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| General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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Ed did one at Christmas. Basically, you lay it in a roasting pan with fat
side up and cook about 15 minutes per pound at about 350F. However, it's best to use a meat thermometer especially if you want it rare or medium rare. Ours finished fast. We followed a recipe in found at epicurious.com. Rubbed it with thyme before roasting, and used pan drippings to prepare an herb/wine/shallot sauce. It was excellent. Ed "Doug Weller" wrote in message ... We've got a 1.22 kg ribeye roast, how do people recommend we cook it? Thanks. Doug |
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In message , Jag Man
writes Ed did one at Christmas. Basically, you lay it in a roasting pan with fat side up and cook about 15 minutes per pound at about 350F. However, it's best to use a meat thermometer especially if you want it rare or medium rare. Ours finished fast. I asked for a "simple meat thermometer" for Christmas, my nearest and dearest overrode this and bought me a fancy one. It is in two parts, a calculator type body with display, and a probe with a shielded lead which plugs into the calculator bit. The calculator bit has magnets on the back so sticks to the oven door which can be closed on the lead. I wasn't sure how useful this all singing all dancing thing would be. Christmas day lunch was roast beef so I had to try it out. I programmed the thing to beep when the centre of the beef reached 47C ( I like it very rare) and always rest it for 30 minutes before carving. This is what the instruction book indicated as the temperature needed. Not yet trusting the gadget I worked out when I was going to remove the beef regardless of what the thermometer said! It was fascinating watching the temperature slowly increase and surprise, surprise it starting beeping at just the time I'd intended to remove it anyway. I was instantly converted to loving the thing :-) I'm now going to use it every time I roast meat and not bother with the weight calculation, but it will really come into it's own during the BBQ season. I always find it tricky to get a leg of lamb, or rib of beef, just right when using the BBQ because the BBQ temperature goes up and down like a whore's knickers ;-) -- Malcolm |
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" wrote in
: On Fri, 2 Jan 2004 09:42:18 +0000, Malcolm Loades wrote: In message , Jag Man writes Ed did one at Christmas. Basically, you lay it in a roasting pan with fat side up and cook about 15 minutes per pound at about 350F. However, it's best to use a meat thermometer especially if you want it rare or medium rare. Ours finished fast. I asked for a "simple meat thermometer" for Christmas, my nearest and dearest overrode this and bought me a fancy one. It is in two parts, a calculator type body with display, and a probe with a shielded lead which plugs into the calculator bit. The calculator bit has magnets on the back so sticks to the oven door which can be closed on the lead. I wasn't sure how useful this all singing all dancing thing would be. Christmas day lunch was roast beef so I had to try it out. I programmed the thing to beep when the centre of the beef reached 47C ( I like it very rare) and always rest it for 30 minutes before carving. This is what the instruction book indicated as the temperature needed. Not yet trusting the gadget I worked out when I was going to remove the beef regardless of what the thermometer said! It was fascinating watching the temperature slowly increase and surprise, surprise it starting beeping at just the time I'd intended to remove it anyway. I was instantly converted to loving the thing :-) I'm now going to use it every time I roast meat and not bother with the weight calculation, but it will really come into it's own during the BBQ season. I always find it tricky to get a leg of lamb, or rib of beef, just right when using the BBQ because the BBQ temperature goes up and down like a whore's knickers ;-) What kind was it? I buy my own presents, and I usually start buying them sometime in January. That sounds like something I'd want. Not being sure which one of those types of meat thermometers are good or not, I thought since you had already had good results with yours that maybe you'd let us know where she got it from and all. -- candeh A caution on the digital meat thermometer. Most of these thermometers cannot exceed 392F in temperature (the wires inside the braided shield shorts out when the insulation on them melts). This limits their usefulness during BBQ Season, as a good BBQ can get upwards of 700F or more. So check out the specs if you have one already. Or shop around for a model that will exceed the 392F limit. http://www.partshelf.com/tayod14digov.html This site at least offers additional probes for sale. -- And the beet goes on! (or under) -me just a while ago |
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In message ,
" writes On Fri, 2 Jan 2004 09:42:18 +0000, Malcolm Loades wrote: I asked for a "simple meat thermometer" for Christmas, my nearest and dearest overrode this and bought me a fancy one. What kind was it? I buy my own presents, and I usually start buying them sometime in January. That sounds like something I'd want. Not being sure which one of those types of meat thermometers are good or not, I thought since you had already had good results with yours that maybe you'd let us know where she got it from and all. http://tinyurl.com/2jov4 -- Malcolm |
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On 02/01/2004 at 16:53:58, Malcolm Loades typed:
In message , " writes On Fri, 2 Jan 2004 09:42:18 +0000, Malcolm Loades wrote: I asked for a "simple meat thermometer" for Christmas, my nearest and dearest overrode this and bought me a fancy one. What kind was it? I buy my own presents, and I usually start buying them sometime in January. That sounds like something I'd want. Not being sure which one of those types of meat thermometers are good or not, I thought since you had already had good results with yours that maybe you'd let us know where she got it from and all. http://tinyurl.com/2jov4 There are also a couple of alternatives he http://www.legendcookshop.co.uk/uk2shop-32.htm -- Abso [at] ukrm [dot] net - Ignore header email address BSA DBD34GS Gold Star "This post will only cause weight loss when used as part of a calorie controlled diet." |
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In rec.food.cooking hahabogus wrote:
A caution on the digital meat thermometer. Most of these thermometers cannot exceed 392F in temperature (the wires inside the braided shield shorts out when the insulation on them melts). It is not the wires, but rather, the limit of the thermistor. This limits their usefulness during BBQ Season, as a good BBQ can get upwards of 700F or more. So check out the specs if you have one already. Or shop around for a model that will exceed the 392F limit. Barbecue is low temperature indirect cooking. You do not need a thermometer for grilling, which is what you are talking about. -- ....I'm an air-conditioned gypsy... - The Who |
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