For a ribeye, I agree with the consensus of 1 1/2 inches or slightly larger. Especially if I start with a sous vide for temperature.
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How Thick Do You Have Your Ribeye's Cut?
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The last ribeyes we had were gigantic tomahawks. They were at least 2 1/2" thick. We cooked them up and then divided them up - 2 tomahawks fed 4 of us. Recently, our local grocery store was selling NY strip loins for $4.99 per pound. I found one that had a minimal fat cap and cut it myself. I cut 6 2 1/2" steaks and then cut those in half, dry-brined and vac froze them. They have enough marbling that if I put them in the 14.5 WSM mostly-to-completely frozen and cook top grate with the bowl removed, by the time they've been flipped once and have hit 110 or so internal, they have already developed good sear. At that point, the reverse sear was an added bonus. Same principle would apply to ribeyes, especially given that they are more marbled than NY Strip. Also, the longer they cook the more of that wonderful fat renders and really tenderizes the steak.
This approach is a bit unconventional, but personally we've found that it produces really good results.
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Founding Member
- Jul 2014
- 487
- Pierre, SD
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1987 Weber Kettle (Still going!)
2004 Cookshack Smokette (The original!)
2012 Weber Genesis (Wonderful for steaks and chops!)
2014 Pit Barrel Cooker (Lovin it!)
Thermoworks Thermapen
Thermoworks Mini Handheld Thermocouple & Meat Needle Probe
Various other wireless remote thermometers
Beer...Bud Light (Timeless)
Although the 3" ubersteak by Troutman was impressive, 1-1/2" was the most consistent response and is what I went with.
Thanks everyone and have a wonderful Easter!
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I don't know.... However thick the "Thick Cut" "Good (black package)" Ribeyes are at Wally World....
Yes I buy steaks at the large box chains... especially if I see that Yellow must sell label....
When I get them at the local meat locker I am in that 1 inch to 1.5 inch range usually... Occasionally I will get the real thin sandwich cuts... love those things too! Anything an inch or over I typically reverse sear it.
Honestly I just really don't care how thick the cut is.... I really really like ribeye.... To each their own!
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Club Member
- Jun 2016
- 2531
- Beautiful Downtown Berwyn, IL
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Grill: SNS Charcoal Kettle/ Grilla Original / Weber Genesis EP-330 / OK Joe Bronco Drum
Thermometers: Thermapen / iGrill 2 / Fireboard
For Smoke: Chunks / Pellet Tube / Mo Pouch
Sous Vide: Joule / Nomiku WiFi (RIP Nomiku)
Reddit: LeCheffre
I will also say that I cut my own mostly, rather than having them cut. One very sharp long knife and a membership at a wholesaler.
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Club Member
- Nov 2017
- 8544
- Huntsville, Alabama
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Jim Morris
Cookers- Slow 'N Sear Deluxe Kamado (2021)
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- Weber Performer Deluxe 22.5" w/ GrillGrates & Slow 'N Sear & Drip N Griddle & Vortex & Party Q & Rotisserie (2007)
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- If not cooking outdoors, I am cooking on the stovetop with my 14" carbon steel wok, 12" CI skillet, or in the oven with my two Lodge CI pizza pans, or two dutch ovens. I've also got a nifty Lodge carbon steel grill pan that rocks for veggies outdoors.
I prefer NY strip's to ribeye, but whichever I get, I have lately bought the full primal cut, and use my Victorinox Fibrox Pro Granton slicer to cut 2" steaks. Why 2"? Because that is the width of my slicing blade, and I am using the blade as the measurement device. Lay it down on the meat to find the next cut, then right through it like a hot knife through melted butter.
I love a good reverse seared 2" thick steak... now I am hungry!
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Same knife. Sometimes I go 3" though, and split with wife. That's a ruler, and notching. Blade width seems legit, tho.
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Potkettleblack I actually used my tape measure to check the blade width on the slicer, before using it as a cutting guide. I was kind of anal about getting some 2" slices, but didn't want to lay my tape measure on the meat!
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Club Member
- Jul 2016
- 889
- Brownsburg, Indiana
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Cookers:
Oklahoma Joe Offset (older thick steel version!)
Camp Chef Woodwind
OK Joe Bronco
Weber Genesis
Ooni Karu
Weber Kettle
My goal is to eventually have at least one of every style of cooker….. I have work to do. Lol!
Thermometers:
ThermoWorks Thermapen MK4
ThermoWorks Thermapen ONE
ThermoWorks Thermopop
ThermoWorks RFX
ThermoWorks IRK-2 Infrared
Maverick XR-50
TempSpike Plus
Other Gear:
Megaforce 3000 Meat Grinder
Weston 7-pound sausage stuffer
Jerky Gun for making poppers. (Game changer!)
Amaz-N-Tube
Original SnS with drip n griddle
Weber Chimney
Fuels Used:
Splits/Chunks, whatever I can get. Usually B&B competition. Favorites are Cherry, Apple, Post Oak, and Hickory.
Pellets, Lumberjack.
Charcoal, whatever is on sale. Currently have a bunch of KBB. Will eventually try B&B. Use whatever lump is on sale in my Ooni.
Propane, Blue Rhino.
Rubs:
Usually make my own riff’s on Memphis Dust and BBBR. Also use Meathead’s commercial rubs and occasionally try something new. I like a couple from Tuffy Stone and Kinder’s. After several surgeries, I’m very sensitive to “spicy” stuff, so I need to be careful about heat levels.
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Wife bought a beautiful (her words, and I AGREE) ribeye for grilling this weekend. BUT, she warned me it was a shade over 2 inches thick (which she didn't realize until AFTER she'd picked it on looks then had it weighed and THEN asked its weight which should tell you how GOOD it looks). So, I came to AR for some hints (or rather to be sure what I remembered from cooking these thick thingees with my Dad fifty years ago) still held. THANKS to you all for jogging my memories. And, if she bothers to ask, I can now honestly say, "Yeah, and I checked with the AR Pit just to be sure." She trusts you all - plus, the recipe I MUST follow is from Meathead's book, "The Science . . ." We just had our 45th anniversary, so we agree on some things, Meathead's book being a good one.
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