My first rib roast was a great success despite some temperature issues. I've posted some questions in a separate link: Cold Weather Low & Slow Temp Questions. Despite my cooking temps not coming out as planned, the roast was excellent. Moist, tender, and tasty. I used a recipe from the Weber Bullet Web Site for a Herb Crusted Rib Roast. The roast is cooked low and slow and then receives a quick sear in a 500 degree oven. I was a bit scared about ruining a fine piece of meat, so while everything but the 5-cheese garlic bread was home made, everything else was made indoors in the Kitchen. This allowed me to precook the garlic mashed potatoes and squash and hold them briefly in my new 3 pan food warmer. I'll let the pictures tell the rest of the story.
The herb paste used chopped fresh Italian parsley, oregano, rosemary & basil, plus minced garlic, Lawrey's seasoned salt, fresh ground black pepper & olive oil.
The ingredients for the herb paste are in a bowl ready to be mixed.
The blended herb paste.
The roast is taken out of the fridge 2 hours early & is about to have the herb past applied.
The herb paste has been applied to the roast, which will go on the egg in 2 hours.
We have liftoff. The Egg is being fired up using 3 paraffin starter & 3 chunks of hickory have been distributed in the lump.
The platesetter is installed legs up & the stainless steel grate is installed.
The roast is on the grill on a v-grid set in a cast iron roast pan. It was an extremely tight fit. The lid just barely cleared the corners of the cast iron pan.
The roast is almost done. Time for some homemade French onion soup.
The roast is up to 125. Time for it to come inside and go into a 500 degree oven for 6 minutes.
The roast after a 6 minute sear in a 500 degree oven. You have to be careful not to keep it in the oven too long or the crust will crack wide open. The roast gets loosely covered in foil & rests for 30 minutes.
The roast rested 30 minutes before I carved it.
The roast is carved time to eat.
In addition to the roast there was some 5 cheese garlic bread, doctored squash, garlic mashed potatoes & au jus gravy.
Everyone loved the meal & are still talking about it 24 hours later. This is the best part of this hobby: being able to share the results with family & friends.
My second Large is supposed to be available for pick up on Friday. Actually it is the base cabinet the Egg sits on I'm waiting for. Next year I'll take more of the cooking outdoors with the second Egg.
Jim
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0 • Off Topic Disagree Agree LikeI have a feeling this problem will be solved once his second egg arrives. I did the same cook, but got to break in my new small egg which was sitting at 475 when the meat hit temp in the XL.
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0 • Off Topic Disagree Agree LikeI've been looking at the BGE for years but putting it off due to the expense. When my lovely wife Patty told me last summer to just get it I didn't ask again. She now thinks it's one of the best purchases we've ever made. I love my BGE!
Another Jim
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0 • Off Topic Disagree Agree LikeJim:
Glad to here the roast turned out so well. I am quite amazed at the number of "This is the best ____ I've ever had" type compliments I've received since I got the Egg. They started the first night and are a regular event around here. My Egg got delivered and set-up about a week early. So my wife didn't know my Spatchcoked chicken had been done on the Egg and I didn't tell her. After her first bite she said "OMG" three times and declared it to be the best chicken she had ever tasted. She had been skeptical about any particular grill being that much better, but now she regularly asks if she can invite freinds or family over for a meal cooked on the Egg. When I mentioned a second Egg it was smooth sailing. It would seem I have her right where she wants me!
As for the reverse sear in the oven I've found between that and the 30 minute rest, I get about a 10-12 degree temperature rise on a rib roast, so pulling it at 120 like you did I would have expected a 130-132 degree finish temp which is what it sounds like you got. I was shooting for a 135 MR done temp, which is why i used 125 as my done temp. With the low and slow cooking it stays nice and juicy. BTW don't keep it in the oven too long. The 10 minutes some recipes call for seems too long and will often crack the skin/crust exposing large areas of meat. I was pushing things with my 6 minute sear. I did get some cracks/tears starting to form. Did your crust crack at all searing it for 5 minutes?
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0 • Off Topic Disagree Agree LikeMAKE THE SOUP:
- Add 1 tbsp EVOO to a large pan and and set heat to low.
- Add the butter & allow to melt.
- Sautée onions in butter until soft and turning brownish. Stir frequently to get all of the onion to cook. Time approx. 30 minutes - 45 minutes. If the time extends beyond 30 minutes you may want to add more butter so the onions continue to brown and don't burn.
- Stir in beef stock, Worcestershire sauce, salt & pepper.
- Simmer for at least 30 minutes, stirring occasionally. Onions will continue to soften.
- At this point the soup can be used or refrigerated & reheated later.
FOR THE TOPPING
● Slice the French bread and toast.
● Add the soup to a microwave safe bowl and then add the slice(s) of bread.
● Wait a minute for bread to absorb some of the liquid and add more soup stock as required.
● Sprinkle on the cheese and microwave at 70% power for about 3 minutes or until the cheese has melted. Every microwave is different so adjust time to suit power of your microwave.
● Be careful handling or eating the soup after it comes out of the microwave oven as the liquid and the bowl will be VERY hot.
I should note that this is the recipe that our family uses. I have often been tempted to try other recipes to compare, but this is my mother's recipe and it makes her happy I still use it. Is it very good? Yes. Is it the best? I don't know.
Jim
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