The Grill and BBQ thread

Happens to us all at some point. Just finished watching folks do a tri-tip like a brisket. Looked amazing and the comments were glowing. Some said they'd never do a reverse sear on a tri-tip again after taking it through the "brisket process". Not sure what I did wrong, but my results were no bueno. Dry roast beef is the best way I can describe it. Awful to waste a cut like that, but I had to see for myself what all the fuss was about. Live and learn.
I wouldn't think a tri tip would have nearly enough fat and connective tissue to hold up to a long cook and high done temperature. I do love a med-rare reverse sear on them with some chimichurri.
 
I wouldn't think a tri tip would have nearly enough fat and connective tissue to hold up to a long cook and high done temperature. I do love a med-rare reverse sear on them with some chimichurri.
It didn't have the fat for sure, but no one I saw injected and not everyone wrapped with foil either. Many wrapped with butter or tallow which I used. Spritzed regularly, too. Even moved it further from the heat as well. Either I missed something critical or they were fibbing for clicks/likes. Either way it's reverse sear from now on. Last one I did that way topped with a seasoned blue cheese butter was awesome if I do say so. Still I hadda try. Lesson learned.
 
Every year for Christmas I do a prime rib roast in the oven. I got a new smoker over the summer and I want to do a test run in it before we hit Christmas to see if I’d rather smoke than bake it in the oven. However, I’m running into a problem and I’m hoping somebody can help me out.

Every recipe I’m finding says to smoke it up to a certain temperature, and then let it rest while I up my smoker to 400 to do a reverse sear. The problem is my smoker won’t go past 325. Can I do the final sear in the oven at 400 and get close to the same effect as a reverse sear in the smoker? Or can I just skip the upping the temp part and just smoke the whole thing until a certain temperature? I understand the latter isn’t a reverse sear, but I imagine it would still taste fine. Any help from more experienced smokers would be greatly appreciated!
 
The higher temp is to crust up the outside of the roast, so if that’s your goal then the oven would do fine. Just make sure your seasoning is such that it won’t scorch with the high heat.
 
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Grill, smoke, roast… details please.
I did a short dry brine with coarse sea salt, pepper, and spiceology cowboy rub. Green egg over direct heat with Fogo charcoal and a bunk of mesquite around 450 for around 5 m/ side. 5 min rest covered. So freaking good.

Those are available at Costco here...heckuva deal. It's not a very thick cut, so really no need to reverse sear, but I'm sure that world be delicious too.
 
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Every year for Christmas I do a prime rib roast in the oven. I got a new smoker over the summer and I want to do a test run in it before we hit Christmas to see if I’d rather smoke than bake it in the oven. However, I’m running into a problem and I’m hoping somebody can help me out.

Every recipe I’m finding says to smoke it up to a certain temperature, and then let it rest while I up my smoker to 400 to do a reverse sear. The problem is my smoker won’t go past 325. Can I do the final sear in the oven at 400 and get close to the same effect as a reverse sear in the smoker? Or can I just skip the upping the temp part and just smoke the whole thing until a certain temperature? I understand the latter isn’t a reverse sear, but I imagine it would still taste fine. Any help from more experienced smokers would be greatly appreciated!
Do you have a gas grill? Could always do the final sear there. A convection oven or broiler would work, as well.
 
I did a short dry brine with coarse sea salt, pepper, and spiceology cowboy rub. Green egg over direct heat with Fogo charcoal and a bunk of mesquite around 450 for around 5 m/ side. 5 min rest covered. So freaking good.

Those are available at Costco here...heckuva deal. It's not a very thick cut, so really no need to reverse sear, but I'm sure that world be delicious too.
Much obliged.
 
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