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BEST Lower Cost Alternative to Prime Rib

Chuck eye is the BEST lower cost alternative to prime rib. It truly resembles prime rib in texture and flavor when prepared correctly.

If you don’t tell your guests, they may not detect the difference! Is it boneless prime rib? Who knows?!

Chuck eye is located at the very end of the chuck primal, right next to the rib primal. Primal Cut refers to the first piece of meat to be separated from the cow during the butchering process. That is why it is called “Primal Cut”.

Don’t confuse chuck eye with chuck cross rib roast, they are not the same cut. They both come from the chuck primal, which is why the names get confused, but they are different muscles with different behavior.

Chuck eye has a very similar delicious beefy flavor profile as the prime rib and good marbling. It is very juicy when cooked correctly and results in a beautiful roast presentation.

Considering that prime rib bones account for about 15 to 20% of the weight, the chuck eye has no bones (sorry Fido), and boneless Choice chuck eye costs about $7 less per pound – depending on the store, the chuck eye meat is about half price.

Chuck eye has slightly more connective tissue than prime rib, and it tightens as temperature rises. As a result, two things matter more than they do with ribeye or prime rib: precise temperature control and correct slicing.

Keeping the roast in a low-and-slow temperature range preserves tenderness, while a final hot sear or broiler blast triggers the Maillard reaction, creating proper browning and depth of flavor. And REST WELL before browning!!! Never, ever skip that part!

For serving, slice thinly across the grain with a very sharp carving knife to shorten muscle fibers and ensure a tender bite.

EQUIPMENT: roasting pan with rack, very sharp carving knife

Chuck Rye Roast

Recipe by Anna Stockel Cuisine: AmericanDifficulty: Easy
Servings

4

servings
Prep time

45

minutes
Cooking time

2

hours 

Ingredients

  • 4 lb chuck eye roast, intact fat cap

  • 3 tablespoons sea salt

  • 3 tablespoons freshly ground black pepper (medium-coarse grind)

  • 1 1/2 teaspoons garlic powder

  • 1 teaspoon onion powder

Directions

  • Pat roast COMPLETELY DRY.
  • Apply a generous amount of rub (salt, pepper, onion powder, and garlic powder) on all sides.*
  • Place roast fat cap up on a rack set over a shallow pan to allow air circulation. Let sit for 30 minutes while beef comes up to room temperature and develops a proper crust. The surface should look dry, not wet. If needed, lightly pat dry again before roasting.
  • Place oven rack in lower-middle position.
  • Preheat convection oven to 225°F or 250°F for a conventional oven.**
  • Roast until the internal temperature reaches 118°F, measured at the thickest part using a Thermapen. Expect approximately 80 –100 minutes. Begin checking internal temperature at 70 minutes. Budget up to 2 hours total so you are never rushed
  • Remove roast from oven and tent loosely with foil. Rest for 30 minutes.
  • After resting, uncover the roast completely. Pat the surface dry to ensure proper browning.
  • Final Sear (choose one method):
  • Convection broiler
  • Set broiler to high.
  • Place roast under broiler and sear about 3 minutes per side, turning as needed, until a deep brown crust forms. Watch continuously, as convection broilers brown quickly and can overshoot.
  • Pan sear
  • Heat a cast iron skillet over very high heat. Sear roast for 45–60 seconds per side until well browned.
  • Final internal temperature
  • Target a final internal temperature of 125°F for rare in the middle.
  • Slice thinly against the grain using a very sharp carving knife. Serve immediately.

Notes

  • * Herbs can burn unless added late. Resist any temptation to add sugar. Sugar browns first, then burns before Maillard flavor fully develops resulting in a bitter or acrid crust.
  • No matter how much you like your favorite store bought rub, it’s best to make your own unless it doesn’t have sugar and is not overly spiced.
  • A restrained rub produces a better crust than an aggressive one. When the surface browns cleanly and smells like beef and pepper—not spices—you have done it right. Let the beef be the star of the dish!
  • ** Convection cooking dries surfaces faster and cooks more evenly, but it increases effective heat by roughly 25°F. The convection oven strategy for a prime-rib-style roast optimized for chuck eye is to compensate to preserve tenderness and fat rendering. Convection circulates hot air aggressively. Lower temp prevents over-tightening the muscle fibers.
  • Common convection mistakes to avoid:
  • • Starting too hot (dries roast)
  • • Skipping the rest period
  • • Over-seasoning early with sugar or herbs
  • • Using foil under roast (blocks airflow)

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