Savory flavors

How do I achieve "savory" flavors when cooking meat? I lightly season (salt, pepper, garlic) and pan fray meat (chicken, beef, pork) in olive oil and it tastes good but it's lacking that deep, rich savory flavor that local restaurants' food provide. Is it just MSG + butter?

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cooksillustrated.com/how_tos/6457-amping-up-savoriness-in-food
ramenchemistry.com/blog?tag=Umami Science
twitter.com/AnonBabble

use paprika

Invest in a cast iron pan, season it properly, get it smoking hot, add seasoned meat. Also, buying quality meat helps. Cheap meat, especially beef, tends to not be as meaty.

>Is it just MSG + butter?
Essentially. What we think of as savory or umami flavors are mostly substances from a combination of glutamates & nucleotides which work together. These explains it well along with food items rich in those substances you should add to your recipes.
cooksillustrated.com/how_tos/6457-amping-up-savoriness-in-food
ramenchemistry.com/blog?tag=Umami Science

What effect does a cast iron pan have in this scenario? Better browning?

Will do

kek, tl;dr

Shouldn't be using olive oil to pan fry stuff, at least not beef steaks; even the refined stuff isn't meant to be used at such a high heat. I suggest peanut or rapeseed oil instead. You need to get it as hot as you can to get a proper sear, which will cause the Maillard Effect (glutamates and nucleotides) where all the savory and deliciousness comes from. You do this even if you're going to for example roast or braise something. You sear it in a pan first then finish off cooking it in whatever method you're going to use.

>What effect does a cast iron pan have in this scenario? Better browning?

Yes, it holds onto heat better than most pans. Doing a sear and baked steak with one is the way to go, imo.

You don't even need oil. I always sear my steaks just on the cast iron and get great crusts.

What's wrong with regular olive oil? I know EVOO shouldn't be heated too high but I haven't heard that about regular olive oil. In fact, all the oil threads on Veeky Forums told me it was fine the last time I asked.

Does it make much difference with chicken? Beef prices around here are through the roof and I've been buying chicken mostly

Add umami.

I guess it would depend on the cut of meat and how much fat it has. They mentioned other things like pork and chicken and for those you would need some oil.

Not really if you have a decent stainless pan. I've always preferred roast or BBQ chicken anyway.

I usually do sous vide flat iron steaks.

so MSG?

>What's wrong with regular olive oil?

Nothing. regular olive oil is refined and it has a high smoke point. There are other oils which have an even higher one, such as the grapeseed the other guy mentioned but plain olive oil is plenty good enough.

It's all about the sear, OP. Searing = Malliard Reactions = Savory taste.

What are the advantages of a higher smoke point? Just how hot do you need to cook chicken or pork if you are pan frying? I understand with steak you want a nice sear.

>What are the advantages of a higher smoke point?

Not much, really. A smoke point in the high 300's F is perfectly sufficient. Though like anything else some people sperg out about the numbers and assume that higher is better.

>>a nice sear
You want that on any kind of meat, not just steak. chicken breast? Sear. pork chop? Sear.

Ok I think I equate searing to steaks and not so much with chicken which you want cooked through. Should I start on a high heat and then back it down when pan frying?

>>Should I start on a high heat and then back it down when pan frying?

Yes.

I do that or I roast it after it has a nice sear