Originally Posted by Pablo:
Can see some serious bark on that one Buehler, looks tasty.
I knocked out a good one. I normally make my own rub and stick it on the smoker. But I was super lazy so I gave it a thin layer of BBQ sauce and used a premade rub from Rec Tec (screamin pig - it’s decent) and threw it on the rectec.
I wasn’t expecting a ton but it was freaking good. Moisture was there, bark was good. Flavor made it through. I was happy. [Reply]
Fuck fancy plating or taking nice looking shots. I had a toddler yelling at me about his unicorn mac n cheese.
Turned out damn good though. Perfect cook for me at 133 with reverse sear in cast iron at 2 minutes a side. Threw some jumbo shrimp on the grill too. Broccoli spears for a side (thank you Green Giant).
My local gas, convenience store makes freshly made pizza's to go. they will cook them in a brick oven or you can take and bake. I had been told about them but it's my first time.
They whipped this up with a hand tossed dough, white cream base with baby spinach, layer of fresh mozzarella, salami, and pickled sweet peppers followed with some white cheese chards. All for $4.95
I had them cut it in Sutara's squares so I could eat the corners on the way home but the box he put it in was sealed tighter than a USPS piorority mail box, so no cheating
The crust was barely burnt with the bottom having both a crunch and a chew, Flavors blended perfectly and 3 hours later it was still great cold.
Originally Posted by lewdog:
Fuck fancy plating or taking nice looking shots. I had a toddler yelling at me about his unicorn mac n cheese.
Turned out damn good though. Perfect cook for me at 133 with reverse sear in cast iron at 2 minutes a side. Threw some jumbo shrimp on the grill too. Broccoli spears for a side (thank you Green Giant).
That looks good and the steak is cooked perfectly for my tastes. [Reply]
Originally Posted by srvy:
That looks good and the steak is cooked perfectly for my tastes.
What's great about Sous Vide is once I know the temperature and how it cooks the steak, I can cook it perfectly every time. Also, the cooking is perfectly even so every bite has the same great texture.
Tonight I think I found my temperature for that thickness/cut of steak. [Reply]
Originally Posted by cdcox:
The sugar helps with blending the flavors. I don't put enough in to make it taste sweet.
Sweet cuts the heat [so you can put more heat in :-)] it also delays the 'hit' of the heat a bit, like until after you've had a couple spoonfuls already. Same reason your hotter BBQ sauces are a little sweeter. Peanut butter, really it isn't a 'must' but if you use the natural stuff, it provides more body and a little more umami. . . . Think of it analogous to stock or marrow/collagen. Thickens and smoothes instead of a beefy/beany stew. And flavor-wise it just enhances the beans, because duh it is one. Naturally, if you use regular Jif or Peter Pan, cut back on the sugar a bit.
A couple tablespoons of each for a 2-quart batch is more than enough. though up to a 1/4-1/3 cup of peanut butter won't hurt anything. [Reply]
Looks great, I can't tell what cut that is but it's probably the strip side of the Porterhouse.
I don't eat $40 steaks very often but when I do, I go all in,
I dry brine, cold smoke (thinking about using a smoke maze and starting it in 3 places), Sous Vide to (<125), then almost throw it directly on a fire, slather with butter and crack some salt.
I started doing this after watching several video's where butts and briskets were smoked for a few hours then put into the dunk for 12+ hours. These guys used a torch to sear but on smaller pieces, a Habachi grill or the starter does the job too.
Originally Posted by lewdog:
What's great about Sous Vide is once I know the temperature and how it cooks the steak, I can cook it perfectly every time. Also, the cooking is perfectly even so every bite has the same great texture.
Tonight I think I found my temperature for that thickness/cut of steak.