“Prime Rib” vs Ribeye Roast vs a chunk of Ribeye

Gunnerclone

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Jul 16, 2010
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Question for the meatheads of CF:

i need to buy a chunk of meat to make “Prime Rib” (no bone in it, which is what I think a true Prime Rib would be?)

I’d like to get it at Costco. What should I look for on the label?
 
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Clonefan94

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You will want a boneless prime rib roast. It's a rib roast, with the Prime designation. If you truly want prime rib, make sure it's not a choice or select rib roast.

Not sure what your reasoning for going boneless is, but I'm a big fan of having the bones be a roasting rack that also provides flavor. The bones are easy to take off, if not already done for you at the meat counter.
 

Gunnerclone

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You will want a boneless prime rib roast. Prime Rib is Prime Rib, it is it's own cut.

Not sure what your reasoning for going boneless is, but I'm a big fan of having the bones be a roasting rack that also provides flavor. The bones are easy to take off, if not already done for you at the meat counter.

Im not cooking it, just paying for it.just Following orders.
 

davegilbertson

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Question for the meatheads of CF:

i need to buy a chunk of meat to make “Prime Rib” (no bone in it, which is what I think a true Prime Rib would be?)

I’d like to get it at Costco. What should I look for on the label?
Was trying to have a productive morning and this caused me to watch the OCB training video in its entirety.
 

Nader_uggghhh

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Jul 11, 2017
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Get the bone in (standing rib roast) if you can. Prime or choice would both be fine. The only no-no would be getting a select no-roll ribeye.
 

Mr Janny

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They are all the same piece of meat a ribeye roast just isn't prime grade and always go with the bone.
Agreed. "Go with the bone"
It's not that hard to carve around and it adds a ton of flavor. If you want, you can cut them off ahead of time, but still cook them together. Or ask the butcher to remove the bones, and include them. Then when it's done, you just toss the already removed bones, and carve away.
 

SCNCY

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Regarding the bone, which do most of you do?

Cut the bone off and tie it back on to the roast? Or do you cook with bone attached and cut the bone off after cooking?
 

Mr Janny

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Regarding the bone, which do most of you do?

Cut the bone off and tie it back on to the roast? Or do you cook with bone attached and cut the bone off after cooking?
Cut it off and tie it back on. If I'm dropping $150-$200 on a piece of meat, I want it to be as good as it can be. And the bone has an impact on the end result.