How to cook a cowboy steak in cast iron — and why the bone marrow changes everything
A cowboy steak — bone-in ribeye, thick-cut, heavy as a brick — is not a recipe you half-commit to. Big Daddy treats this cut with the respect it demands: a full hour at room temperature, a cast iron sear that forms a crust you can hear, a butter baste loaded with garlic and rosemary, and a finish in the oven to bring the center up perfectly. The roasted bone marrow on top is the move that takes this from great to unforgettable. Spread it over the crust while the steak rests. You’ll understand immediately why it’s there.

Cast-Iron Cowboy Steak with Roasted Bone Marrow
Ingredients
Method
- Allow steak to come to room temperature about 45 minutes before cooking.
- ROAST BONE MARROW: Preheat oven to 450°F (230°C). Arrange marrow bones cut-side up in a foil-lined pan. Drizzle with olive oil, season with salt, pepper, and smoked paprika. Roast 15–20 minutes until marrow is bubbling and slightly caramelized. Remove and top with parsley and lemon zest.
- Rub steak with olive oil, then coat both sides generously with salt and cracked pepper, pressing in slightly.
- Heat a large cast-iron skillet over high heat until smoking. Add a touch of olive oil.
- Lay steak flat and do not move it for 3–4 minutes. Flip and sear the other side 3–4 minutes until both sides are bronzed and crackling. Reduce heat to medium.
- Add butter, garlic, rosemary, and thyme to the pan. Tilt the skillet and spoon sizzling butter over the steak repeatedly for 2–3 minutes.
- Transfer entire skillet to oven at 400°F (200°C). Roast 5–6 minutes for medium-rare, 8–9 minutes for medium. Internal temp: Medium-Rare 130°F, Medium 140°F.
- Rest on a cutting board tented loosely with foil for 10 minutes.
- Place steak on a rustic wooden board. Spoon roasted marrow directly over the hot steak and let it melt into the meat. Sprinkle with flaky salt and fresh herbs.
- Serve with crusty bread or grilled sourdough to scoop up marrow-infused juices.
Why This Works
Starting with a 45-minute room-temperature rest for a 30 oz steak is non-negotiable — this cut is so thick that a cold interior simply cannot reach proper doneness before the exterior overcooks. The pan-to-oven method is specifically designed for steaks this thick: the screaming-hot cast iron builds the crust in the first 6–8 minutes while the moderate oven heat (400°F) penetrates gently to the center without burning the exterior. The bone marrow roasts simultaneously at 450°F — higher heat is needed to bubble and caramelize the marrow quickly before it seizes up. Spooning the warm marrow over the hot steak is the final flourish: as it melts into the crust, it adds richness, depth, and a mineral quality that no other ingredient replicates.
What to Serve With This
This is a primal feast and it deserves a primal plate. Serve the Cowboy Steak on a large wooden board in the center of the table. Grilled sourdough alongside to scoop up the marrow-infused pan juices. A simple arugula salad with lemon and Parmesan on the side cuts through all that richness. Horseradish cream sauce in a small bowl gives people the option of something sharp and bright. An old-vine Zinfandel or a Spanish Rioja with some age are excellent pairings.
Make It Your Own
If bone marrow isn’t available from your butcher, substitute with a generous knob of truffle butter melted over the top at serving — different, but equally luxurious. For a lighter approach, skip the marrow entirely and finish with just the herb butter and flaky salt. The reverse sear method (oven first at 250°F until 115°F internal, then 3 minutes per side in a blazing hot pan) produces even more control over doneness for this thick a cut. This same technique works on a bone-in Ribeye or a Tomahawk.
Storage & Leftovers
A 30 oz Cowboy Steak will almost certainly have leftovers, and they are spectacular. Slice cold over a breakfast hash with fried eggs and roasted potatoes, or reheat gently and slice thin for steak sandwiches. Refrigerate tightly wrapped for up to 3 days. Reheat the steak as a whole piece in a 275°F oven covered with foil for 15 minutes, then 90 seconds in a hot dry pan to restore the crust. Bone marrow does not keep well — use it all the day of cooking.
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