Pan sear filet mignon in a cast iron skillet once and you will never grill steak again (unless you absolutely have to grill filet mignon). There are plenty of ways to cook tenderloin steak but this recipe is by far my favorite along with reverse searing. If you go out to a nice steakhouse then this is most likely the method they are using to cook your steak.
Filet mignon is known for its tenderness and buttery texture. They have a delicate flavor compared to other cuts of beef, such as pan-seared ribeye or New York strip. It is often considered a luxury cut and is usually reserved for special occasions.
Because filet mignon is a lean cut of meat, it is important to cook it properly to avoid drying it out. I recommend cooking it to medium-rare or medium doneness to preserve its tenderness and juiciness.
If you enjoyed this recipe, I highly recommend you also check out my blueberry glazed filet mignon, balsamic glazed filet mignon, and bacon-wrapped filet mignon. If you’re looking for a good steak to share with a crowd, look no further than my porterhouse steak recipe with dipping sauces or my surf and turf recipe for two!
Why This Recipe Works
The overall consistency and predictability of this cooking technique give this recipe a very high success rate on the very first try. I’ve followed it to the T with great success with hundreds of steaks. If this is your first time preparing filet mignon or if you’re struggling to get it right, then this recipe is for you.
Ingredients
- 10-12 ounce tenderloin beef filets (roughly 1.5- 2 inches thick): look for steaks that are about 2 inches thick and appear plump and deep red in color. Avoid steaks with signs of browning or slimy texture.
- Salt and pepper: for seasoning and optional dry brining.
- Vegetable or canola oil: these oils are best for searing because they have a higher smoke point than butter or olive oil.
See the recipe card for full information on ingredients and quantities below.
Seasoning the Steak
Remove your steak from the fridge 1 hour prior to cooking to bring it closer to room temp. This is going to ensure even cooking and more accurate cooking times. Pat the steaks dry with a paper towel and season generously with coarse sea salt or kosher salt and pepper.
Dry Brining Steak
You can take seasoning one step further with dry brining. Dry brining is the process of drying out the exterior of the steak with salt prior to cooking, locking in the juices, and enhancing the flavor. To dry brine steak, place the steaks on a wire rack set on a baking sheet and season liberally with coarse sea salt or kosher salt, and pepper. Place the steaks in the fridge uncovered for at least one hour or preferably overnight. The drier steak surface will make for even better crusting.
Steak should still rest on the counter for at least 30-45 minutes prior to cooking to climatize. No additional salt or seasoning is required.
How to Cook Filet Mignon
The secret to cooking the perfect filet mignon is to combine pan searing with an oven finish. Why is this the best way to cook filet mignon? This method gives your filet a nice seared exterior with a perfectly juicy and tender inside that’s evenly cooked throughout. A cast iron skillet allows you to easily transfer your steak from the stovetop to the oven, making this a simple recipe to master.
To summarize, sear filets for 2 minutes per side on the stovetop in a cast iron skillet on high heat with butter or oil and then immediately transfer to a preheated oven at 415°F. I typically bake filets for about 5-6 minutes for medium-rare.
Precisely timing your cook time for steak always yields consistent results. It may sound like overkill, but I use my phone to time each side on the skillet and then in the oven. If you really adhere to cooking times I promise you will never overcook a steak again.
Step 1.
Leave the butter on the counter to soften or place it in a microwave-safe bowl and microwave until malleable, 10-15 seconds. Use a fork to mash in the herbs and garlic until fully mixed. Store in the refrigerator and remove 10 minutes before adding to the filet.
Step 2.
Preheat the oven to 415°F. Remove the steak from the fridge 30 minutes prior to cooking, this is to bring the steak to room temperature and ensure your cooking times are more accurate. Season all sides liberally with salt and pepper. This can be done while your steak comes to room temp.
Step 3.
Add 1-2 tablespoons of oil to an oven-safe cast iron skillet and turn the heat up high, allowing the skillet to become very hot. Twirl the pan to distribute oil as it heats. Once the oil starts to smoke, place the filets face down and sear undisturbed for 2 minutes. Flip the filets and sear for an additional 2 minutes. This will give your filets a nice seared edge.
Step 4.
Optionally add some herb butter and a whole garlic clove/herbs to the pan before transferring it to the oven. The butter will melt and the herbs will season the pan drippings for a later step. Transfer your skillet directly to the oven. [WARNING] skillet may be hot, handle it with oven mitts. For rare, bake for 4 minutes. Medium rare, 5-6 minutes. Medium, 6-7 minutes. Medium well, 8-9 minutes. Remember, depending on the size of the steak, the more or less time it will take. This recipe is ideal for an 8-10 ounce portion, roughly 1.5-2 inches thick.
