17 Comments
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ivalley's avatar

That looks SO GOOD. Ribeye is by far my favorite cut, too. Amazing work, sir.

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John Birmingham's avatar

Cheers mate. It was pretty amazing.

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Elana Mitchell's avatar

I realise you'll never cook steak any other way for the rest of your life now, but for those without an Egg who are "crap" at cooking steaks Heston Blumenthal's method is fool proof and backed by SCIENCE:

https://youtu.be/nhOV89EQtJs

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Greybeard's avatar

You interest me strangely Sir.

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PeterH's avatar

Lovely! My fave ribeye rub is salt, cumin, allspice and black pepper. Perfect for the reverse sear.

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Damo's avatar

OMG. I quit cooking on coals some time ago because it was too much of a hassle, but looking at that picture ...

Kosher salt is basically salt without additives, particularly no iodine. So if one isn't a woman of child-bearing age, go for it.

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Pirategalaxy's avatar

There are plenty of non iodised salts and kosher is one of them. What makes it special is the consistent large flake size. This reduces the amount of contact with the meat during the koshering process that removes blood from meat. It is used in recipes as it is highly consistent across brands which is important if you are using spoon measurements rather than weight.

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John Birmingham's avatar

Thanks! I had been wondering why everyone recommended it

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insomniac's avatar

What are the merits of blowing off ms insomniac and associated children and their children with a grumpy outburst just so I can buy a cattleman’s cutlet for dinner (for one)?

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John Birmingham's avatar

I dont see any possible downsides.

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Drew Mayo's avatar

This fees very much like sous-vide, is that the gist of it?

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John Birmingham's avatar

I guess the principle is the same. Slow cooked for a long time to break down the muscle fibres, then finished fast and hot with a sear

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Dave W's avatar

Does the salt being kosher make any difference? Does this mean that it has sensibly steered clear of dairy?

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John Birmingham's avatar

Honestly, I couldn't tell you. But it's widely recommended as the best salt for barbecue because it's... wait for it...less salty.

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insomniac's avatar

I find that Himalayan pink salt is less salty than your basic sodium chloride.

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Jj's avatar

For a non-barbecue blog I`m getting a strong barbecue-blog vibe

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