Pellet Fan

All Things Considered => General Discussion--Food Related => Topic started by: Canadian John on February 17, 2018, 10:11:13 AM

Title: Cooking Meat
Post by: Canadian John on February 17, 2018, 10:11:13 AM

 To determine doneness, what method(s) do you use?

 -Thermometer.

 -Touch method.

 -Time.

 -Looks.
Title: Re: Cooking Meat
Post by: rwalters on February 17, 2018, 10:16:33 AM
Thermapen... pretty much 100% of the time.
Title: Re: Cooking Meat
Post by: triplebq on February 17, 2018, 10:20:48 AM
Usually Temp. On ribs sometime I go by feel.
Title: Re: Cooking Meat
Post by: Bar-B-Lew on February 17, 2018, 10:21:52 AM
I would say a combination of all of them depending on the meat.  I usually have a decent estimate of the time.  Once that passes, I may press the meat for firmness (chicken, steak, burgers, chops, sausage) and then stick a thermometer in it to see if it hit the temp I desire.  For shoulders and briskets, go by time, then check temp with thermometer and also go by feel of thermometer going into the meat.  For ribs, go by time then go by look with a bend test.
Title: Re: Cooking Meat
Post by: Jcorwin818 on February 17, 2018, 10:48:02 AM
I would say a combination of all of them depending on the meat.  I usually have a decent estimate of the time.  Once that passes, I may press the meat for firmness (chicken, steak, burgers, chops, sausage) and then stick a thermometer in it to see if it hit the temp I desire.  For shoulders and briskets, go by time, then check temp with thermometer and also go by feel of thermometer going into the meat.  For ribs, go by time then go by look with a bend test.

I agree with Bar-B-Lew.
Title: Re: Cooking Meat
Post by: silverbullet on February 17, 2018, 11:18:20 AM
My wife is a real stickler when it comes to how she wants her meat done. So for me its the Thremapen that gets the final say.
Title: Re: Cooking Meat
Post by: hokiepop on February 17, 2018, 02:58:55 PM
I always use a thermapen for the final check.
Title: Re: Cooking Meat
Post by: cookingjnj on February 17, 2018, 07:13:05 PM
A combo of all four depending on what I am cooking and the method by which it is being cooked.
Title: Re: Cooking Meat
Post by: SmokinHandyman on February 19, 2018, 11:32:21 AM
Mostly by temperature
Title: Re: Cooking Meat
Post by: Darwin on February 19, 2018, 03:33:36 PM
My sense of touch is still accurate, but I will use a thermometer for large cuts of meat.
Title: Re: Cooking Meat
Post by: Bentley on February 19, 2018, 03:46:10 PM
For me, on meats that will have color in them, it is Science from now on.  I pretty much know that on a piece of meat that I want medium rare, that 135° +-2° is gonna be it for me...Why guess!  The high temperature IT's, that is all feel!

And if you do want to go by feel, a good guide is to use that little area between your index finger and thumb. Lightly touch your index finger to the thumb and feel that area, that is rare, middle finger, med rare, 4th finger medium, pinky, med well...
Title: Re: Cooking Meat
Post by: dieselr88 on February 19, 2018, 04:01:39 PM
Usually thermapen, ribs-bend test and looks
Title: Re: Cooking Meat
Post by: dshaffes on February 19, 2018, 11:44:25 PM
I always time and use a thermapen, but will include look and touch when the cook calls for it.
Title: Re: Cooking Meat
Post by: David on February 20, 2018, 05:26:17 AM
Ribs is bend test  everything else gets the thermapen
Title: Re: Cooking Meat
Post by: Michael_NW on February 20, 2018, 11:17:11 PM
I use time to get me in the neighborhood, then it's by temp for the large cuts with probing, and feel for the thinner cuts like ribs.
Title: Re: Cooking Meat
Post by: GrillinGlen on February 20, 2018, 11:29:31 PM
Ribs is bend test  everything else gets the thermapen

Same for me