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I use this primarily for brisket cooks.
I use this primarily for brisket cooks.
Try Ruby over Kayne, it's less expensive(barely) than the waygu, and I doubt you can tell the difference. Better steak.
RE: at home waygu. We can get that or akaushi here in Lex at Cooper Brothers. So I'm assuming you can also get it somewhere in Nashville. The savory factor almost becomes too much on those fattier cuts like ribeye. Perfect on a strip or filet.
Anyway, if it was me I'd plop the steaks in the sous vide (anova) for MR then run the egg up to max and lower the grate right over the flames for a 1 minute hard sear on both sides. If you don't have that option try the reverse sear method.
Kenji and Adam Savage will show you how to cook a steak. This would have been much better without Adam Savage.
They sous vide some steaks and put the sear on them with different methods to see which is the best. The best was using the chimney method I described earlier in this thread. You can only do one at a time that way though.
Depends on how hot your lump burns. Can be up to 1400°F. The grill is on top of the chimney, how far from the coals depends on how much you put in the chimney.
So it was. Do you still do em up like that? Last ones I did I used that cast iron grill thing my sil bought me. I didn't care for it the one time I used it on the stove, but let it sit over the chimney until it was extremely hot, smoking, then let a 1.5" ribeye sear for a minute, then turned it 45 degrees and let it go for another minute. Same on the other side. Excellent. I brushed each side with flaxseed oil and gave each side a healthy dose of s and p prior to cooking.Great video...The sous vide/chimney sear was talked about in the 2015 edition of this thread.https://kentucky.forums.rivals.com/...thread-2015-edition.92646/page-7#post-1738497
I've made dozens and dozens of different types of chili throughout the years and most are really good. I especially like cubed chuck or tri-tip for the meat. One recipe that is tried and true though is this one:Alright I'm making my first batch of chili this season any good ideas?
I'll never make the dough by hand again after using the food processor.
I've got the Peter Reinhart class from Craftsy loaded into my computer. I've watched it too many times. I use his stretch and fold method on my dough and let it sit in the fridge for at least a day before I use it. I've also got that serious eats link in my favorites.
I've never even tried one of those premixes. I read many hours worth of pizza on the webs and went straight for what the cool kids recommended.
I read on the internet that those trader joes mixes are awful.I've used the trader joes several times, very hard to manipulate.