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about 4-5 pounds. haven't got a clue what to do with it. rather not
use a crock pot / slow cooker, but the truth is I have no experience with this cut, or any 'roast' for that matter. there is a recipe floating on the net that starts with rubbing it with balsamic, among other things.... anyone have any pointers? (I'm a roast newbie) thanks, -dan |
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dan wrote:
> about 4-5 pounds. haven't got a clue what to do with it. rather not > use a crock pot / slow cooker, but the truth is I have no experience > with this cut, or any 'roast' for that matter. > > there is a recipe floating on the net that starts with rubbing it with > balsamic, among other things.... > > anyone have any pointers? > > (I'm a roast newbie) I've used a Bruce Aidells recipe to good effect, which someone has posted here. http://www.samcooks.com/ask/ask_meat1.htm The book it comes from, "The Complete Meat Cookbook", is quite good BTW. -- Reg |
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![]() "dan" wrote in message > about 4-5 pounds. haven't got a clue what to do with it. rather not > use a crock pot / slow cooker, but the truth is I have no experience > with this cut, or any 'roast' for that matter. > > there is a recipe floating on the net that starts with rubbing it with > balsamic, among other things.... > > anyone have any pointers? > > (I'm a roast newbie) > Dan, here's 2 that look interesting. MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.06 Title: STANDING RIB ROAST WITH HERBED CRUST Categories: Beef, Meats Yield: 6 To 8 serv. 1 Standing rib roast (7-8 lbs) -(about 3 or 4 ribs) 1/2 c Fresh thyme leaves; chopped -(reserve stems) 4 Garlic cloves; peeled and -cut into slivers 1 tb Freshly ground black pepper 1/2 ts Salt 1 c ;water 2 To 3 tablespoons flour -optional Preheat oven to 475 degrees F. Dry the roast thoroughly. Lightly score the fat, then rub the whole roast with the reserved thyme stems. Rub the face and underside of the roast with half of the garlic slivers. Rub the whole roast with the pepper and salt. Pierce the fat layer just enough to insert the remaining garlic slivers--do not pierce into the flesh. Pat and press the thyme leaves into the scored layer of fat. Place the roast bones down in a shallow roasting pan just large enough to hold it comfortably. Insert a meat thermometer in the top of the roast; make sure it is not touching bone. Roast for 15 minutes. Reduce oven temperature to 350 degrees and roast until done to your liking: 125-130 degrees for rare, 140-150 degrees for medium, and 160-165 degrees for well done. Count on cooking times approximately as follows: For rare, cooking time is 12-15 minutes per pound; medium, 15-18 per pound; well-done, 18-20 minutes per pound. Remove the roast from the oven and place it on a carving board. Let it stand, loosely covered with aluminum foil, for 15 minutes before carving. Meanwhile, skim all but a few tablespoons of fat from the juices in the roasting pan. Place the pan over medium heat; add 1/2 cup of the water and stir to deglaze the pan, scraping up any bits clinging to the bottom of the pan. Add the remaining water. This juice can be served with the roast. For a flour based gravy, stir in the optional flour until it browns before adding the 1/4 cup of water. To carve, place on a carving board or platter, and cut away the bones. Place the roast cut-side down on the board and carve into 1/2- to 3/4-inch-thick slices. Serves 6 to 8. Source: San Francisco Chronicle, 12/20/95. MMMMM MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.06 Title: MUSTARD-COATED RIB ROAST WITH HORSERADISH SAUCE Categories: Main dish, Meats Yield: 8 Servings 1 4-6 lb. Beef Rib Roast - (bone-in), fat cover - trimmed to 1/8-inch thick 1 1/2 tb Paprika 1 tb Crushed black peppercorns 1 tb Coase salt 1 tb Dried oregano, crumbled 1 tb Dried thyme, crumbled 2 ts Celery seeds 1 ts Cayenne pepper 2 tb Dijon mustard 2 tb Grated onion 2 Garlic cloves; pressed MMMMM---------------------HORSERADISH SAUCE-------------------------- 1/2 c Grated radishes 3 tb Prepared horseradish 2 tb Dijon mustard 1 ts Sugar 1/2 c Chilled whipping cream -- whipped to stiff peaks Salt and pepper Mix first 7 dry ingredients in a small bowl. Mix mustard, onion, and garlic in another small bowl. Rub mustard mixture over meat. Sprinkle the spice mixture over roast surface. Cover and refrigerate for 2 hours before cooking. Or, if time allows, for a "cured" flavor, let seasoned roast stand in refrigerator overnight before cooking. Place roast, fat side up, on a rack in a shallow roasting pan in a 325 degree F oven for 2 1/4 hours or 26-30 min./lb. Remove from oven when meat thermometer inserted in center, not touching bone or fat, registers 135 degrees F for med-rare or 150 degrees F for medium doneness. Let roast stand tented with foil for 15 min. before carving. Serve with Horseradish Sauce (recipe below). Serves 8 to 12. Horseradish Sauce: Mix grated radishes, horseradish, mustard and sugar in a small bowl. Just before serving, pour radish mixture over whipped cream and fold together gently. Serve with sliced beef roast. Makes 2 cups. * COOKFDN brings you this recipe with permission from: * Texas Beef Council -- http://www.txbeef.org MMMMM |
