RECIPE: REC: Slow Roasted Beef. Excellent results using a cheap cut of beef (eye of round roast)!

RECIPE:

michael-in-phoenix

Well-known member
From CI:

Slow-Roasted Beef

Serves 6 to 8

For an inexpensive slow-roasted beef recipe, we transformed a bargain cut into a tender, juicy roast by salting the meat a full 24 hours before roasting and then cooking it at a very low temperature, which allowed the meat's enzymes to act as natural tenderizers, breaking down its tough connective tissue. We don't recommend cooking this roast past medium. Open the oven door as little as possible and remove the roast from the oven while taking its temperature. If the roast has not reached the desired temperature in the time specified in step 3, heat the oven to 225 degrees for 5 minutes, shut it off, and continue to cook the roast to the desired temperature. For a smaller (2 1/2- to 3 1/2-pound) roast, reduce the amount of kosher salt to 3 teaspoons (1 1/2 teaspoons table salt) and black pepper to 1 1/2 teaspoons. For a 4 1/2- to 6-pound roast, cut in half crosswise before cooking to create 2 smaller roasts. Slice the roast as thinly as possible and serve with Horseradish Cream Sauce.

Ingredients

1 boneless eye-round roast (3 ½ to 4 ½ pounds) (see note)

4 teaspoons kosher salt or 2 teaspoons table salt

2 teaspoons vegetable oil plus 1 tablespoon

2 teaspoons ground black pepper

Instructions

1. Sprinkle all sides of roast evenly with salt. Wrap with plastic wrap and refrigerate 18 to 24 hours.

2. Adjust oven rack to middle position and heat oven to 225 degrees. Pat roast dry with paper towels; rub with 2 teaspoons oil and sprinkle all sides evenly with pepper. Heat remaining tablespoon oil in 12-inch skillet over medium-high heat until starting to smoke. Sear roast until browned on all sides, 3 to 4 minutes per side. Transfer roast to wire rack set in rimmed baking sheet. Roast until meat-probe thermometer or instant-read thermometer inserted into center of roast registers 115 degrees for medium-rare, 1 1/4 to 1 3/4 hours, or 125 degrees for medium, 1 3/4 to 2 1/4 hours.

3. Turn oven off; leave roast in oven, without opening door, until meat-probe thermometer or instant-read thermometer inserted into center of roast registers 130 degrees for medium-rare or 140 degrees for medium, 30 to 50 minutes longer. Transfer roast to carving board and let rest 15 minutes. Slice meat crosswise as thinly as possible and serve.

 
The most wonderful part of slow-roasting a big cheap piece of meat...

is the wonderful pan gravy that goes on the mashed potatoes.

 
glad to know you liked it...

because I've had this in my mental files to try for a long time, but wasn't quite convinced

 
It certainly works with cheap pork (think pulled pork from pork shoulder) but that is a very fat

and collagenous piece. Eye of round is very lean. BUT I make a crockpot beef using rump (with hot 'n sweet peppers) that makes a delicious "tender" "roast" that is good for sandwiches.
And thinking about a very delicious pork dish (again) of pork loin that is braised, the low and slow does work with a lean cut.
May give the beef a chance. ;o)

 
So true. Today I am making a pot roast out of a big cheap piece of meat

I will brown it then add wine, broth, veggies and put the lid on the pot on top of the stove and cook it for about 6 hours. It will fall apart and the gravy will be wonderful. A DH favorite.

 
What's not to love...

We had a total 50's throwback dinner tonight:

I made Sloppy Donald's (we retired Joe) on Toasted Onion Buns.
Grandma's green beans
My roasted vegetable mélange
All served with Sweet Tea and Fritos.

The roasted veg thing is so amazing. I get my large roasting pan out, fill it with quartered Roma tomatoes, slices of zucchini and summer squash, large chunks of eggplant, chunks of red and green bell pepper, and chunks of red onions. Then I cover it with rosemary leaves, seasoned salt, chopped garlic, a blanket of freshly ground pepper, and a dousing of olive oil. Put it under the broiler, stir it up a few times, and wow, it just doesn't get any better.

Love the leftovers and the final product ends up as a soup later in the week.

 
This particular method yielded little to no drippings. The juices were truly in the roast.

The downside of a very, very lean eye of round.

Michael

 
I also have a big, boneless chuck roast in the fridge. Today it will be slow-braised...

...with root vegetables and mushrooms and the liquid will become the base for a bean and barley soup. The meat will be reserved for sandwiches or french dips.

So good...

 
This sounds very nice. Will try soon because beef eye round roasts have been on sale here. . .

for fairly cheap: 2.99/lb. Gotta do it soon!

 
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