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01-01-2018 01:42 PM
I would never complain about a meal that has been cooked for me. I am a Southern girl and I truly appreciate someone cooking for me I would say great and thank you for your kindness. Bring the meat home and make a chili or stew. Enjoy the fellowship. I also have a 5 lb prime rib I am making today, Kansas City Steak. I am using the meat thermometer and making potatoes, asparagras and Bernaise Sauce. Wish me luck.
01-01-2018 07:47 PM
01-01-2018 09:09 PM
@fourpaws56 wrote:help! I am making a prime rib roast. It is 10.7 lbs. I googled it and it said fifteen minutes per lb,okay, got it, but I could use some helpful tips from those who know more than I do ..TIA Merry Christmas!
This is how we do our prime rib and it turns out delicious every time. You may want to try it the next time you make a rib roast for your family. We have friends who own a restaurant and they prepare their large roasts in this manner. You can cut their meat with a fork and it is so tender.
Prime Rib Roast: The Closed-Oven Method
This technique produces a perfectly medium-rare prime rib with a gorgeous brown crust on the outside. It works best for smaller prime ribs of between 4 and 8 pounds. For a bone-in prime rib, figure two servings per rib, while a boneless roast will yield two servings per pound.
The key to this method is knowing the exact weight of your prime rib. Just copy it off the label, write it on a Post-it and stick it on your fridge. I say this because I know how easy it is to just tear off the butcher paper and throw it away, and you really don't want to have to go digging through the trash to find the label.
Also, you don't actually need a meat thermometer with this technique, although if you're paranoid you can certainly use one anyway.
You'll also notice that there's no resting time with this recipe, which might come as a surprise if you're used to resting your meat after roasting it. And if you're used to doing that, that's good. But with this recipe it's not necessary because the meat is basically resting as it sits in the oven.
Preparation
Calculation
01-03-2018 10:11 AM
@Snicks1 wrote:
I love a good prime rib dinner. I bought one at my local butcher's for Christmas Eve dinner, it was a little over 7 lbs. with bone. I had the butcher cut the bone off and tie it back on (for ease of slicing), then made my own rub. It was delicious and the 6 adults and one 8 year old child enjoyed it very much. I made a big salad, baked potatoes and hot rolls to go along with it. My guests brought dessert so we were all set.
@Snicks1 that sounds like such a nice dinner.
01-07-2018 10:44 AM
Dear Tribefan: Used your directions last night. Thank you so much. It was the best I've ever done in years. Kept it flavorful and tender and at just the proper "doneness" for such an expensive cut of meat.
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