Step 5.
Optionally spoon some of the seasoned pan drippings over the steak to infuse it with extra flavor.
Step 6.
Remove filets from the skillet and set them on a plate or cutting board and let sit for 5-10 minutes before serving. This is important to bring your steak to its final serving temperature.
Step 7.
Top with a slice of garlic and herb butter and serve.
Temperature for Steak
The timing/temperature chart below corresponds to the pan sear/oven method in this recipe. It’s a great guide assuming you choose a steak of similar size and thickness as listed in the recipe. I recommend a digital thermometer to verify your steak’s internal temperature for the desired level of doneness. Always measure in the middle of the thickest part of the steak.
Doneness | Internal Temp | Oven Duration |
---|---|---|
Very Rare/rare | 120°F to 125°F | 4 minutes |
Medium rare | 125°F to 130°F | 5-6 minutes |
Medium | 135°F to 140°F | 6-7 minutes |
Medium well | 145°F to 150°F | 8-9 minutes |
Well done | 160°F and above | 10+ minutes |
SMOKE WARNING: Cooking steaks at high temps in a skillet tends to get smokey. Open a kitchen window and turn on your kitchen’s overhead vent fan before you start to help with ventilation.
Let Steaks Rest
The legend, Anthony Bourdain once said, the most important aspect of cooking any steak is the rest period after you take it off the heat. Letting a steak rest for 5-7 minutes before cutting is critical for two reasons. One, it continues to actually cook the steak. Second, the juices evenly distribute throughout the meat, yielding the perfect bite every time. Always let your steaks rest!
What to Serve With Filet Mignon
You can never go wrong with steak and potatoes. Pair this porterhouse steak with my parmesan roasted fingerling potatoes or my garlic butter roasted red potatoes. If you’re looking for ultra-crispy potatoes, try my pesto smashed potatoes! If you prefer mashed potatoes, try my rich and delicious cream cheese mashed potatoes.
My favorite veggie of choice will always be my roasted bacon and parmesan Brussels sprouts. Make this recipe surf and turf with pan-seared lemon butter scallops or baked lobster tails.
Frequently Asked Questions
Cast iron is really versatile and can be used for so many different recipes on my site. Here is the one I have. Any oven-safe pan should do the trick, however, as a disclaimer, I based the cook times and results on cast iron.
If you don’t have an oven-safe pan, you can sear your filets on the stovetop and then transfer them to a baking sheet lined with a wire rack. This method works really well at keeping your steaks elevated from the direct heat while in the oven. Just note, this will likely add additional baking time.
If cooking more than 4 steaks on a standard skillet, you may need to adjust the cooking times. I wouldn’t attempt to cook more than 6 filets at a time in a single skillet because the heat loss is going to be too significant.
It’s very important to start with steak that’s had a chance to warm up on the counter. Cooking cold steaks is going to impact cooking times significantly. Also, be sure you’re starting with a very hot skillet. You should not add your steak until the oil is smoking.
This is a difficult recipe to pull off for 10-12 people unless you have two skillets. If cooking for a larger crowd I would also suggest reverse searing a whole tenderloin or cooking your steaks on the grill. Learn how to grill your filet mignon here.
More Steak Recipes
- T-bone steak with garlic and rosemary
- Ribeye with blue cheese butter
- Steak frites with chimichurri
- Steak crostini with chimichurri
- Everything you need to know about sous vide steak
Enjoy this recipe? If you made this recipe, please leave a ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ star rating in the recipe card below & a review in the comments!
PrintPan-Seared Filet Mignon Recipe
- Prep Time: 10 mins
- Cook Time: 10 mins
- Total Time: 20 mins
- Yield: 4 1x
- Category: Dinner
- Cuisine: American
Description
The only filet mignon recipe you will ever need. Never grill steak again—the fail-proof method to cooking the perfect filet mignon.
Ingredients
- 4 10-ounce thick tenderloin beef filets (roughly 1.5– 2 inches thick)
- salt and pepper to taste
- Vegetable or canola oil (can use 2 tbsp butter but it has a lower smoke point)
Garlic & Herb Butter
- 1/2 stick of butter, softened
- 1 tablespoon chopped fresh rosemary
- 1 tablespoon chopped fresh tarragon
- 1/2 tablespoon minced garlic
Instructions
For the herb butter
- Leave the butter on the counter to soften or place it in a microwave-safe bowl and microwave until malleable, 10-15 seconds. Use a fork to mash in the herbs and garlic until fully mixed. Store in the refrigerator and remove 10 minutes before adding to the filet.
