![]() |
Sunday smoking
I'm going to cook an eye of round Sunday. I'm having a little trouble about which marinate to use. I have Allegro gold buckle brisket sauce and Claudes marinade sauce. So which one? Anyway I don't have a Ronald M. Popeil deal to inject the seasoning, so I made a stop at hardware for something to get the seasoning in it. PVC. If anyone is interested in how this works out, let me know and I'll try to make photos. "If UT don't care." Also I made some almond bark today with cereal?sp Starts with a M. Couldn't find the cheap grainola. :yum: Wolf I think will be great.
|
you can vacum it in ,
http://www.cabelas.com/cabelas/en/te...004&hasJS=true Or inject it , http://www.cabelas.com/cabelas/en/te...004&hasJS=true or go to , http://www.tonychachere.com/store/marinades.html We have used there maranade befor , http://static.flickr.com/35/66715194_4323aa4f73_o.jpg See the little holes in the leg and the such . I LOVE the Creole Style Butter Injectable Marinade !!!!!!!! You Should be able to find a bottle of maranade with an injector in a walmart , we have a few extras injectors ( slightly used ) , I can send you one if you want , PM me . |
Got any friends that work in medical hospitals?
I think what you want is called an irrigation syringe. |
1 Attachment(s)
I have injectors up the whatever. My fav is the Morton Meat Pump / Brine Pump, I've had it for years. I'm thinking of a slit cut long ways in center and stuffed w/garlic, green onions and who knows. Going to try pvc stuffed w/above and push in with a dowel.
|
Oh , Ok , Make some pics and let us know how it came out .
A customer ( who used to be a butcher ) told me about the tool he used to use to inject bacon into meat , he said it was like a square of small sharp tubes , you would push them into a slab of bacon , then push them into a piece of meat and press this plunger thus injecting little spots of bacon . it sounded YUMMMMMY !!! |
Found this tip and thought someone might use it
THE SECRET OF LARDING A ROAST Venison is a "dry" meat, meaning it has very little natural fat in it. Often it is "larded" before cooking, by adding a bit of fat to make it more tender. Traditionally, this is done with a larding needle, and can be a hard and messy job. Here is a nice, quick trick. Take a couple thick, (3/16 in.), slices of salt pork, bacon, or other fat meat. Cut into pieces a couple inches long and 3/4 inch wide at one end, and pointed at the other end. Put the pieces on a heavy plate and put the plate in the freezer until the bacon is hard frozen. Make holes in the roast with a thin bladed knife. Aim the holes toward the center of the roast. Shove a frozen piece of bacon into each hole, just like a nail. Put in a nail of bacon every square inch or two, and stuff them in good. If you are quick, you can lard a roast like this in a couple minutes. When you are done with the bacon, if you like garlic, shove thick slices into some of the holes. When done, proceed with the marinating, or the browning of the meat. |
if i migrated to mississippi, would busterb take care of me?
|
U bet :thumb2:
|
Photos here. http://www.flickr.com/photos/busterb/
|
Quote:
|
Buster, I mean t' tell ya, anybody with the extraordinary abilities that you have should be opening a barbecue shack and getting rich. I'd bring a caravan all the way from CA just to eat at your place :yum:
|
Yo buster , i just had a thought ( you smelled the smoke didn't you ;) )
If you made that tube out of metal ( stainless ) and sharpend the end , you could punch out a core of that big ole hunk of meat , push that out and then fill the tube with goodies and insert them !!! Just a thought !!! |
Me, too! I'm not nearly as good a cook as Busterb, but this is my new favorite poor girl's Sunday dinner with lots left over for the coming week recipe:
one 7 blade chuck roast (3-5 pounds) one onion, chopped one small bag mini carrots 7-10 new red potatoes cut in half 3 stalks celery, sliced one handful fresh green beans cut into thirds one package mushroom gravy mix one McCormick's cooking bag/seasoning for pot roasts one cup water 1/4 cup red wine one bay leaf preheat oven to 325 degrees Put all the above ingredients into the cooking bag, tie, and shake around to mix. Stab a slit into top of cooking bag with a sharp knife to vent steam. Place bag of goodies into roasting pan and roast in oven 2 1/2 to 3 hours. Its easy, nutricious, and delicious. Best of all, you don't have a pan to scrub out afterwards. If you have a dog, give her the bones which have fallen off the meat when the roast is done. Yum! :yum: |
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 11:28 PM. |
Powered by: vBulletin Version 3.8.1
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.