raratt
Well-Known Member
My favorite things.tasty and easy!
My favorite things.tasty and easy!
OK @Metasynth what am I doing wrong?My Walmart rib roast. Graded “prime” but what I see is upper-tier Choice. The eye is more marbled than the pic shows, and I care more about that than the thinnish fat cap. It’s in the oven (bone down, not as shown) for a slow roasting at 170, as low as my oven will go. I’ll go til the low probe reads 125, then cover it on the counter. The center should heat ballistically to maybe 130, which is for me a perfect medium-rare.
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The Maillard reaction doesn’t happen till the exterior of the meat reaches 280-330 degrees Fahrenheit. So if you didn’t pre-sear, or you don’t get the oven up to at least that temperature, then you may miss out on that lovely roasty exterior.OK @Metasynth what am I doing wrong?
It’s not that he’s doing anything wrong, it’s just new to me. But I imagine 170 degrees won’t have much color. 170 degrees is like a well well done steak. So like how a dried out well done steak looks, that’s 170 degrees.
I perform a reverse sear. I follow the Serious Eats recipe that Annie brought to my attention. Once I hit temp, it’ll rest while I bring the oven up to 475x. That puts on a lovely crust and does not leave of a gray layer.The Maillard reaction doesn’t happen till the exterior of the meat reaches 280-330 degrees Fahrenheit. So if you didn’t pre-sear, or you don’t get the oven up to at least that temperature, then you may miss out on that lovely roasty exterior.
I’ve never cooked a roast at 170, but I imagine it taking a long time. And since it isn’t BBQ, and there is no smoke involved, I don’t expect much color on the roast at the end.
But I admit, now I am curious to see the outcome.
I didn't quote anyone. I really want to see how it goes too.It’s not that he’s doing anything wrong, it’s just new to me. But I imagine 170 degrees won’t have much color. 170 degrees is like a well well done steak. So like how a dried out well done steak looks, that’s 170 degrees.
I’m genuinely curious to see the results, this is uncharted territory for me
Yeah, I remember someone talking about a reverse sear a while back. I want to see how this turns out.I perform a reverse sear. I follow the Serious Eats recipe that Annie brought to my attention. Once I hit temp, it’ll rest while I bring the oven up to 475x. That puts on a lovely crust and does not leave of a gray layer.
I finger faulted and looked up to see Serious Rats. I giggled but corrected it.
I read through the recipe on their site, looks good, I think I’ll try it for my rib roast this year. Thanks for the heads up!I perform a reverse sear. I follow the Serious Eats recipe that Annie brought to my attention. Once I hit temp, it’ll rest while I bring the oven up to 475x. That puts on a lovely crust and does not leave of a gray layer.
I finger faulted and looked up to see Serious Rats. I giggled but corrected it.
~edit~ the oven is at 170, not the meat! I have two Maverick probes in there. When the low one reads 125, I pull the roast.
I get better results in this oven whose lowest setting is 170.Cook rib roast at 250° F until 120° for very medium rare. Remove from oven and rest for 1 hour. Put back into 500° oven for 10-15 minutes. Slice and eat. If you want your meat cooked more then make the initial pull at 125° or higher depending on the doneness you want.
Do you eat the shell?Coolest fish tacos ever
No idea! They use real fish fins and eyes but do not describe the shell. If that is actual puffer those could kill a dozen people.Do you eat the shell?
Are they edible?Those are called a Box fish or Turret fish. Basically they are a cow fish sans the "horns".
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