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beef

Dry Aged Smoked Prime Rib

January 2, 2021 by Vanessa Whiteside Leave a Comment

Affiliate disclosure: As an Amazon Associate, I may earn commissions from qualifying purchases from Amazon.com. 

This recipe is the BEST prime rib I’ve ever tasted! Also known as standing rib roast, this beef cut is tender and worth the price per pound. We treated ourselves to Dry Aged Smoked Prime Rib for the Christmas holiday. One bite and I was already planning when we would serve it again.

While a bit of preparation is required, it is worth the effort. The process of dry aging a bone-in prime rib is actually quite easy. After patting the meat dry with paper towels, wrap it in 2-3 layers of cheese cloth and secure with kitchen twine. Store the prime rib on a tray or cookie sheet in the refrigerator for seven days.

When you’re ready to cook it, remove the cheese cloth and apply a heavy coat of kosher salt and fresh cracked black pepper to the outside of the prime rib. Lightly coat the meat with vegetable oil and use your hands to really press the seasoning into the flesh of the beef. The seasoning will form a thick bark or outside crust during the cooking process. (You don’t have to allow the meat to come to room temperature before cooking it.)

Smoked Prime Rib

To get the hickory flavor, prepare the prime rib on a Traeger grill or similar smoker using wood pellets. For this recipe, a 4 lb. bone-in prime rib required two hours of cooking time followed by 30 minutes of resting time before serving. The end result was a tender cut of beef with light smoke flavor. You’ll love the crusted bark!

Use a extremely sharp knife to cut about 3/4″ pieces and serve it alongside creamy horseradish and beef au jus. I suggest serving it to your guests with sautéed asparagus and smashed garlic potatoes.

Why wait until a special occasion to enjoy Dry Aged Smoked Prime Rib? Treat yourself!

One Delightful Life

4 servings

Serves 3/4" slice

Dry Aged Smoked Prime Rib

Dry Aged Smoked Prime Rib is the best way to serve this tender cut of meat to guarantee incredible flavor.

2 hrCook Time

2 hrTotal Time

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Ingredients

  • 4 lb. bone-in prime rib
  • vegetable oil
  • kosher salt
  • freshly ground black pepper

Instructions

  1. Bring your Traeger smoker or grill to 250 degrees.
  2. Smoke the prime rib roast for two hours or until the internal temperature reads 125 degrees.
  3. Remove the prime rib from the smoke or grill and allow it to rest at room temperature for 20 minute before slicing to serve.

Notes

You may want to trim the excess fat from each slice prior to plating.

7.8.1.2
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Dry Aged Smoked Prime Rib

Filed Under: Dinner, Taste Tagged With: beef, beef roast, dry aged, grill, hickory, meat, prime rib, roast, smoked meat, Traeger

Hibachi Steak Lettuce Wraps with Asian Cucumber Salad

July 30, 2017 by Vanessa Leave a Comment

My version of Hibachi Steak Lettuce Wraps includes using soft ribeye steak cut into small chunks, then marinated in a soy sauce and canola oil marinade, and later cooked to perfection over medium heat. I prefer to cook my steak to medium rare or medium. If you use a cut of beef with a lot of marbling, it would be a more tender cut and with robust flavor. Of course, use fresh cuts of meat over frozen ones.

Yum Yum Sauce. That creamy, tangy sauce is so delicious on top of Asian meat dishes. You’ll love it drizzled on top of this recipe for Hibachi Steak Lettuce Wraps, a low-carb but high flavor dinner. The wraps are easy to make and pair well with my Asian Cucumber Salad a dining experience complete with international flavor.

We are still “trying” to eat low-carb in our household. Yep, we’re going on five months of this dietary lifestyle and it’s been a challenge but a satisfying one. Thankfully, it’s forced me to think outside the box when brainstorming recipes that are high in nutritional value but low in carbs. Eating this way involves more discipline than not eating bread and pasta. It requires sheer willpower.

But, I can’t lie to you. We shared a basket of skin-on truffle fries today with garlic ailoi dipping sauce, a real gut buster basket of deliciousness. I don’t feel guilty about it either. You can’t. You have to allow yourself a break or two every once in awhile. Can you relate?

