Dan Cooks

May 1, 2026

Tasteze Blog

The Backyard Plate That Never Gets Old: Ribeye, Loaded Mash & Cold Tea

A proper Southern BBQ spread — perfectly crusted ribeye, creamy loaded mashed potatoes piled with bacon and cheddar, and a tall glass of unsweetened iced tea to wash it all down. This is the plate my family asks for…

The best meals aren't measured by perfection — they're measured by the memories made around the table.

Dan Cooks

The Backyard Plate That Never Gets Old: Ribeye, Loaded Mash & Cold Tea

A proper Southern BBQ spread — perfectly crusted ribeye, creamy loaded mashed potatoes piled with bacon and cheddar, and a tall glass of unsweetened iced tea to wash it all down. This is the plate my family asks for…

There's a plate that shows up at every important moment in my family's life — birthdays, end-of-school cookouts, those warm Friday evenings in Tampa when the sun is still high at six o'clock and nobody wants to be inside. It's a ribeye off the grill, a bowl of mashed potatoes loaded with bacon, cheddar, and sour cream, and a sweating glass of unsweetened iced tea. Simple as that. My grandmother Hellon didn't need a fancy menu to make people feel loved. My mother Barbara didn't either. And I don't either. What I do need is a hot grill, good meat, and enough time to do it right. This is that meal — the one that brings everybody to the table without a single complaint.

Why This Plate Works

I've cooked this combination more times than I can count, and what strikes me every time is how honest it is. There's no hiding behind complicated sauces or clever plating. The ribeye either has a crust or it doesn't. The mash is either silky or it's not. Every element on this plate tells the truth about how it was made. That's what I love about grilling — the fire doesn't lie. You get out what you put in. And when you put in a well-marbled ribeye, seasoned with nothing but kosher salt and black pepper, and you let the grate do its work without fussing, you get something that tastes like it belongs on a restaurant menu. The loaded mash is the same story: butter, cheddar, bacon, sour cream — nothing exotic, just each ingredient doing its job at full volume.

The Crust Is Everything

Here's what I tell anyone who asks why their steak doesn't taste like the one at a steakhouse: the crust. That deep, mahogany sear you see on a great ribeye isn't just visual — it's where the flavor actually lives. The Maillard reaction, that beautiful browning that happens when meat hits serious heat, creates hundreds of new flavor compounds that you simply cannot get any other way. To make it happen, you need three things: a bone-dry surface, enough salt, and the discipline not to move the steak. Pat it dry with paper towels. Season it generously — more than feels comfortable — with kosher salt. Then lay it on a hot grill and walk away for four to five minutes. No peeking. No pressing. No moving. When you flip it, you'll know you did it right. That crust is the whole game.

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Building the Loaded Mash Right

The mash on this plate isn't an afterthought — it's a full co-star. Russet potatoes are the right call here: they're starchy and fluffy, which means they absorb butter and milk beautifully without turning gluey. The key move is warming your butter and milk before they go in. Cold fat hits hot starch and seizes it up, giving you a dense, gummy result instead of the cloud-like mash you're after. Once the potatoes are drained and back in the pot, add the warm butter and milk, mash to your preferred texture, then pull the pot off the heat before folding in the cheddar, bacon, and sour cream. Off the heat matters — you want the cheese to melt gently into the mash, not break and go greasy. Finish with fresh chives and the remaining salt and pepper, taste it, and adjust. That's your mash.

About That Iced Tea

I grew up with sweet tea on the table, but for a plate this rich — ribeye, butter, cheddar, bacon — unsweetened is the move. Here's the thing most people don't realize: a good unsweetened black tea has a natural, pleasant bitterness that actively cuts through fat. Every sip resets your palate, so the next bite of steak or loaded mash tastes just as good as the first. It's the same reason a squeeze of lemon works on fried food. The tea isn't just a drink alongside the meal — it's doing real work. Brew it strong, let it cool completely, pour it over plenty of ice, and don't add a drop of sugar. Let the tea be what it is. Your taste buds will thank you.

Unsweetened black tea is the quiet MVP of this plate — its natural bitterness cuts through the richness of ribeye, butter, and cheddar in a way that keeps every bite tasting fresh.

  • black tea

A Word on the Numbers

I'll be straight with you: this is a treat-yourself plate, not a Tuesday night regular. The loaded mash — butter, cheddar, bacon, sour cream — is where most of the richness lives, and it's substantial. That said, the russet potatoes quietly earn their keep: they bring a serious amount of fiber and potassium that most people don't get enough of in a day, which is a genuine bright spot on an otherwise indulgent plate. If you want to lighten it up without losing the spirit of the dish, swap half the butter in the mash for plain Greek yogurt. You keep the creaminess and tang, and you pull back on the fat and salt meaningfully. Or just make it as written and enjoy every bite — this is a backyard BBQ, not a diet plan.

balanced

Hearty and protein-forward, with the potatoes delivering real fiber and potassium. The mash toppings carry most of the richness — here's the full picture.

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Questions from the kitchen

How long should I let the ribeye rest before cutting?
At least 5 minutes, and I'd push to 7 if you can stand it. A ribeye is a fatty cut, and the carry-over heat keeps working after it leaves the grill. Cutting too early sends all those juices straight to the cutting board instead of staying in the meat where they belong.
Can I make the mashed potatoes ahead of time?
Yes — make them up to an hour ahead and keep them warm on the lowest heat setting, stirring occasionally. If they tighten up, add a splash of warm milk and stir to loosen. Don't reheat them hard or the texture will suffer.
What temperature should I pull the steak for medium-rare?
Pull it at 130–135°F internal temperature. It'll carry over to about 135–140°F while resting, which is a perfect medium-rare. If you prefer medium, pull at 140°F and let it rest to around 145°F.
Can I dry-brine the steak overnight?
Absolutely — this is actually the move if you have the time. Salt the steak generously, set it uncovered on a rack in the fridge overnight, and the surface will dry out beautifully. That dry surface is exactly what you need for a proper crust on the grill.
Do I need to use a charcoal grill or will gas work?
Gas works fine. What matters most is getting the grill hot enough — 400 to 450°F — and making sure the grates are clean and well-oiled so the steak doesn't stick. Charcoal adds a smokier character, but the technique is the same either way.

This is the plate I come back to every summer, and I don't think that's ever going to change. There's something about a properly grilled ribeye next to a bowl of loaded mash — the kind that's still steaming when it hits the table — that just feels right. It's the kind of food that makes people stop mid-conversation and just eat. My kids scrape the bowl. My wife asks for seconds on the mash. And I'm already thinking about the next time I get to fire it up. That's the whole point, really. Food is love made visible, and this plate says it loud and clear. Fire up something good today.