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Santa Maria Tri Tip

Comments
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What method did you use? How did you season? I did one on Sunday with a coffee based rub, cooked at 300 until 110 then seared.- Jamaican living in rural Western Washington
- Got my first egg (XL) in October 2015 -
@annjamaican I totally winged this, but the rub was: cayenne, black pepper, garlic salt. I basted with mixture of EVOO and red wine vinegar. Did reverse sear, cooked indirect until about 115 IT then seared on CI grate.LBGE & SBGE. Central Texas.
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Fantastic, I take my Santa Maria Tri tip to 135 ... IMO 110-115 is too raw. Great cook.I've slow smoked and eaten so much pork, I'm legally recognized as being part swine - Chatsworth Ca.
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Looks great. How hot and long did you sear and what was the temp after the sear?Stillwater, MN
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Man, this looks awesome.
Tri tip isn't easy to find in my neck of the woods. I need to track some downXL & MM BGE, 36" Blackstone - Newport News, VA -
You might try what I have cooked at multiple Eggfests:
Santa Maria Style Tri-tip
Rich Miller
Morro Bay, CA
2 (3 pound) tri-tip roasts
Basting Sauce, recipe follows
Seasoning Salt Mixture: recipe follows
Seasoning Salt Mixture:
2 teaspoons freshly ground black pepper
2 teaspoons white pepper
2 teaspoons cayenne pepper
1 teaspoon onion powder
4 tablespoons granulated garlic
6 tablespoons salt
Mix together all ingredients in a small bowl
Basting Sauce:
½ cup red wine vinegar
½ cup garlic-infused vegetable oil
Whisk together vinegar and oil in a small bowl.
Coat both sides of the tri-tip roasts with the seasoning mixture, rubbing it in as you would a dry rub. Let the seasoned tri-tip rest for at least 30 minutes at room temperature. Sear each side of the tri-tip at 600 to 700 degrees for 3 to 4 minutes each. Remove seared tri-tip from the BGE, cover it with foil and let it rest while bringing the BGE temperature down to 350 to 400 degrees. During this cool down period I usually toss in a couple of oak chunks. Put tri-tip back in the BGE and cook to an internal temperature of 126 degrees for medium rare, basting with the sauce every 5 to 10 minutes. Remove tri-tip from the BGE, cover it with foil and let it rest 15 minutes. Cut into ½” slices against the grain.
This recipe is from Foodnetwork.com’s website. It is titled “Santa Maria Style BBQ” Oakwood Grilled Tri-tip. It is as close to authentic Santa Maria tri-tip as I have been able to find.
Remember if you don’t use the Basting Sauce, decrease the salt to 2 tablespoons.
Morro Bay, CA -
@SoCalTim sorry I wasn't clear, I go to abou 115 IT and then reverse sear it, so final temp 135 after rest.LBGE & SBGE. Central Texas.
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@morrobayrich thanks I'll try thatLBGE & SBGE. Central Texas.
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Same here. Can't afford that mail order Wagu beef. Still looking though.johnnyp said:Man, this looks awesome.
Tri tip isn't easy to find in my neck of the woods. I need to track some down
Eggo in N. MS
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