For extra spicy heat, add more than a pinch of red pepper flakes to the cucumber salad dressing.

A lover of colorful food and crunch, I add shredded carrot and red cabbage inside my romaine lettuce wraps, then the cooked ribeye, and then topped with my version of Yum Yum Sauce. The sauce is a simple 2-1-1 ratio of Hellman’s mayonnaise, General Tso’s Sauce, and Tobasco Sriracha.

To cut the rich flavor of the Hibachi Steak Lettuce Wrap filling (I tend to over do it with the Yum Yum Sauce), I served Asian Cucumber Salad on the side. An easy combination of thinly sliced cucumbers, red onions, bell pepper, and dressing, its delicate Asian flavor balances the mayo based sauce’s heavier consistency.

You could slice your cucumber thinner than shown here, but I prefer more crunch with mine. To each his own!

Finally, to finish the dish I toast white sesame seeds in a naked skillet on a low temperature for a few minutes until slightly golden brown. I sprinkle the seeds on top of the cucumber salad for garnish and added flavor.

What is your guilty pleasure when it comes to international cuisine? Do you dive into curry soups? Slurp large bowls of pho?

Scroll down and let me know what big flavor dish you want me to make a low-carb version of and I’ll post it next on the blog.

Prefer lettuce wraps instead of using tortillas or bread for sandwiches? You may also enjoy my easy Crock Pot Buffalo Chicken Lettuce Wraps or my recipe for Crunchy Asian Turkey Lettuce Wraps.

onedelightfullife.com

3 wraps

Serves large leaf romaine lettuce

Hibachi Steak Lettuce Wraps with Asian Cucumber Salad

Topped with Yum Yum Sauce, ribeye is the star of these Hibachi Steak Lettuce Wraps served with cool Asian Cucumber Salad.

1 hrPrep Time

30 minCook Time

1 hr, 30 Total Time

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Ingredients

  • Hibachi Steak and Marinade:
  • 1 pound diced ribeye steak
  • 1 T. canola oil
  • 1 T. soy sauce
  • Asian Cucumber Salad:
  • 1 thinly sliced, seedless cucumber
  • 1/2 diced orange bell pepper
  • 1/8 c. thinly sliced red onion (soak for 24 hours in water inside a covered glass dish to cut the bite of flavor)
  • 1/4 c. rice wine vinegar
  • 1 tsp raw honey
  • 1/2 tsp sesame oil
  • tiny pinch red pepper flakes
  • tiny pinch kosher or sea salt
  • 1/2 T. white sesame seeds

Instructions

  1. Clean and dry romaine leaves. Set aside.
  2. Slice the red onion and add to a small glass bowl. Add water and cover tightly. Allow to sit for several hours (I prefer overnight to 24 hours) and then drain the water.
  3. Slice the cucumber and dice the bell pepper and add to a bowl. Add in the red onions.
  4. Mix the cucumber dressing and drizzle it over the cucumbers, pepper and onions. Mix thoroughly and then refrigerate for at least an hour.
  5. Dice the ribeye steak and add it to the marinade for at least 20-30 minutes, if not longer (refrigerate). Cook the steak over medium heat until desired doneness.
  6. Assemble the lettuce wraps and drizzle with 2-1-1- Yum Yum Sauce made of 2 parts Hellman's Mayonnaise, 1 part General Tso's Sauce, and 1 part Tobasco Sriracha.
  7. Serve with cucumber salad topped with toasted sesame seeds.

Notes

You can substitute chicken or shrimp for beef.

7.8.1.2
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onedelightfullife.com

Hibachi Steak Lettuce Wraps

 

Filed Under: Dinner, Taste Tagged With: Asian, beef, cucumber salad, cucumbers, dressing, Hibachi, international, lettuce wrap, lettuce wraps, low-carb, marinade, mayo, meat, Oriental, ribeye, salad, sesame, soy sauce, sriracha mayo, steak, Yum Yum Sauce

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Hello! I'm Vanessa. Welcome to One Delightful Life, a blog created to add more delight to your life with delicious recipes, travel destinations, and lifestyle improvement ideas. Thanks for exploring my blog!

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