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    Home » Recipes » Condiments

    Montreal Steak Spice & Marinade

    Published: Apr 26, 2021

    Note: This site is a participant in the Amazon Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for the site to earn fees by linking to Amazon and affiliated sites.

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    Montreal Steak Spice - and Montreal Steak Spice Marinade - are not only delicious, they're quick and easy to make at home. Here's how!

    Montreal steak spice in a small square bowl, and marinade in a glass bottle. Behind them, a steak with sauteed mushrooms and asparagus on a plate.

    I’ve been working on posting my recipe for making Montreal Smoked Meat, and I realized that I never did post my recipe for Montreal Steak Spice - a key part of that recipe.

    SO, today I’m going to rectify that!

    As I was gathering the photos from previous shoots, to get this post together, I realized - when we shot this spice mix for More Than Poutine, we shot it together with a knockoff recipe for Diana Steak Spice Marinade.

    Like literally did not photograph the steak spice on its own.

    So, in the spirit of laziness leading to giving... we’re doing a 2-for here today!

    Montreal Steak Seasoning

    Montreal Steak Spice is a seasoning mix that’s ubiquitous here in Canada - it’s pretty much *the* default seasoning blend of grilling season.

    Like the name suggests, this spice mix originated in Montreal, Quebec.

    As legend tells it, the mix specifically came from Schwartz’s Deli. It’s pretty much a historic landmark at this point - the company has been around for almost 100 years, and is famous for its smoked meat.

    Back in the 40s or 50s, one of their employees started using their pickling spice when cooking his own steaks.

    The customers started asking for it, other delis and steak houses followed suit, and it became a Canadian tradition!

    Montreal steak spice in a small square bowl, and marinade in a glass bottle. Behind them, a steak with sauteed mushrooms and asparagus on a plate.

    Homemade Montreal Steak Spice

    Today I’m sharing my version of the mix, which I use when making my own Montreal Smoked Meat (Sort of - I omit the salt when making smoked meat!).

    I also use this when grilling or roasting beef in general, in making beef burgers (sometimes), etc. It’s also the main flavour in my replica Diana Marinade - more on that in a few minutes.

    While my recipe has all the flavour of commercially available Montreal Steak Seasoning, it has a lot less salt.

    I don’t know if the stuff we’d get in Minnesota was actually saltier than I was used to, but it sure seemed like it.
    The salt content was definitely excessive - it really doesn’t need that much.

    I’m guessing it’s a matter of salt acting as a cheaper filler material, than anything else.

    Anyway.

    If you find you want more salt in this, feel free to add more. Just be sure to try it as-is, first - I think you’ll find that it’s definitely got enough salt! It’s ruined us for the store-bought favourite, to be honest.

    The full recipe is at the bottom of this post, and can be used to make the marinade recipe, later in this post.

    Montreal steak spice in a small square bowl, and marinade in a glass bottle. Behind them, a steak with sauteed mushrooms and asparagus on a plate.

    How to Make Montreal Steak Spice

    Makes about ½ cup.

    Measure peppercorns, garlic, coriander, dill, and pepper flakes into a nonstick pan.

    A two part compilation image showing spices measured into a pan, and that pan next to a small bowl of powdered spices.

    Toast over medium-high heat - stirring constantly - until fragrant. Remove from heat, allow to cool.

    A two part compilation image showing whole spices in a nonstick pan, before and after toasting.

    Transfer toasted spices to a small food processor or spice grinder, blitz until ingredients are fairly fine, but still mostly identifiable.

    A two part compilation image showing spices in a spice grinder, before and after being ground down.

    Mix in remaining ingredients.

    A glass bowl full of freshly ground Montreal Steak Spice.

    Store in an airtight container.

    Montreal steak spice in a small square bowl, and marinade in a glass bottle. Behind them, a steak with sauteed mushrooms and asparagus on a plate.

    Replica Diana Steak Spice Marinade

    Much like the Diana BBQ Sauces I posted the other day, the source material for this is a popular, commercially available product in Canada.

    It’s particularly good for steak and vegetables. If using commercial steak spice, leave out the ½ teaspoon salt. Taste, add more salt if necessary.

    To make this gluten-free, be sure to use a gluten-free soy sauce.

    A Note on Accuracy

    Because this is a replica of a commercial product, the technique - and corn starch - are things that I normally wouldn't include in a basic marinade.

    While I'd normally leave the water and corn starch out and just shake/whisk the remaining ingredients, I'm a stickler for details! Done as described, this produces a marinade that is very accurate to the store-bought version.

    If you're looking for a great-tasting steak marinade, and don't really care if it has the right viscosity to replicate a $3 bottle of Canadian marinade that you've never tried, you can definitely skip the water, corn starch, and cooking!

