^Livio Borra, letter to the editor, The Times, 1958-07-26, p. 7
^Max Jacobson, "Blast from a tasty past", Los Angeles Times, March 26, 1998 [1]: "steak Diane and all the other Continental dishes an up-to-date foodie would be embarrassed to admit knowing of"
^Lobel's Culinary Club, August 17, 2012 [2]: "Steak Diane is among those popular dishes in ubiquitous cosmopolitan, Continental-style restaurants of the 1950s and ’60s that combined high style with leather banquettes, white-linen table cloths and dishes of American and European influences, a bit of theater and dramatic preparation."
^Mark R. Vogel, "Diana: The Legacy of the Huntress", FoodReference[3]: "One thing is for sure. Steak Diane was the rage in the 50s and early 60s, especially in New York."
^Florence Fabricant, "New Wave in the East River: David Burke", The New York Times November 9, 1988, characterizes it as "retro"
^ 7.07.1Leah Koenig, "Lost Foods of New York City: Steak Diane", Politico, March 14, 2012 [5]: "Lost Foods of New York City is a column that celebrates the food and drink that once fed the city, but have disappeared.... America’s collective obsession with all things mid-century New York City is back in full martini-slinging force. What better time, then, to celebrate steak Diane—a dish so quintessentially retro-glamorous, it might as well be called steak Don Draper."
^Jan Aaron, 101 Great Choices: Washington DC, Part 3, p. 76
^Spécialités de la Maison. American Friends of France. 1940.
^ 23.023.1Morris, Charlotte Sidle. Favorite Recipes of Famous Musicians. 1941: 38.
^Muir, Helen. "Very Truly Yours", Miami Herald, 1942-03-21, p. 5
^John Fuller, Guéridon and Lamp Cookery: A Complete Guide to Side-table and Flambé Service, 1964, p. 69
^ 26.026.1Arthur Schwartz, "21's Steak Diane",[6]archived quoting from Arthur Schwartz, New York City Food: An Opinionated History and More Than 100 Legendary Recipes, 2008
^Patten, Marguerite. Cooking for Two. London: Hamlyn. 1982: 47. ISBN 978-0-60-032273-3. and Paré, Jean. Company's Coming: Main Courses. Edmonton: Company's Coming. 1989: 59. ISBN 978-0-96-933221-3.
^Lagasse, Emeril. Emeril's Delmonico: A Restaurant With a Past. New York: William Morrow. 2005: 172. ISBN 978-0-06-074046-7.