Re: Prime Rib
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Posted by GLA on Jul-4-03 5:04am
(In reply to: Prime Rib posted by clueless on Jul-3-03 9:52pm)
Clueless: This is the recipe I use and it comes from the Texas Beef Council...it sure is good.
Take a 12 to 13 pound Prime Rib, that has never been frozen
Cover it pretty good with coarse ground black pepper and Cavendar's Greek Seasoning....it's hard to use too much Greek Seasoning
It works good if you cover the Prime Rib with Virgin Olive Oil first.
Cook @ 300 to 325 degrees for 3 to 3 1/2 hours
Cook to internal temperature of 130 to 135 degrees.
It works best if you are cooking on the grill to cook on indirect heat
Don't cook directly over the open fire
After 2 hours, check temperature with meat thermometer and turn Prime Rib every hour.
3 hours is enough for Medium Rare
3 1/2 hours is nearly too much
Remember, after you remove it from the grill it will cook for another 15 minutes or more on internal heat
Slice and enjoy
Happy Fourth of July!! Re: Prime Rib
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Posted by agman on Jul-4-03 7:22am
(In reply to: Prime Rib posted by clueless on Jul-3-03 9:52pm)
cluelesws.....Would someone tell me how to cook a prime rib roast? Does it need to be thawed? How do I season it?
The following is from the chefs from two of the top restaurants in the U.S. modified for home use.
1. Thaw meat to nearly room temp. steaks should also be thoroughly thawed prior to placing on the grill.
2. Rub exterior with Kosher salt,if not use Lowry's seasoned salt.
Season generously, that is a large piece of meat. Cap 2 inches of each end with tin foil so as to prevent those ends from being over cooked.
3. Place in a roast pan with 1/4 to 1/2 inch of beef broth. You may wish to place some oninons in broth for au jus to be made later.
4. Season according to you liking- pepper, etc. Place lid on roast pan.
5. Set temp to 220 degrees. Slow cooking is vital to good prime rib
6. Use internal temp thermometer, when internal temp gets to desired level for rare, remove lid. Finish to med-rare with lid off. Remove from oven immediately. Allow prime rib to cool for five minutes, then cut and serve. Interior should be perfectly pink (med rare) from end-to-end.
7. Take drippings from roast pan and mix with a can of au jus, any brand will do.
8. Enjoy. Depending on the size of the prime rib, a boneless prime rib will take approximately 2 1/2 - 3 hours hours. Bone-in, cap on, could take up to four-five hours. Always - the internal temp is the final indicator, not time, in determining if a prime rib is done.
9. Do not overcook a prime rib. That will upset the beef Gods. The internal temp will not begin to rise at all for perhaps an hour or hour and one-half on a boneless prime rib, bone-in will take even longer. Be patient. This baby takes time.
Enjoy, have a safe holiday. Agman