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On Oct 31, 4:53?pm, "Cshenk" > wrote:
> "dan" wrote in message > > about 4-5 pounds. haven't got a clue what to do with it. rather not > > use a crock pot / slow cooker, but the truth is I have no experience > > with this cut, or any 'roast' for that matter. > > > there is a recipe floating on the net that starts with rubbing it with > > balsamic, among other things.... > > > anyone have any pointers? > > > (I'm a roast newbie) > > Dan, here's 2 that look interesting. > > > Title: STANDING RIB ROAST WITH HERBED CRUST Um, cross rib roast is chuck. |
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On Oct 31, 10:38 am, dan > wrote:
> about 4-5 pounds. haven't got a clue what to do with it. rather not > use a crock pot / slow cooker, but the truth is I have no experience > with this cut, or any 'roast' for that matter. > > there is a recipe floating on the net that starts with rubbing it with > balsamic, among other things.... > > anyone have any pointers? > > (I'm a roast newbie) > > thanks, > -dan You've been given several suggestions/recipes on how to cook a "standing rib roast", which is clearly not the cut of roast you have. A cross rib roast best fits in a "pot roast" category and they are truly delicious if cooked properly. I have seen the recipe you refer to, and I think it would be very tasty. Otherwise, almost any recipe for pot roast would work with this cut. Wayne |
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Wayne...
do you mean this one? >>>'Ive used a Bruce Aidells recipe to good effect, which someone has posted here. http://www.samcooks.com/ask/ask_meat1.htm The book it comes from, "The Complete Meat Cookbook", is quite good BTW. |
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dan > wrote:
> about 4-5 pounds. haven't got a clue what to do with it. rather not > use a crock pot / slow cooker, but the truth is I have no experience > with this cut, or any 'roast' for that matter. Cross rib roast is "chuck", makes a very good pot roast. Sheldon |
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Dan, sorry. Apparently I misunderstood the cut you meant and gave the wrong
recipes. Oh well, I tried! The one you have is for long slow cooking for best effect. Normally in very little liquid as it makes it's own. While balsalmic vinegar sounds a little odd, it might work well as i often add a little vinegar to tenderize. If you do that, keep the vegetables you plan to add, to ones that work well with a little vinegar if you plan to eat them too. I also agree witht he person who said they have rotisseried a cut like that but watch the drip pan or r may overflow. I've done the rotisserie route but cut the 'pot roast' down to more like thick steaks, marinaded in a vinegar based way and put them in the basket. I like them long cooked at a lower temp setting (say 250). Here's something else I've done with that cut. While not the 'recommended cut for this' we happen to like it. Got a dehydrator? We make our own semi-dry jerky (stored in the fridge). If it's frozen, patly thaw to make it easier to cut. If it's not frozen, it's easier to cut if you partly freeze it first. Spice/marinade the slices with vinegar and worstershire then we add a little hot sauce (cholula with the wooden ball is the one we like). For 'real jerky' this cut is too fatty but heck, we eat alot of it right out the dehyradtor as it's going and it'ssoft enough for my husband's bad teeth (grin). "dan" > wrote in message ups.com... > about 4-5 pounds. haven't got a clue what to do with it. rather not > use a crock pot / slow cooker, but the truth is I have no experience > with this cut, or any 'roast' for that matter. > > there is a recipe floating on the net that starts with rubbing it with > balsamic, among other things.... > > anyone have any pointers? > > (I'm a roast newbie) > > thanks, > -dan > |
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On Nov 1, 5:11 pm, "Cshenk" > wrote:
> Dan, sorry. Apparently I misunderstood the cut you meant and gave the wrong > recipes. Oh well, I tried! > > The one you have is for long slow cooking for best effect. Normally in very > little liquid as it makes it's own. > > While balsalmic vinegar sounds a little odd, it might work well as i often > add a little vinegar to tenderize. If you do that, keep the vegetables you > plan to add, to ones that work well with a little vinegar if you plan to eat > them too. > > I also agree witht he person who said they have rotisseried a cut like that > but watch the drip pan or r may overflow. I've done the rotisserie route > but cut the 'pot roast' down to more like thick steaks, marinaded in a > vinegar based way and put them in the basket. I like them long cooked at a > lower temp setting (say 250). > > Here's something else I've done with that cut. While not the 'recommended > cut for this' we happen to like it. Got a dehydrator? We make our own > semi-dry jerky (stored in the fridge). If it's frozen, patly thaw to make > it easier to cut. If it's not frozen, it's easier to cut if you partly > freeze it first. Spice/marinade the slices with vinegar and worstershire > then we add a little hot sauce (cholula with the wooden ball is the one we > like). For 'real jerky' this cut is too fatty but heck, we eat alot of it > right out the dehyradtor as it's going and it'ssoft enough for my husband's > bad teeth (grin). > > "dan" > wrote in message > > ups.com... > > > > > about 4-5 pounds. haven't got a clue what to do with it. rather not > > use a crock pot / slow cooker, but the truth is I have no experience > > with this cut, or any 'roast' for that matter. > > > there is a recipe floating on the net that starts with rubbing it with > > balsamic, among other things.... > > > anyone have any pointers? > > > (I'm a roast newbie) > > > thanks, > > -dan- Hide quoted text - > > - Show quoted text - a rib roast is one of the best roasts you can buy, sometimes called a prime rib/standing rib roast or delmonaco roast good rule of thumb with most beef roasts ..is 20 mins per lb at 350 if using a thermometer 135 for rare, 149-145 for medium rare remember to let it "set" for at least ten minutes before you carve it (the internal temp will rise 5-10 degrees while setting) personall, i just salt/pepper/garlic and roast uncovered |
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On Nov 1, 5:11 pm, "Cshenk" > wrote:
> Dan, sorry. Apparently I misunderstood the cut you meant and gave the wrong > recipes. Oh well, I tried! > > The one you have is for long slow cooking for best effect. Normally in very > little liquid as it makes it's own. > > While balsalmic vinegar sounds a little odd, it might work well as i often > add a little vinegar to tenderize. If you do that, keep the vegetables you > plan to add, to ones that work well with a little vinegar if you plan to eat > them too. > > I also agree witht he person who said they have rotisseried a cut like that > but watch the drip pan or r may overflow. I've done the rotisserie route > but cut the 'pot roast' down to more like thick steaks, marinaded in a > vinegar based way and put them in the basket. I like them long cooked at a > lower temp setting (say 250). > > Here's something else I've done with that cut. While not the 'recommended > cut for this' we happen to like it. Got a dehydrator? We make our own > semi-dry jerky (stored in the fridge). If it's frozen, patly thaw to make > it easier to cut. If it's not frozen, it's easier to cut if you partly > freeze it first. Spice/marinade the slices with vinegar and worstershire > then we add a little hot sauce (cholula with the wooden ball is the one we > like). For 'real jerky' this cut is too fatty but heck, we eat alot of it > right out the dehyradtor as it's going and it'ssoft enough for my husband's > bad teeth (grin). > > "dan" > wrote in message > > ups.com... > > > > > about 4-5 pounds. haven't got a clue what to do with it. rather not > > use a crock pot / slow cooker, but the truth is I have no experience > > with this cut, or any 'roast' for that matter. > > > there is a recipe floating on the net that starts with rubbing it with > > balsamic, among other things.... > > > anyone have any pointers? > > > (I'm a roast newbie) > > > thanks, > > -dan- Hide quoted text - > > - Show quoted text - oops,,i guess after reading the other posts, i got my roasts mixed, different meat terminology in different regions. if its a cross cut, roast past the 7th rib,,then you are in the chuck, which also can be a very good roast. |
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