For the filets
- Preheat the oven to 415°F. Remove the steak from the fridge 30 minutes prior to cooking, this is to bring the steak to room temperature and ensure your cooking times are more accurate. Season all sides liberally with salt and pepper. This can be done while your steak comes to room temp.
- Add 1-2 tablespoons of oil to an oven-safe cast iron skillet and turn the heat up high, allowing the skillet to become very hot. Twirl the pan to distribute oil as it heats. Once the oil starts to smoke, place the filets face down and sear undisturbed for 2 minutes. Flip the filets and sear for an additional 2 minutes. This will give your filets a nice seared edge.
- Optionally add some herb butter and a whole garlic clove/herbs to the pan before transferring it to the oven. The butter will melt and the herbs will season the pan drippings for a later step. Transfer your skillet directly to the oven. [WARNING] skillet may be hot, handle it with oven mitts. For rare, bake for 4 minutes. Medium rare, 5-6 minutes. Medium, 6-7 minutes. Medium well, 8-9 minutes. Remember, depending on the size of the steak, the more or less time it will take. This recipe is ideal for an 8-10 ounce portion, roughly 1.5-2 inches thick.
- Optionally spoon some of the seasoned pan drippings over the steak to infuse it with extra flavor.
- Remove filets from the skillet and set them on a plate and let sit for 5-10 minutes before serving. This is important to bring your steak to its final serving temperature.
- Top with a slice of garlic and herb butter and serve.
Notes
Cooking steaks at high temps in a skillet tends to get smokey. Open a kitchen window and turn on your kitchen’s overhead vent fan before you start to help with ventilation.
If you don’t have an oven-safe skillet or pan, sear the steaks first and then transfer them to a baking sheet lined with a wire rack. This method works really well at keeping your steaks elevated from the direct heat source but will also add additional cooking time to your oven duration. Plan on 2-3 additional minutes.
Temperatures for steak
Rare: 120°F to 125°F
Medium rare: 125°F to 130°F
Medium: 135°F to 140°F
Medium well: 145°F to 150°F
Well done: 160°F and above
Nutrition
- Serving Size: 1
- Calories: 858
- Sugar: 0g
- Sodium: 552mg
- Fat: 67.5
- Saturated Fat: 31g
- Carbohydrates: 1.1g
- Fiber: 0.4g
- Protein: 55.4g
- Cholesterol: 233mg
Keywords: filet mignon, steak, tenderloin steak
Just made this for Father’s Day and everyone said is was the best filet they ever had. I also sautéed thinly sliced garlic cloves on the side and poured them in top with the butter.
★★★★★
415 degrees is not a common cooking temperature. This is something only an alien would say.
Why do you set oven at 415 F
And show much lower temperatures in the 115 to 140 F range
Doesn’t make sense.
415 is the oven temp – the other temps measure the steak’s internal temp.
Omg! I love you! Your my hero! I will never order filet mignon in a restaurant again. This is the only way to cook steaks. Better than anything I’ve ever done on the barbecue. Thank you so much! My daughter even said it’s the best steak she’s ever had in her life. A good cast iron skillet is a must.
★★★★★
I’ve just eaten what was surely by far the best steak I’ve ever prepared and prob the best I’ve ever eaten. I’ve used this method before but never had the time to allow it to come to room temp or to rest. I followed the steps and the result was a perfectly seared filet with just the right amount of crisp on the outside and and interior that was, literally, melt in the mouth. The herb butter was the perfect finish. I’ll never grill steak again. Thank you!
Excellent recipe! I found the timing spot on for cooking to different temperatures. For Easter dinner, I cooked eight filets. I used two pans; one for well done and another for medium. After searing both pans of filets, I butterflied one pan of four steaks. This allowed me to finish all eight pieces virtually at the same minute, half medium and half well done. I had extra herb butter and served that with baked potatoes…so tasty!
★★★★★
Definitely the best steaks i have ever cooked!! So excited to have a steak recipe i feel confident w
The times were perfect and steaks were tender and delicious! Thank you so much
★★★★★
If you’re cooking (4) Filets would you recommend searing them in the skillet 2 at a time or would you do all (4) together and if so, would you change anything regarding the cooking times? TIA for any guidance here!
sear all 4 at the same time. Be sure the skillet is very hot.
Shawn, you just leveled me up into FULL adulthood. I’m honored to have you as my meat-making steward. So far, I’m 5/5 = 100% win rate with your method and for this I am eternally grateful.
★★★★★
Seared for 2 minutes a side. Into the 415 degree oven for 5.5 minutes. Checked the internal temperature with a digital thermometer and it was…….82 degrees. These were 2 9oz. Filets. Had to put them back in the oven for another 4-5 minutes to get them to medium rare.