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Has Achieved Nirvana |
Nina, do you use an instant read thermometer?
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Pinta & the Santa Maria Has Achieved Nirvana |
Yep! Though it's not often that I cook a big hunk of meat, so I'll have to go dig it out of my kitchen junk drawer. | |||
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Minor Deity |
Yes. An instant read is crucial for steaks.
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Has Achieved Nirvana |
I would skip the flambé part.
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Minor Deity |
Yeah. That's unnecessary for the dish and invites stories to tell of 'the night I flambeed the guests'.
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Has Achieved Nirvana |
What did you make, Nina?
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Minor Deity |
I would have done a BBQ which does not need nice weather...I do them all winter! Curious what you did as well. For Xmas at cousin's, he roasts slowly a rib roast. Yum!
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Pinta & the Santa Maria Has Achieved Nirvana |
I ended up following Mik's advice, but tweaked it. Used tenderloin filets, thick cut, marinaded in dijon mustard and a bit of light soy sauce for about 20 minutes. Seared then into the oven. I had a few differently sized filets, which meant that when I took the largest to 120, then there were other done-ness options for those who don't like rare/medium rare. Sliced and served with stuffed baked potatoes and steamed broccoli, and a light local beer with a slight honey infusion (not sweet, just a hint). It was great. I want to try a rib roast at some point, and this adventure gave me some confidence. I also ordered the veal glace for steak diane in the future, but it hadn't arrived in time for last weekend. Thanks for the ideas! | |||
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Has Achieved Nirvana |
Sounds great! I reverse seared my rib roast last Christmas and it came out perfectly!
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Pinta & the Santa Maria Has Achieved Nirvana |
One of the What is "reverse sear"? Off to google... | |||
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Has Achieved Nirvana |
I used the Food Lab recipe. Let me know if you need it and I will post it for you. I made a few notes that might help: 1. Removing from oven at 120 degrees is a little too rare for most people. 125 degrees would be better. 2. Oven temp is way off at 185 degrees setting. Use oven thermometer. 3. Takes longer than recipe says. 10# roast started at 50 degree internal temp took about 7 hours at 185 degree oven temp.
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Has Achieved Nirvana |
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Minor Deity |
Sounds great I did a rib roast a few weeks ago and found a good tip. Coat it with seasoned flour. Gives a nicer crust. Apparently restaurants use this. I’ll dig out the recipe today.
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Minor Deity |
Caveat: I totally disagree with their roasting temperature, and they contradict themselves on time. I subscribe to low and slow for rib roasts. But the flour coating is great. https://www.allrecipes.com/rec...yle-prime-rib-roast/ This is more the method I use: https://carmanranchcowshare.co...asted-beef-prime-rib
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Pinta & the Santa Maria Has Achieved Nirvana |
Any reason why I couldn't use these techniques for a non-rib roast? As in, a hunk of meat with no bones in it? I know the bones impart great flavor, but they also impart great expense. OK, now the embarrassing question--does anyone know of a good website that lists all the various cuts of beef and what they're best used for, or better yet, your "go to" beef types for various things? (I said, I have ZERO experience cooking beef.) That's part of my hesitation at this point--not wanting to plunk down a hunk of change on a cut of beef only to discover that it's a bad choice for method X. | |||
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