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    Top Loin Roast with Garlic-Herb Butter


    Source of Recipe


    Meg Suzuki from Cooks Illustrated Nov-Dec '03

    List of Ingredients




    5.5 lb Top Loin Roast beef
    3 T Olive Oil
    4 t Kosher Salt
    1 T black pepper ground
    4 T unsalted butter, softened
    1 T sage, fresh, chopped
    1 T parsley, fresh, chopped
    1.5 t thyme, fresh, chopped
    1 garlic, minced
    1 ds Salt to taste
    1 ds Black pepper, ground, to
    - taste

    Recipe



    Line baking sheet with paper towels and set flat wire rack over
    baking sheet. Pat roast dry with paper towels, then set roast on wire
    rack. Refrigerate, uncovered on lowest shelf for 1 to 3 days

    Adjust oven rack to lower middle position, heat oven to 250°. Remove
    roast from refrigerator; using sharp paring knife, trim off all fat and
    silver skin from the roast and shave off hard, dried exterior surfaces.
    Rub roast with 2 tablespoons olive oil; let roast stand at room
    temperature for 1 hour

    Combine salt and pepper in small bowl; season all surface of roast
    with salt-pepper mixture, pressing to make salt and pepper adhere. Heat
    remaining 1 tablespoon of olive oil in 12 inch heavy bottomed ovenproof
    skillet over medium high heat until smoking; set roast in skillet fat
    trimmed side down, and cook until well browned, about 3 minutes. Using
    tongs, to turn roast, turn on all sides, 2-3 minutes on each side.
    Turn roast fat trimmed side up, set skillet in oven and roast until
    instant read thermometer inserted into center registers 1120-125°,
    40-50 minutes. Using potholders to handle skillet, transfer roast to
    cutting board, loosely tent roast with foil and let rest 20 minutes.

    While meat roasts, stir together butter, sage, parsley, thyme, garlic
    salt and pepper to taste; set aside until needed. After roast has
    rested spread butter evenly over surface of roast. with sharp carving
    knife, cut into 1/4 inch thick slices and serve.

    Cooking Tip: Some upscale butchers and restaurants age their beef,
    unwrapped and refrigerated (carefully monitored), for as long as several
    weeks. This process called dry aging dramatically improves the meat's
    flavor and texture. Of course using a home refrigerator to age the roast
    for weeks is out of the question. The author tried as few as one day and as
    many as three. As the roast aged the flavor of the beef changed from
    metallic and bloody to mellow, buttery, and nutty. The three day roasts
    had the best flavor but aging for even one day made a difference.

    Cooking Tip: The author found three simple steps to making a great roast:
    aging, searing on top of the stove and roasting in a hot skillet at low
    temperature.

    Cooking Tip: With the help of a digital thermometer, the recipe was
    virtually foolproof.

 

 

 


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