    Replica Diana Steak Spice Marinade

    Makes about 1 ¼ cups marinade.

    ½ cup White vinegar
    ¼ cup Vegetable oil
    ¼ cup Water
    ¼ cup Granulated sugar
    2 tablespoon Montreal steak spice (Recipe below)
    1 teaspoon Corn starch
    1 teaspoon Mustard powder
    1 teaspoon Soy sauce
    ½ teaspoon Paprika
    ½ teaspoon Salt
    ¼ teaspoon Thyme

    Measure ingredients into a small saucepan.

    Spices and corn starch measured into a small pot.

    Whisk all ingredients together.

    A small pot of Montreal Steak Spice Marinade.

    Bring to just a simmer over medium heat. Remove from heat and cool before using.

    Montreal Steak Spice Marinade in a glass measuring cup.

    To use, marinate food items for about 30 minutes, before cooking.

    Cover image for the "More Than Poutine" cookbook.

    This recipe is one of many fantastic Canadian recipes in my cookbook, "More Than Poutine: Favourite Foods from my Home and Native Land”. "More than Poutine" is a Canadian cookbook like no other - written by a Canadian living away, it includes both traditional home cooking recipes, as well as accurate homemade versions of many of the snacks, sauces, convenience foods, and other food items that are hard to come by outside of Canada! Order your copy here on this site, through Amazon, or through any major bookseller!

    Montreal steak spice in a small square bowl, and marinade in a glass bottle. Behind them, a steak with sauteed mushrooms and asparagus on a plate.

    More Grilling & Smoker Recipes!

    Looking for an excuse to fire up the grill? I've got you...

    Apple Chicken Burgers with Basil & Gouda
    Chicken Souvlaki
    Cold Smoked Potato Salad
    Grilled Jambalaya Skewers
    Hop Marinated Chicken & Vegetable Skewers
    Hoppy IPA BBQ Sauce
    How to Cook Corn on the Cob
    Montreal Smoked Meat
    Moroccan Spiced Lamb Burgers
    Replica Diana Sauce
    Smoked Cheese Balls
    Smoked French Fries
    Smoked Jalapeno Poppers
    Spinach Feta Salmon Burgers
    Tandoori Spiced Chicken Burgers with Mango
    Vegetarian Chorizo Burgers with Grilled Poblano & Cilantro Pesto

    Share the Love!

    Before you chow down, be sure to take some pics of your handiwork! If you post it to Bluesky, be sure to tag us - @CelebrationGen. We're also on Pinterest, so you can save all your favourite recipes to a board!

    Also, be sure to subscribe to my free monthly email newsletter, so you never miss out on any of my nonsense.

    Well, the published nonsense, anyway!

    Montreal steak spice in a small square bowl, and marinade in a glass bottle. Behind them, a steak with sauteed mushrooms and asparagus on a plate.
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    5 from 1 vote

    Montreal Steak Spice

    Montreal steak spice in a small square bowl, and marinade in a glass bottle. Behind them, a steak with sauteed mushrooms and asparagus on a plate.
    Prep Time5 minutes mins
    Cook Time5 minutes mins
    Total Time10 minutes mins
    Course: Condiment
    Cuisine: Canadian
    Servings: 8 tablespoon
    Calories: 17kcal
    Author: Marie Porter

    Equipment

    • Spice Grinder

    Ingredients

    • 2 tablespoon Black peppercorns
    • 1 ½ tablespoon Dried minced garlic
    • 2 teaspoon Coriander seeds
    • 2 teaspoon Dill Seed
    • 1 ½ teaspoon Crushed chilies / red pepper flakes
    • 1 tablespoon Salt
    • 1 teaspoon Onion powder
    • ½ teaspoon Smoked Paprika

    Instructions

    • Measure peppercorns, garlic, coriander, dill, and pepper flakes into a nonstick pan.
    • Toast over medium high heat - stirring constantly - until fragrant. Remove from heat, allow to cool.
    • Transfer toasted spices to a small food processor or spice grinder, blitz until ingredients are fairly fine, but still mostly identifiable.
    • Mix in remaining ingredients.
    • Store in an airtight container.

    Notes

    Nutritional info is for the entire batch.
    See the main blog entry for the Steak Spice Marinade recipe.

    Nutrition

    Calories: 17kcal | Carbohydrates: 4g | Protein: 1g | Fat: 1g | Saturated Fat: 1g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 1g | Monounsaturated Fat: 1g | Sodium: 880mg | Potassium: 76mg | Fiber: 1g | Sugar: 1g | Vitamin A: 187IU | Vitamin C: 1mg | Calcium: 27mg | Iron: 1mg

    Related posts:

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