steaks in an airtight container up to 3 days. The crust softens in storage — reheat in a hot pan for 60 seconds to partially restore it.
🧊
Freezer
Wrap cooked steaks tightly in plastic then foil. Freeze up to 2 months. Thaw overnight in fridge and reheat in cast iron — never microwave a crust you worked this hard for.
🔥
Reheating
Reheat in a 275°F (135°C) oven on a wire rack until warmed through (about 12 min), then 90 seconds in a screaming-hot cast iron to restore the crust’s crackle.

Nutritional Information

Per serving (1 ribeye steak, ~10 oz, cooked):

NutrientAmount% Daily Value
Calories430 kcal
Protein44g88%
Total Fat28g36%
Saturated Fat12g60%
Carbohydrates0g0%
Sodium620mg27%
Iron4.1mg23%
Zinc8.3mg75%

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • ⚠️
    Cooking directly on the stone. Fat and moisture dripping onto the stone creates smoke, flare-ups, and carbon deposits. Always use a cast-iron skillet or dedicated steak pan inside the oven.
  • ⚠️
    Cooking at full blast (900°F+) without experience. At maximum pizza oven temperature, a 1-inch steak can go from raw to medium-well in under 3 minutes. If you’re new to this method, cook at 700–750°F until you understand how your oven behaves.
  • ⚠️
    Using olive oil or butter directly. Both smoke and burn below 400°F — far below pizza oven temperatures. Use beef tallow, avocado oil, or clarified butter (all with smoke points above 450°F) to avoid acrid burned-fat flavors on your crust.
  • ⚠️
    Walking away from the oven. At 750°F, the difference between medium-rare and well-done is 60 seconds. Never leave the steak unattended. Stand at the oven and monitor the crust color and thermometer reading continuously.

FAQs

  • What temperature should a pizza oven be for steak?
    For most cuts, the sweet spot is 700–800°F (370–425°C) ambient temperature with the stone floor reading around 650–700°F. Above 900°F, the cook time becomes too compressed for reliable doneness control without significant experience.
  • Can I cook steak in a gas pizza oven (like an Ooni Koda)?
    Absolutely. Gas pizza ovens like the Ooni Koda 16 reach 950°F (510°C) and produce excellent steak with slightly less smoke flavor than wood-fired. Use the same method — reduce heat to around 700°F by turning the gas burner to medium-high and letting the oven stabilize for 15 minutes before cooking.
  • How long does it take to cook a steak in a pizza oven?
    At 750°F (400°C): approximately 90 seconds per side for a 1-inch ribeye to medium-rare. Thicker cuts (1½ inches) may need 2 minutes per side. Always use a thermometer — time is a guide, not a guarantee at these temperatures.
  • Do I need special equipment to cook steak in a pizza oven?
    At minimum: a cast-iron or carbon steel skillet with no plastic handles, long-handled tongs, an infrared thermometer for the stone, and an instant-read meat thermometer. Heat-resistant gloves and a long spatula are strongly recommended for safety at these temperatures.

Did You Make This Recipe?

Wood-fired steak with a crust you can hear — save this pizza oven steak guide to your boards so you never waste that heat again!

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Cooking Steak in a Pizza Oven: Temperature, Timing & Pro Tips

Cooking Steak in a Pizza Oven: Temperature, Timing & Pro Tips

Cooking steak in a pizza oven unlocks temperatures that no cast iron, grill, or home oven can match, producing a crust so mahogany-dark and crackling that it's genuinely difficult to achieve any other way.

Prep time10 mins
Cook time4 mins
Total14 mins
Servings 2 servings
Course Main Course
Cuisine American
Calories 430
Quantities:
  • 2 ribeye or strip steaks ribeye or strip steaks 1 to 1½ inches thick (10–12 oz each)
  • 1 tbsp beef tallow or clarified butter smoke point 480°F+
  • 1½ tsp coarse kosher salt
  • 1 tsp freshly cracked black pepper
  • ½ tsp garlic powder
  • Flaky sea salt (Maldon) for finishing

Cooking the Steak

1

Bring the oven to the right temperature zone. For wood-fired ovens, build your fire 45–60 minutes ahead. Let the fire burn down to embers and push them to one side — you want 700–800°F (370–425°C) ambient temperature.

2

Prepare the steaks. Pat steaks completely dry. Season generously with salt, pepper, and garlic powder. Let rest at room temperature for 30–45 minutes. Brush the top surface lightly with beef tallow — its 480°F (249°C) smoke point handles pizza oven temperatures without burning off immediately.

3

Use a cast-iron or carbon steel pan. Never place steak directly on the pizza stone — fat dripping onto the stone causes flare-ups and uneven scorching. Place the seasoned steaks in a cast-iron skillet preheated inside the oven for 5 minutes, or use a dedicated pizza oven steak pan (carbon steel with no plastic handles).

4

Cook with the door partially open. Slide the pan to the center of the oven floor. For a 1-inch ribeye at 750°F (400°C), sear for 90 seconds, then flip and cook another 60–90 seconds. At these temperatures, doneness changes by the second — stay at the oven and watch the crust color.

5

Check temperature with precision. Pull the steak when internal temperature reads 120°F (49°C) for medium-rare (it will carryover cook to 130°F during rest). For medium, pull at 130°F (54°C).

6

Rest on a wire rack. Remove from pan and rest on a wire rack, not a cutting board — resting on a flat surface traps steam under the crust and softens it. A rack allows airflow underneath, preserving that shattering crust you worked for.

7

Finish with flaky salt and rest 5 minutes. Sprinkle Maldon sea salt over the crust immediately after pulling. The residual heat dissolves the salt slightly into the crust surface, enhancing the savory impact of every bite. Slice against the grain and serve immediately.

  • Cast-iron or carbon steel skillet
  • Infrared thermometer
  • Instant-read meat thermometer
  • Long-handled tongs
  • Heat-resistant gloves
  • Long spatula
Serving1 ribeye steak, ~10 oz, cooked
Calories430 kcal
Carbohydrates0g
Protein44g
Fat28g
Saturated Fat12g
Sodium620mg

For a perfect medium-rare, pull the steak when internal temperature reads 120°F (49°C).

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Scrumptious

March 25, 2026

My husband (who is extremely picky) loved the liver & onions so much!! I didn’t have any beef broth or Sherry so I used about a tbl of Worcestershire and 1/4 c of white wine …..it was scrumptious

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Response from MeatRecipesBox

Oh wow, I’m so happy to hear that!! 😍 I love that you made it work with what you had on hand — Worcestershire and white wine sound like a delicious twist. So glad your husband enjoyed it, especially being picky! Thank you for sharing your version, it makes me smile knowing it turned out scrumptious!

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This recipe turned out really amazing! It’s juicy and spiced deliciously. I definitely would use less of the spicy pepper next time, but it really was delicious and I don’t think I’ll make chicken legs any other way from now on.!

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Response from MeatRecipesBox

Thank you for taking the time to leave such a thoughtful review. I’m really glad to hear the recipe turned out juicy and full of flavor for you. That’s exactly what I was hoping for when putting it together. Good call on the spicy pepper as well. Adjusting the heat level to your own taste is always the best approach, and using a little less next time should make it just right for you. I really appreciate you trying the recipe and sharing your experience. It’s great to know it worked so well for you.

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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.

Read full bio →

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