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5 Best Steaks to Cook for Father’s Day

May 28, 2026 4 min read

Father’s Day Steak Guide


Not all steaks cook the same. Some need a hard sear. Some need patience. Some just need butter and a little respect. Here are five cuts worth putting on the grill, plus simple ways to make each one feel special.

Before you fire up the grill

Steak night starts before the steak hits the heat. Pick the right cut, season it well, and cook to temperature instead of guessing by time.

For thicker cuts, reverse searing is your friend. Cook low first, bring the steak close to your target temperature, then finish hot and fast for the crust.

01 / Big Flavor

Ribeye

Rich, juicy, and loaded with marbling. This is the classic “Dad deserves a good steak” cut.

Best for: Big flavor Method: Reverse sear Vibe: Classic Father’s Day

Simple recipe

  • Season with salt, black pepper, and garlic powder.
  • Cook low until close to target temperature.
  • Sear hot for a crust.
  • Rest 5 to 10 minutes before slicing.

Quick tip

Ribeye has a lot of fat, so do not rush it. Let the fat render slowly before the final sear.

Make it special: Finish with garlic herb butter. Mix softened butter with garlic, parsley, salt, and a little lemon zest.

02 / Steakhouse Classic

New York Strip

Beefy, firm, and clean. It gives you that steakhouse feel without being too fussy.

Best for: Steakhouse feel Method: Grill or cast iron Vibe: Reliable crowd-pleaser

Simple recipe

  • Pat the steak dry.
  • Season with salt and cracked black pepper.
  • Sear on a hot grill or cast iron pan.
  • Add butter, garlic, and rosemary near the end.

Quick tip

The strip has a fat cap on one side. Sear that edge for 30 to 60 seconds so it gets crisp.

Make it special: Serve with peppercorn sauce or a simple pan sauce made with butter, garlic, and steak drippings.

03 / Show-Off Steak

Tomahawk

Big bone. Big drama. Big “yes, we are taking pictures before we eat” energy.

Best for: Big presentation Method: Smoke then sear Vibe: Trophy steak

Simple recipe

  • Season heavily with salt, pepper, and garlic powder.
  • Smoke or cook indirect until close to target temperature.
  • Rest briefly.
  • Sear hard over high heat.
  • Slice off the bone, then cut against the grain.

Quick tip

Because it is thick, do not cook it hot from start to finish. Reverse sear is your friend here.

Make it special: Serve sliced on a board with flaky salt, chimichurri, and grilled lemon.

04 / Tender Pick

Filet Mignon

Tender, lean, and a little fancy. This is the steak that shows up wearing a nice shirt.

Best for: Tender bite Method: Cast iron Vibe: Fancy but simple

Simple recipe

  • Season with salt and pepper.
  • Sear in cast iron.
  • Add butter, garlic, and thyme.
  • Baste until it reaches your target temperature.
  • Rest before serving.

Quick tip

Filet is lean, so it needs help from butter, sauce, or bacon. Overcook it and it can turn dry fast.

Make it special: Add blue cheese butter or wrap it with bacon for a richer bite.

05 / Feed-The-Table Cut

Tri-Tip

A BBQ-friendly steak roast that feeds the family without buying five separate steaks.

Best for: Family cookout Method: Smoke or grill Vibe: Big payoff

Simple recipe

  • Season with salt, pepper, garlic, and smoked paprika.
  • Smoke or cook indirect until close to target temperature.
  • Sear both sides over high heat.
  • Rest for 10 minutes.
  • Slice against the grain.

Quick tip

Tri-tip has grain that changes direction. Look closely before slicing, then cut against the grain.

Make it special: Serve with chimichurri, grilled onions, rolls, and pickles for a Father’s Day steak board.

Tiny Steak Nerd Note

Pull before it looks “done”

Steak keeps cooking after it leaves the heat. That little carryover moment is one of the big reasons steak gets overcooked.

A good rule: pull the steak a few degrees before your final target, then let it rest.

Doneness Pull Around Final Temp Range
Rare 115°F to 120°F 120°F to 125°F
Medium-Rare 125°F to 130°F 130°F to 135°F
Medium 135°F to 140°F 140°F to 145°F
Medium-Well 145°F to 150°F 150°F to 155°F

So, which steak should you cook for Father’s Day?

Here is the no-drama version. Pick the steak based on the moment you want.

Safest crowd-pleaser:
Ribeye
Big visual moment:
Tomahawk
Steakhouse energy:
New York Strip
Tender and fancy:
Filet Mignon
Feeding the table:
Tri-Tip
Still unsure?
Go ribeye. It rarely misses.

Cook steak by temperature, not guesswork

The MeatStick helps you track your cook from the inside, so you know when to pull, rest, and serve without hovering over the grill like a stressed-out steak goblin.

See The MeatStick V Lineup


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