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I have 4 different recipes in my cookbook depending on where the cut is taken from, the only thing common between them is that you need to make sure to ask the butcher to remove the chine bone or you won't be able to cut it.
"Greatness is not an act... but a habit.Greatness is not an act... but a habit." -Greg Jennings
Just serve plenty of liquor before dinner and everything will be fine.
I can't run no more
With that lawless crowd
While the killers in high places
Say their prayers out loud
But they've summoned, they've summoned up
A thundercloud
They're going to hear from me - Leonard Cohen
Sorry, I have never cooked Prime Rib, although I sure do like to eat it!
My dad does Prime Rib every year, though, and from what I remember he swears by what he calls the Martha Stewart method. This involves baking at lower heat for most of the time, but broiling for a very short time to give the meat a good crust.
Good tips from Martha Stewart's website:
"To ensure even cooking, roast must first be left at room temperature for about two hours before being placed in the oven. Do not use a nonstick pan for this recipe; it will yield fewer cooked-on bits of flavorful juices."
In this write-up, she starts by cooking for 20 minutes at 450 and then lowers the heat to 325 for the remainder of the time, using a meat thermometer to measure if it's done rather than a set time. It calls for baking rather than broiling in that first 20 minutes.
From reading this recipe, and from seeing my dad do it, it's not too tough to do: basically you put on a pretty heavy crust of seasoning on the outside of the roast, and bake it. Not too bad.
Generally speaking, you cook the whole roast to medium rare or so, and then if anyone perfers their serving more well done than that, you put individual portions in a frying pan with some au jus gravy and cook to desired doneness. They used to do that at the restaurant where I worked, and my dad has done that too.
From another article:
"NOTE: If you ignore every other bit of advice I've given, please pay attention to this. For a perfectly cooked rib roast, invest in a good meat thermometer. Internal temperature, not time, is the best test for doneness and you don't want to blow this meal!"
slow cook that puppy so it's incredibly tender. Takes a while but I think my pops cooks it on 250
Be sure to make some mean adjus and it'll be awesome
TERD Buckley over Troy Vincent, Robert Ferguson over Chris Chambers, Kevn King instead of TJ Watt, and now, RICH GANNON, over JIMMY JIMMY JIMMY LEONARD. Thank you FLOWER
not to jinx you, but I had my first and only bad experience with prime rib a month ago. Probably it is my own fault, I ordered it at 4PM like a senior citizen out on a Saturday night.
I asked for rare. That piece of meat could not have been dead for more than half an hour. I mean, it was not hot, it was oozing with warm blood. Disgusting!
I sent it back to be reheated. They immediately came back with a new cut, which made me wonder what happened to the piece I just took a bite out of. Perhaps it went to the next senior citizen through the door.
The next piece was cooked to pass health inspection standards, but it was tough and not at all juicy. I was too big of a pussy to raise a fuss, I just wanted my freedom.
The horror! Prime rib exists in my mind as something sacred, perhaps the second greatest pleasure in life.
I think idle's suggesting of braizing the meat at high temperature to get a crust, and then cooking slowly makes great sense. The crust will seal-in the juices. I'm getting hungry.
007 don't despair! Prime Rib is the easiest thing in the world to cook. Really. My wife has made this multiple times for 50-75 people for our church dinners. (By popular vote, we NEVER serve spaghetti or anything similar....)
Here is the recipe she uses. follow the directions exactly and your dinner will be a hit.... Trust me.
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