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Majors Steakhouse

 
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8289 Jerich Tpke
Woodbury, NY 11797-1802
516-367-7300

As waiter Joseph Keaveney adds pepper to their dish, Brett and Francesca Prochazka enjoy a meal at Majors Steakhouse. (Photo by Joel Cairo)
Like prime beef or fine wine, some restaurants need to age before they can be fully enjoyed.

It was more than a decade ago when I first visited the value-priced Majors Steakhouse in Woodbury. All I can recall is overcooked meat and clueless service. I didn't rush back.

It took the urging of a food-savvy acquaintance to motivate a belated return. "There's a reason the parking lot is always crowded," he told me. The parking lot at Applebee's is always crowded, too, I thought, proving only that good marketing can work wonders.

As I found out, though, there's more than marketing behind the success of Majors. These days, this mid-priced purveyor of red meat (under the same ownership as the more upscale Bryant & Cooper steak house in Roslyn) is running smoothly.

When a member of our group ordered a Porterhouse steak very rare, he got it exactly as our waiter described it -- red and cold at the center. The mammoth cut of beef was tender, smoky, juicy, with a fine char on the outside. And while this wasn't a transcendental steak palace experience, it was satisfying and reasonable at $26.95 for a 24-ounce entree.

If you're considering this kind of red meat debauch, you might want to skip appetizers, especially since every table gets a bowl of pickles and sauerkraut. While the jumbo shrimp cocktail was fresh and sweet, it came on a watery bed of ice chips. A Caesar salad was respectable, clams oreganata garlicky and herbal.

Although I was unable to finish my 16-ounce New York sirloin (very rare, precisely as ordered), I was pleased with every juicy bite. The friend who requested his filet mignon medium-well got it just that way. Any meat cooked to that degree of doneness is beyond my appreciation, but he gobbled it up. I was impressed, though, with the slab of boneless prime rib, rare, tender and full of flavor.

A rack of barbecued spare ribs was infused with a deep-down smokiness. The only misfire was a grilled swordfish steak with a strong fishy flavor. But Cajun blackened salmon, a special one night, was crisp and fiery on the outside, its interior moist and savory. Majors makes a fine, fat burger, crusty on the outside, oozing juices. It outclasses its dry, ordinary bun.

Rich creamed spinach, a steak house requisite, is a bright emerald. Oniony home fries, pleasingly greasy, are preferable to the limp, stringy French fries. I liked the smooth solace offered by the garlic mashed potatoes.

On the dessert menu is a peach of a Key lime pie, tart and creamy. Homestyle apple crisp is fragrant with cinnamon, just made for a scoop of vanilla ice cream. Warm and gooey pecan pie, from an out-of-house baker, holds its own. These days, so does Majors.

Reviewed by Joan Reminick, 1/14/05.

Hours

Lunch, Monday to Saturday, noon to 4 p.m.; dinner, Monday to Thursday, 4 to 11 p.m., Friday and Saturday, 4 p.m. to midnight, Sunday, 4 to 10 p.m.

Assessment

Beefed up

Cuisine

Steak

Price Range

Expensive ($25-$50), Inexpensive (Under $15), Moderate ($15-$25)

Wheelchair Access

Accessible through side entrance.