The time has come to cook our beautifully aged prime rib roast! Unwrap the cheese cloth and dispose.
Heeelllloooo! Since there was so much interest in this technique, I decided to give you a sneak peek! This is after one week dry aging in the beer fridge. As you can see, the dark spots are drying out sealing the meat and the enzymes in the meat are doing their good work tenderizing the roast. I re-wrapped in fresh cheese cloth, now back to the fridge until cooking day on Christmas eve!
Hello again friends. Its hard to believe I haven't made a post for a year. Ok maybe its not hard. Time is just flying by so fast. Make sure you stop and smell the roses.
I thought I had a demo on dry aging a prime rib (or any other roast at least 4 pounds in weight) but I guess not. I see the salt crust cooking techniche but not the aging. So here we go!
Step one, buy an amazing hunk of beef! This is a gorgeous prime rib I bought from the Blue Max boys on Canyon. It is the "small end" so the first bone is only about 4 inches long. This is the more tender end of the roast. This is a 5-bone roast weighing in at 12.6#. It will loose a little weight in the aging process due to loss of moisture.
Hello my succulent roast beast! You have to request the small end from the butcher. I also had them "cut and tie" which means the bones are cut off then tied back on again (see the strings?)
I also requested he leave a bit more of the fat cap on the roast. Normally a bit more of the fat would be removed but for the drying process, this is best to leave mostly intact.