If you’ve been wondering how to cook sirloin top steak and actually get it right — tender, deeply seared, with a crust that crackles when you cut into it — you’re in the right place. Top sirloin is one of the most versatile steaks in the butcher’s case: lean enough to cook fast, flavorful enough to need almost nothing beyond salt and heat, and forgiving enough that a home cook can nail it on the first try. In my kitchen tests across all three main methods — cast iron stovetop, oven finish, and broiler — the variables that matter most are surface dryness, pan temperature, and pull timing. Get those three right and this steak delivers every time.
Why You’ll Love This Method
Top sirloin sits right in the sweet spot of the beef world. It’s leaner than ribeye but significantly more flavorful than tenderloin, with a firm, satisfying bite and a natural beefy depth that stands up to bold seasoning or works beautifully with nothing but kosher salt and cracked pepper. The price point is also dramatically more accessible than premium cuts — you get 80% of a ribeye experience at about 50% of the cost.
What makes this method work is the cast-iron sear followed by a brief oven finish. Cast iron holds heat more evenly than stainless steel and reaches surface temperatures that stainless can’t sustain — critical for building the Maillard-reaction crust that gives a steak its savory, complex browned flavor. The oven finish lets the interior come up to temperature gently without the exterior overcooking. It’s the technique professional kitchens use, and it translates perfectly to a home oven.
The Butcher’s Selection — Ingredients
Choose top sirloin steaks at least 1 inch thick — ideally 1.25 to 1.5 inches. Thinner cuts cook through before a proper crust can develop, making them difficult to serve at medium-rare without burning the exterior. Look for steaks with a light marbling of white fat running through the deep red muscle — this intramuscular fat is what bastes the interior during cooking.
- 2 top sirloin steaks, 1–1.5 inches thick (approx. 8 oz / 225g each)
- 1½ tsp kosher salt — apply 30–45 min before cooking for dry brine effect
- 1 tsp black pepper, freshly cracked
- 1 tbsp avocado oil or canola oil — high smoke point essential for cast iron
- 2 tbsp unsalted butter — for basting; added in final 90 seconds
- 3 cloves garlic, lightly smashed
- 2 sprigs fresh thyme or rosemary
- Flaky sea salt — for finishing after rest
How to Cook Sirloin Top Steak — Step by Step
- Dry brine 30–45 minutes ahead. Season steaks generously with kosher salt on all surfaces — top, bottom, and edges. Place on a wire rack uncovered at room temperature for 30–45 minutes. Salt draws surface moisture out through osmosis, then back in carrying dissolved salt with it. The surface dries out completely, which is precisely what you need for a hard sear. This is a dry brine, not just seasoning — it fundamentally changes the texture of the steak.
- Preheat your cast iron skillet. Place a cast iron skillet over high heat for 4–5 full minutes before adding oil. The pan is ready when a drop of water evaporates instantly on contact. Add oil and let it shimmer and just begin to smoke — this signals you’ve reached the Maillard threshold of approximately 280°F (138°C) at the surface. Add your steaks away from you to prevent oil splatter.
- Sear without moving. Press steaks firmly into the pan and leave them untouched for 3–4 minutes. Do not press, prod, or move them. The steak will stick initially then release naturally when the crust has formed — this is the Maillard reaction building a lattice of browned, flavor-rich compounds. A crust that releases naturally is a properly formed crust. One forced up early is torn and uneven.
- Flip once and add butter. Turn the steaks and immediately add butter, smashed garlic, and herb sprigs to the pan. Tilt the pan slightly and use a spoon to continuously baste the top of the steak with the foaming, herb-infused butter for 60–90 seconds. The butter’s milk solids caramelize at lower temperatures than oil, adding a secondary layer of nutty flavor compounds to the crust.
- Check internal temperature. Insert an instant-read thermometer into the thickest part of the steak horizontally. For medium-rare: pull at 130°F/ 54°C. For medium: pull at 140°F/ 60°C. The steak will rise 5°F during rest through carryover cooking.
- Rest before cutting. Transfer steaks to a cutting board and rest uncovered for 5–8 minutes. During rest, the muscle fibers that contracted under heat relax and reabsorb the juices pushed to the center during cooking. A rested steak retains 30–40% more juice on the plate. Finish with a pinch of flaky sea salt immediately before serving.
The Maillard reaction is a non-enzymatic browning process between amino acids and reducing sugars that occurs above 280°F (138°C). It generates hundreds of new flavor compounds responsible for the complex, savory, slightly bitter crust flavor that distinguishes a properly seared steak from a pale, gray one. Moisture on the surface suppresses it — the steak surface must reach 212°F (100°C) to evaporate surface water before browning can even begin. This is why a dry surface and a screaming-hot pan are non-negotiable.
Pro Cooking Tips
Doneness Temperature Guide
49–52°C
54–57°C
60–63°C
66–68°C
71°C+
Use avocado oil, not olive oil. Olive oil’s smoke point is approximately 375°F (190°C) — far too low for a proper sear. Avocado oil smokes at 520°F (271°C), giving you the full temperature range a cast iron pan can generate without the acrid, burned-oil flavor that ruins an otherwise great steak.
If your steaks are thicker than 1.5 inches, finish them in a 400°F (204°C) oven after the stovetop sear. Sear 2 minutes per side on the stovetop, then transfer the cast iron skillet directly to the oven for 4–6 minutes to bring the interior up to temperature without scorching the crust. This reverse-finish method is also excellent for classic beef stew cuts that benefit from even internal cooking before braising.
