SALT-ENCRUSTED PRIME RIB
Restaurants have nothing on this recipe. For a true meat lover, it's very easy and the results are beyond belief. -Roger Bowlds, Bakersfield, California
Provided by Taste of Home
Categories Dinner
Time 2h30m
Yield 10 servings.
Number Of Ingredients 6
Steps:
- Preheat oven to 450°. Line a shallow roasting pan with heavy-duty foil. Place 3 cups salt on foil, spreading evenly to form a 1/2-in. layer. , Brush roast with Worcestershire sauce; sprinkle with pepper and garlic powder. Place roast on layer of salt, fat side up. In a small bowl, mix water and remaining salt (mixture should be just moist enough to pack). Beginning at the base of the roast, press salt mixture onto the sides and top of roast., Roast 15 minutes. Reduce oven setting to 325°. Roast 2 to 2-1/4 hours or until a thermometer reaches 130° for medium-rare; 145° for medium. (Temperature of roast will continue to rise about 15° upon standing.) Let stand 20 minutes., Remove and discard salt crust; brush away any remaining salt. Carve roast into slices.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 325 calories, Fat 18g fat (7g saturated fat), Cholesterol 107mg cholesterol, Sodium 900mg sodium, Carbohydrate 2g carbohydrate (1g sugars, Fiber 0 fiber), Protein 37g protein.
PRIME RIB
Provided by Michael Symon : Food Network
Categories main-dish
Time 4h
Yield 6 servings
Number Of Ingredients 7
Steps:
- Liberally season the prime rib with the salt and some pepper and refrigerate overnight.
- An hour before cooking, remove the roast from the refrigerator to allow it to come to room temperature.
- Meanwhile, preheat the oven to 400 degrees F.
- Put the reserved ribs in a roasting pan bowed-side up (the ribs will be acting as the roasting rack). Scatter any fat and meat trimmings in the pan around the bones. Roast the bones and trimmings for about 30 minutes, or until the fat starts to render.
- Remove the pan from the oven, put the rosemary sprigs on top of the bones, then top with the prime rib. Put the smashed garlic in the bottom of the pan with the trimmings. Baste the beef with the fat drippings and return the pan to the oven.
- Cook for 30 minutes and then baste the roast again.
- Reduce the heat to 350 degrees F and cook until the meat is medium rare (an internal temperature of 125 degrees F to 130 degrees F), about 1 hour, 15 minutes, basting the roast every 30 minutes until it is done. Keep in mind that the roast will continue to cook while resting.
- Remove the roast from the oven and put it on a cutting board to rest, uncovered, for 20 minutes. Slice the prime rib to the desired thickness and garnish with the arugula and olive oil.
PRIME RIB FOR A CROWD
Every New Years I cook 4 6 - 8 rib roasts for family and friends. This is my recipe for cooking these roasts that always supply enough well done, medium, medium rare and rare meat to feed everyone their favorite.
Provided by Chabear01
Categories Roast Beef
Time 2h25m
Yield 1 half inch slice, 80 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 5
Steps:
- Have your butcher french and tie your roasts for you.
- Preset Oven to 500 degrees.
- Coarsly chop the garlic cloves, poke holes through the center of the roasts and fill with the garlic.
- Mix salt, granulated garlic and pepper. Use this mix to throughly rub and encase as much of the roast as you can with this mix.
- Put into large Roaster and cook in oven for 1 hour at 500 degrees. At the end of one hour cover the roasts and leave in oven for another hour.
- Remove roast from bones and slice and serve per each persons request for doneness. A dish of horseradish and sour cream, and one of pure horseradish for all the different taste buds.
- You can seperate the fat from the pan juices to make an aux juice or gravy and the fat and remaining bits in the roasting pan are always great for Yorkshire pudding.
- I always use the ribs for another meal of BBQ'ed ribs on another family and friends gathering shortly thereafter along with Cousin Caroline's Baked Beans -- another of my posted recipes.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 832.2, Fat 74.6, SaturatedFat 31.1, Cholesterol 165.6, Sodium 828.3, Carbohydrate 1.5, Fiber 0.3, Sugar 0.2, Protein 36.4
THE BEST PRIME RIB
For our Sunday roast, we went with a foolproof reverse sear method - cooking the roast low and slow then finishing with an incredibly high heat - to get a juicy, perfectly medium-rare roast from edge to edge. The low heat dries the surface which allows the high heat to crisp it up nicely. And a long cooking time with a low, gentle heat avoids the gray band of overcooked meat that usually happens when you sear first.
Provided by Food Network Kitchen
Categories main-dish
Time 10h
Yield 6 to 8 servings
Number Of Ingredients 4
Steps:
- Pat the skin of the roast completely dry and place on a cutting board, fat-side up. Use a paring knife to make small slits all over the fat, and then stud the meat with the garlic slices. Sprinkle all over with the salt and pepper, wrap tightly with plastic wrap and refrigerate for 4 hours and up to overnight.
- Preheat the oven to 250 degrees F. Unwrap the roast and place fat-side up on a rack set in a roasting pan.
- Roast the meat until an instant-read thermometer inserted into the center of the meat registers 120 degrees F, about 4 hours. Remove from the oven and let sit for 1 hour. The temperature will continue to rise another 10 to 14 degrees as it sits.
- Turn the oven to 500 degrees F. Place the roast back in the oven and bake until the fatty skin starts to crisp up and turn golden brown, 10 to 15 minutes. Let rest another 30 minutes before transferring to a cutting board for slicing.
CLASSIC PRIME RIB FOR A SMALL CROWD
This scaled-down version of the traditional holiday roast is incredibly easy to prepare. In addition to the beef, you need only red wine or stock, garlic, salt and pepper. Serve it for Sunday dinner alongside a pile of fluffy mashed potatoes and something green. If you're feeling ambitious, use the beef drippings to make Yorkshire pudding.
Provided by Mark Bittman
Categories dinner, easy, roasts, main course
Time 1h30m
Yield 6 servings or more
Number Of Ingredients 4
Steps:
- Bring the meat to room temperature by removing it from the refrigerator at least an hour before cooking, preferably two. (For a larger roast, make it three.) Preheat the oven to 450 degrees.
- Place the meat, bone side down, in a large roasting pan. Season it with salt and pepper. If you like garlic, peel the cloves and cut them into tiny slivers; use a boning or paring knife to poke small holes in the meat and insert the garlic into them.
- Place the roast in the oven and cook for 15 minutes, undisturbed. Turn the heat down to 350 degrees and continue to roast about 1 hour; check in several places with a meat thermometer. When no spot registers under 125 degrees (120 degrees if you like your meat really rare and your guests are of the same preference), the meat is rare; cook another 5 or 10 minutes if you like it more well done, then check again, but in no case should you let the temperature of the meat go above 155 degrees.
- Remove the meat from the oven. Pour off all but a few tablespoons of the fat, and place the roasting pan over a burner set to high. Add the liquid and cook, stirring and scraping up any brown bits, until it is reduced by half. Slice and serve the roast, splashing a little of the sauce on the meat platter and passing the rest at the table.
Nutrition Facts : @context http, Calories 1252, UnsaturatedFat 49 grams, Carbohydrate 2 grams, Fat 106 grams, Fiber 0 grams, Protein 62 grams, SaturatedFat 44 grams, Sodium 970 milligrams, Sugar 0 grams
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