Tender beef strips. Seasoned flour batter. Oil so hot it crisps on contact. Born in Boise in the 1950s and still served at every bar and diner from Twin Falls to Coeur d'Alene.
"The only state in the union
where deep-fried beef strips
are a point of pride."
The finger steak was born in Boise sometime in the early 1950s. Most food historians trace it back to Milo's Torch Lounge, where a creative cook sliced beef tenderloin into strips, dredged them in seasoned flour, and dropped them in a deep fryer. Bar food was never the same in Idaho.
The dish never really left the state. While the rest of America moved on to mozzarella sticks and chicken wings, Idahoans kept ordering finger steaks. You'll find them at dive bars, family restaurants, and steakhouses from Twin Falls to Coeur d'Alene. Always beef. Always fried. Always served with fry sauce on the side.
Every variation. Every technique. All tested in a real kitchen.
Seasoned flour, hot peanut oil, and beef tenderloin strips cut the old-fashioned way. The one that started it all.
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An overnight buttermilk soak makes these the most tender version you'll find. The batter fries up extra crispy.
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Same crispy batter, less oil. A proper adaptation for the air fryer that doesn't cut corners on flavor or texture.
Get the Recipe →Finger steaks need hot oil and stable temperature. These are the fryers, thermometers, and oils that actually work.
View Buyer's Guide →Classic recipe, fry sauce guide, oil temperature chart, and cut recommendations. One PDF. Free.
No spam. Just finger steaks.