Gotta say, I have never understood the attraction of prime rib.
Honey Baked Ham is outstanding. Kick it up a notch by pouring a coke over it with 10 minutes to go...
Also, bone in rib roast is the way to go...
Interesting on the coke. Does it eat away at the ham?
Dr.Pepper works well also. Or you can go full Alton Brown and rub it with mustard, coat with crushed ginger snaps, and mist with bourbon. I did that once with a non-spiral ham, oh my.Doesn't have time to rot it away like a tooth in a cup. The coke goes flat and basically reduces down to a sweet glaze.
nomar said:Anytime you can get a mixture of sickly sweet and ocean salty flavors and springy texture -- and complete homogeneity of taste and texture -- into one piece of meat, you have to not ever eat that.
Kind of have to agree it is barely a step up from that foulest thanksgiving fowl on the "choke it down for tradition" scale.
That's like saying " i don't get why Sofia Vergara has a nice behind"Gotta say, I have never understood the attraction of prime rib.
I'm with you there, 8893. It gets a shoulder shrug from me.
As an outside observer (Jew), allow me to say that it seems almost as if all the great things about Xmas (presents, family traditions, general cheer, etc) are completely neutralized by your insistence on eating a monstrous chunk of Spam spray-painted with honey glaze by stoned college kids working for $10/hour on their winter break. (Dove, that last part answers your question about the Honey Baked Ham Company.)
I mean, I get it's a tradition and all, and we've got our own gross food traditions, but gefilte fish is an app, not the main course. And it ain't a kosher thing. I'll eat a pig even if it's doesn't have 1/10 the charm of Arnold from Green Acres. I like bacon as much as the next guy, and I dig a ham sandwich from time to time, but baked ham is nasty. Anytime you can get a mixture of sickly sweet and ocean salty flavors and springy texture -- and complete homogeneity of taste and texture -- into one piece of meat, you have to not ever eat that.
A spiral ham is what you serve when you can't be bothered to actually cook something decent.
"Merry Christmas. Here is a piece of meat that died a very long time ago - but don't worry, we killed the rotting bits with salt and maple syrup."
A man who cared about his guests would step up and see to it that there was a standing rib roast coming out of that oven. Jesus wasn't born so that you could serve your people a salted pig carcass.
(True story - my mom served a ham on Easter about 20 years ago...I don't exactly remember the sequence of events, but my younger brother made a joke about something that resulted in the ham being thrown in the yard and everyone but the two of us storming out of the room.)
Christmas With The Fishys!
I married into a family where this ham has been a staple since 1967. The starters of the tradition have passed by Mrs Dove needs that connection. At least the baked apple has been dismissed.
I now "dry age" my prime rib in the fridge for about 5-7 days on a platter just covered with a dish towel, then bill's recipe of lots of crushed garlic and sea or kosher salt, unbelievable.
Gotta say, I have never understood the attraction of prime rib.
Under ideal financial circumstances one would purchase prime beef that was aged for about 3 weeks ala Peter Lugers, but by letting it dry out ( no mold) you have to trim off a bit of the outer layer but the flavor of the meat becomes more intense, even for choice stop and shop cuts. BTW Lugers and all great steakhouses season their beef with their own mixes and sometimes put butter on it.Isn't "dry age" just another way of saying "let the meat get moldy"?
FYI - One thing that needs to be made clear in this thread. The pig is the tastiest of all animals. And that's not up for debate. You can keep your fat
Glad to see everyone realized how much turkey sucks and is looking at alternatives for Xmas dinner. ;-)
Under ideal financial circumstances one would purchase prime beef that was aged for about 3 weeks ala Peter Lugers, but by letting it dry out ( no mold) you have to trim off a bit of the outer layer but the flavor of the meat becomes more intense, even for choice stop and shop cuts. BTW Lugers and all great steakhouses season their beef with their own mixes and sometimes put butter on it.