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Forward sear bone-in pork chops
Powak
Posts: 1,412
picked up some bone-in chops today from the butcher shop. These guys looked like the pork version of porterhouse steak and I just couldn't resist. The guy behind the counter said these are great seared first then slow cooked at 300° indirect until they're done. He prefers no pink and we do too at my house. Would this be easily done on the egg? I'm thinking of how hot of a sear temp and methods for cooling the egg down to the roast temp. I've done a few reverse sears with pork and always yield dry, tough meat.
Comments
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A second Egg cures that problem. Awaiting finished pics.Steve
XL, Mini Max, and a 22" Blackstone in Cincinnati, Ohio -
My man Trey speaks the truth. Time to pony up for that second egg. I find the MM to be a searing machine.YEMTrey said:A second Egg cures that problem. Awaiting finished pics.Ellijay GA with a Medium & MiniMax
Well, I married me a wife, she's been trouble all my life,
Run me out in the cold rain and snow -
Hahahah I know! That's definitely in the works in the near future for me. In the mean time I've gotta do the cool-down waitnorthGAcock said:
My man Trey speaks the truth. Time to pony up for that second egg. I find the MM to be a searing machine.YEMTrey said:A second Egg cures that problem. Awaiting finished pics. -
Reverse sear it“There are three rules that I live by: never get less than twelve hours sleep; never play cards with a guy who has the same first name as a city; and never get involved with a woman with a tattoo of a dagger on her body.”
Coach Finstock Teen Wolf -
If I can get it to come out cooked and juicy that way I'll go with it. Maybe it being bone-in, that'll help.Hans61 said:Reverse sear it -
My other thought is possibly searing it inside on my cast-iron pan and then slow roasting at 275 indirect on the egg
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The ONLY advantage to a "forward sear" is that you're doing the "final" cook slowly at a low temp, so it's easier to be sure you're not going to overshoot and overcook the meat. The HUGE disadvantage is that it takes FOREVER for a Big Green Egg to cool down, whereas it's pretty darn fast to crank it up. That's the reason practically everyone who's cooking thick steaks uses reverse sear.Powak said:... I've done a few reverse sears with pork and always yield dry, tough meat.
I used to do forward sear (they called it "T-Rex," years ago, from the "handle" of the guy who made that technique popular), and it works like a charm. If you feel safer doing that, no problem. Go for it! Just be aware that it will take a long time for the Egg to truly get down to low-and-slow temps after a hot sear.
Possible reasons for a reverse sear to turn out dry and tough, that are FIXABLE include:- Taking the internal temp too high before the sear. Trial and error can fix this. If it was dry and tough, shoot for a lower temp next time. The Thermapen is your friend!
- Taking too long to sear. At 650°-700°, it should only take a minute a side to sear. That's NOT going to raise the internal temp appreciably at all.
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Doin the good ole reverse sear. I'm going to pill the pork at 140, crank to 700 and searTheophan said:
The ONLY advantage to a "forward sear" is that you're doing the "final" cook slowly at a low temp, so it's easier to be sure you're not going to overshoot and overcook the meat. The HUGE disadvantage is that it takes FOREVER for a Big Green Egg to cool down, whereas it's pretty darn fast to crank it up. That's the reason practically everyone who's cooking thick steaks uses reverse sear.Powak said:... I've done a few reverse sears with pork and always yield dry, tough meat.
I used to do forward sear (they called it "T-Rex," years ago, from the "handle" of the guy who made that technique popular), and it works like a charm. If you feel safer doing that, no problem. Go for it! Just be aware that it will take a long time for the Egg to truly get down to low-and-slow temps after a hot sear.
Possible reasons for a reverse sear to turn out dry and tough, that are FIXABLE include:- Taking the internal temp too high before the sear. Trial and error can fix this. If it was dry and tough, shoot for a lower temp next time. The Thermapen is your friend!
- Taking too long to sear. At 650°-700°, it should only take a minute a side to sear. That's NOT going to raise the internal temp appreciably at all.
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Can't you sear first then drop in the plate setter? Doesn't the temp drop when putting on cold plate?
I would sear at 600 then drop in plate setter and chop with meat probe.Cooking on a LBGE and MM down in Miami, FL. -
That's what I want to try. I'm going to do that next time. I would think dropping the plate setter in would drastically lower the temps .HurricaneEddie1 said:Can't you sear first then drop in the plate setter? Doesn't the temp drop when putting on cold plate?
I would sear at 600 then drop in plate setter and chop with meat probe. -
It drops, but not to low-and-slow temps! That a whole lotta ceramic that's at 600°, and it's still going to be RADIATING all of that heat energy right at that steak for a long time. It's been a long time since I did a forward sear, but I think even putting in the plate setter it was still over 350° 20 minutes later. I think I usually just went ahead anyway even though it wasn't as cool as I really wanted it. I've done it many times both ways and I MUCH prefer reverse sear!HurricaneEddie1 said:Can't you sear first then drop in the plate setter? Doesn't the temp drop when putting on cold plate?... -
Try putting it in a good brine the night before and then reverse searing.OKC area XL - Medium Eggs
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You will get more of the egg flavor if you do a low and slow first and then crush it with a sear. Reverse sear
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