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London Broil Ideas
Comments
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My London Broils never turn out good. Any advice?
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I don't reverse sear a piece of meat that thin. I just have a couple of marinades we use and then get the Egg up to 500 - 550 and flip it a few times and pull. Nice med rare in the middle. Cut on bias and across the grain. Feed the whole family (4) for about $14 - $16 of meat. Hard to beat that. Good luck.Joe - I'm a reformed gasser-holic aka 4Runner Columbia, SC Wonderful BGE Resource Site: http://www.nakedwhiz.com/ceramicfaq.htm and http://www.nibblemethis.com/ and http://playingwithfireandsmoke.blogspot.com/2006/02/recipes.html
What am I drinking now? Woodford....neat -
Cook direct 450-500, turning a few times This IMHO is not a piece to be reverse seared.
.Beef, London Broil, Rusty Rooster
INGREDIENTS:
1 London broil, covered with seasoning salt and pepper
Marinade
1 cup cooking oil
1/2 cup Dijon mustard
1/4 cup white vinegar
1/8 cup WorcestershireProcedure
1. Pour marinade ingredients in a zip bag & mix. Then add meat and be sure it is well covered. Squeeze out the air and refrigerate turning every few hours. Try to marinade at least eight hours, 24 will be better.
2. Cook direct to your desired doneness, remembering that this is a lean cut & it will be tougher the more it is cooked.
3. As soon as you remove the meat from the marinade, let it set a minute and the oil will separate. Pour off as much of the oil as you can then put the rest in a small pan. Cook to kill anything from the meat and to slightly thicken. Your microwave, stovetop or egg will all do this equally.
4. When the meat is done, slice it thinly across the grain and serve with the cooked marinade as gravy.
Recipe Type: Beef, Main Dish
Source
Author: Tom and Karen Chamberlain (Rusty Rooster)
Source: BGE Eggtoberfest '08, Rusty Rooster -
Just did one today... Montreal steak seasoning. Seared down low for about 8min a side and then did raised direct 4min a side flipping until the IT was 138. Turned out fantastic.MSV Chill Spot
Chester County, PA
http://egginwithedward.blogspot.com/
http://edwardhardingphotography.zenfolio.com/ -
I marinade in a mix of oil, garlic, soy sauce and honey. Raised direct around 400 to desired doneness. The sugar in the honey gives a nice bark. Slice very thin against the grain.__________________________________________It's not a science, it's an art. And it's flawed.- Camp Hill, PA
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I was on vacation recently (rental house) and was seriously let down when I saw the state of the grills they had and even worse when looking around the meat dept. at the nearby big-chain grocery store. I didn't see anything I'd even want to grill had the grills been usable.
Anyway, they did have a nice selection of meats labeled "london broil" which is something I'd never cooked before. I bought one and then googled what to do with it. I marinated one in a mix of Italian salad dressing and a bit of my home made rub that I'd brought along and broiled it in the oven. The trick with this stuff is to cut it as thin as you can. Do that, and it's really not bad. It fed 3 adults 1 dinner, and I made a couple of sandwiches out of the rest. Kind of like roast beef.
If I was to do one in the egg, I'd probably go real hot indirect to keep from charring it.
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marinate in chimichurry sauce (parsley pesto-like)remove excess sauce before cookingcooked hot (5-600) to your doneness
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+1 with njl using Italian salad dressing for marinade.
I've done that for years to marinate meat for shish kabob. It's very good.
John in the Willamette Valley of Oregon -
Not sure about the reference above to a piece of meat that thin - maybe the term varies around the country but where I am (mid-atlantic region) it's generally about 2 inches thick. Did my first BGE london broil tonight. Didn't have time for a marinade so mixed the following and spread on both sides: 2 tablespoons dijon mustard, 2 cloves garlic (chopped), 2 teaspoons fresh rosemary (chopped), ground pepper, 1 tablespoon olive oil. Following a suggestion somewhere on BGE, cooked at 300 degrees 8 minutes/side, then 400-450 for 4 minutes/side. Ended up a little past medium-rare but still pink; next time I'll cut the time by a little bit. Definitely good though; not sure why there are some many LB haters on here
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Love this cut... Always turns out good and you can cook 3 of them and have plenty of good beef for a lot of guests. Never has anyone turn it away.susanshaw said:Not sure about the reference above to a piece of meat that thin - maybe the term varies around the country but where I am (mid-atlantic region) it's generally about 2 inches thick. Did my first BGE london broil tonight. Didn't have time for a marinade so mixed the following and spread on both sides: 2 tablespoons dijon mustard, 2 cloves garlic (chopped), 2 teaspoons fresh rosemary (chopped), ground pepper, 1 tablespoon olive oil. Following a suggestion somewhere on BGE, cooked at 300 degrees 8 minutes/side, then 400-450 for 4 minutes/side. Ended up a little past medium-rare but still pink; next time I'll cut the time by a little bit. Definitely good though; not sure why there are some many LB haters on here
MSV Chill Spot
Chester County, PA
http://egginwithedward.blogspot.com/
http://edwardhardingphotography.zenfolio.com/
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