Amazing Ribs Smoked Beef Roast

This recipe made the best Prime Rib I've ever had (made with a Costco Prime grade rib roast).

Ingredients Directions

  • 1 beef rib roast, with bones (they can be on or off)
  • 1/2 tsp Kosher salt per pound of meat
  • 1 tsp Mrs. O'Leary's Cow Crust per pound of meat

  1. 24 hours before cooking. Remove the rib bones and save them for the gravy.
  2. Trim off all the fat cap from the top. Go ahead and trim right down to the meat. Make sure to get the silverskin too, it can be chewy. Save any pieces that are more meat than fat for the gravy. Save the silverskin for the gravy too. Some of it melts into gelatin.
  3. Leave most of the fat on the side where the bones were because it is hard to remove and it's not very thick. But the fat cap has got to go.
  4. Dry brine 6 to 24 hours before cooking. Put it in the fridge. This is a method called dry brining. The salt is sucked into the meat, seasons it, and it messes with the protein structure to help retain moisture. There is a lot of meat to penetrate, so you can use the salt generously, but don't make a thick cake of it, and you will not need to rinse it off. It will all be sucked in. You should wrap it with plastic wrap just to keep other foods from coming in contact with meat juice.
  5. 1 hour before cooking. Make a spice paste with my recipe for Mrs. O'Leary's Cow Crust. The water releases the flavors in the herbs and spices and helps with browning and forming a crust. Let it sit for at least 1 hour before applying it to the meat so the herbs can reconstitute and release their goodness. Pour most of the paste on top of the roast. Spread it around all visible surfaces working it into the meat. Turn the roast over and pour the rest on the bottom and work it around. It does not penetrate the meat so you can do this any time up to the time you cook.
  6. Set up your grill or smoker for 2-zone cooking and preheat the indirect zone to 225°F. It is very important that you not cook hotter than 250°F or so.
  7. If you have a meat thermometer with a probe on a cable, and you should, insert it now so the tip is dead center in the thickest part of the meat. If you don't have a probe you can leave in the meat, you absolutely must have a good digital instant read meat thermometer and you should check it every 30 minutes at first, and more often as the cook progresses. You should also have a good oven thermometer that has a probe you can place near the meat in the grill/oven, but place it at least 2“ away so it is not in the cold air bubble surrounding cold meat.
  8. If you want a smoke flavor in the background add just a little bit of hardwood or fruitwood to the hot part of the cooker, about 2 to 4 ounces max right at the start of the cook. Don't overdo the smoke. A little bit is nice, but too much can ruin it. I cannot overemphasize this. This cut of meat does not benefit from a lot of smoke. Keep it in the background.
  9. When the temp in the deepest part of the interior reaches 115°F, remove the probe (it just gets in the way), remove any string if you used it, and place the roast over the hottest part of the grill. Remove the drip pan and bring it inside. Raise the lid and stand by your grill. Get the surface a deep dark brown by leaving it on the hot part for about 5 to 10 minutes. Roll it a quarter turn and repeat on all four sides. We leave the lid up because we no longer want to roast the interior. We are focusing the heat on the exterior now. During this process, the interior will rise another 5 to 10°F anyway. Check the temp again and take it off at 130°F to 135°F for medium rare.

Notes

This is basically a reverse sear using a smoker, can finish on a grill or under the broiler.

I'm generally skipping the process of smoking the gravy in the drip pan. Also the gravy can be made ahead of time just fine.


Original Recipe

recipes/amazing_ribs_smoked_beef_roast.txt · Last modified: 2021/06/19 14:32 (external edit)