Recipe Variations
🔥 Broiler Method
Preheat broiler to HIGH, rack 4 inches from element. Sear on a broiler pan 4–5 min per side. Produces an even crust across the full surface — ideal for thinner steaks under 1 inch where cast iron risks overcooking the center.
🌿 Herb-Crusted Sirloin
After the dry brine, press a crust of minced rosemary, thyme, garlic, and cracked pepper into both sides. The herbs char slightly during the sear, adding a smoky, aromatic layer that complements the beef’s natural mineral notes.
🥩 Keto / Low-Carb
Top sirloin is naturally keto — zero carbs, high protein and fat. For a full keto plate, serve over sautéed spinach in brown butter with a wedge of blue cheese on top. The fat content of the cheese offsets the leanness of the cut perfectly.
🍳 Reverse Sear Method
Bake at 250°F (121°C) until internal temp reaches 115°F (46°C), then sear in a screaming-hot cast iron 90 seconds per side. Produces the most even edge-to-edge doneness with zero gray band — the technique preferred by steakhouses for thick cuts.
What to Serve With Sirloin Top Steak
- Crispy smashed potatoes — Boiled, smashed, and roasted at 425°F (220°C) until shatteringly crisp. The texture contrast against the steak’s tender interior is one of the most satisfying combinations on a plate.
- Compound herb butter — Soft butter mixed with parsley, garlic, lemon zest, and a pinch of chili flake. Placed on the steak at the beginning of the rest period so it melts into the meat as the juices redistribute.
- Watercress & shaved fennel salad — The peppery bite of watercress and the anise sweetness of raw fennel cut through the steak’s richness with botanical precision. Dress with nothing more than lemon juice and good olive oil.
- Sautéed mushrooms in brown butter — Cook cremini or shiitake mushrooms in butter until they’ve released their moisture and re-caramelized — about 12 minutes. The umami compounds in mushrooms intensify the steak’s savory depth through synergistic flavor pairing.
Storage & Meal Prep
Nutritional Information
Per serving (one 8 oz top sirloin steak, cooked, with butter baste), approximate values:
| Nutrient | Amount | % Daily Value |
|---|---|---|
| Calories | 420 kcal | — |
| Protein | 48g | 96% |
| Total Fat | 22g | 28% |
| Saturated Fat | 9g | 45% |
| Carbohydrates | 0g | 0% |
| Sodium | 680mg | 30% |
| Iron | 4.4mg | 24% |
| Zinc | 8.2mg | 75% |
Common Mistakes to Avoid
A cold steak creates an extreme temperature gradient between the exterior and interior. The crust forms while the center is still 38°F (3°C) — by the time the center reaches medium-rare, the exterior has overcooked. Always rest at room temperature 30–45 minutes before cooking.
A pan that hasn’t been preheated long enough produces a gray, steamed exterior instead of a sear. Steam cannot trigger the Maillard reaction. Cast iron needs 4–5 full minutes over high heat before oil is added. The pan is ready when it begins to lightly smoke before the oil goes in.
Cutting a steak fresh off the heat causes the pressurized juices to flood out immediately onto the cutting board. Meat science guides on sirloin steak technique consistently confirm that a 5–8 minute rest reduces moisture loss by 30–40%. Tent loosely with foil — never tightly, which steams and softens the crust.
If the steak sticks when you try to flip it, it isn’t ready. The proteins on the bottom surface are still bonding with the pan. Wait 30–60 more seconds — the steak will release cleanly when the Maillard crust has fully formed. Forcing it tears the crust and creates an uneven sear.
Salt applied right before cooking draws surface moisture out but doesn’t have time to reabsorb. That moisture sits on the steak surface and steams the exterior instead of searing it. Either salt 30+ minutes ahead (dry brine) or immediately before the steak hits the pan. Anything in between is the worst of both approaches.
FAQs
Once you understand the mechanics — dry surface, screaming-hot cast iron, pull at temperature, rest before cutting — cooking sirloin top steak at home becomes completely reliable. This cut rewards simplicity. The best version you’ll ever make requires five ingredients and eight minutes of active cooking. Master the technique once and you’ll use it every time.
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How to Cook Sirloin Top Steak — Perfectly Seared at Home
A simple recipe for cooking top sirloin steak to perfection using a cast iron skillet and a brief oven finish.
- 2 steaks top sirloin steaks 1-1.5 inches thick, approximately 8 oz each
- 1.5 tsp tsp kosher salt
- 1 tsp tsp black pepper freshly cracked
- 1 tbsp tbsp avocado oil or canola oil
- 2 tbsp tbsp unsalted butter
- 3 cloves cloves garlic lightly smashed
- 2 sprigs sprigs thyme or rosemary
Step 1: Dry Brine
Season steaks generously with kosher salt on all surfaces.
Place on a wire rack uncovered at room temperature for 30-45 minutes.
Step 2: Sear
Preheat cast iron skillet over high heat for 4-5 minutes.
Add oil and let it shimmer and just begin to smoke.
Add steaks away from you to prevent oil splatter.
Step 3: Finish and Rest
Flip steaks and add butter, garlic, and herbs to the pan.
Baste the top of the steak with the foaming butter for 60-90 seconds.
Check internal temperature and pull at 130°F for medium-rare.
Rest steaks uncovered for 5-8 minutes before serving.
- cast iron skillet
- wire rack
- instant-read thermometer
Cook to medium-rare for best results.
Did You Try Our Recipe ?
Scrumptious
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
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!
This was amazing
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.!
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
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.



