oakley wrote:well i saw the grill today it is a charcol grill and its about the size of a small chevy car .
i think i want to cook it in one piece i am excited i get the meat tommorow
i was going to get it going early in the morning at a high temp get some colour and then cool the grill down to 300 degrees i have a infer red thermometer . and cook it for about 5 to 6 hours till an internal of 130
and then rest in silver foil for a couple of hours will i cook the chicken then i thought i would temp the meat and decide the holding temp
i need a little luck but i think it could work
the one thing i am worried about is that there is no bone so there will be no reflected heat from that does that change any thihing?
Hi. There are some adjustments you will need to make, and there are a lot of really bad recipes for steamship round on the internet. Pay attention to RodinBangkok's experience. I've cooked primal cuts in charcoal cookers for up to 450 people.
You will need to bring the three roasts up to room temperature before you put them in to cook, or they will not complete in time, by several hours.
You need a meat thermometer with a long probe. An infrared thermometer is fine for cooking surfaces and foods that are not too thick, but you need to know the temperature near the core of these 50-60 lb roasts, or you may end up with a well-done roast at the surface that is raw at the center, especially if it is still chilled when you start cooking.
You don't have a forced air convection oven, your cooking time will be longer. For 50-60 lb roasts, about 6-8 hours at 300°F, depending on the weather.
The round roasts that make up a steamship round are very lean. In a charcoal grill, you will want to turn the roasts a quarter turn every 15-20 minutes, to keep the juices evenly distributed. The roasts will be less dry when done.
You cannot cook these over direct heat. Assuming that the grill is wider than it is deep, you will need to bank the coals across the front and back of the grill and cook the roasts over indirect heat, lining the roasts up end-to-end down the center of the grill, spaced a few inches apart, so they are receiving indirect heat from the sides, for even cooking. To keep an even temperature, you will need to supplement the coals every 45 minutes or so. If you don't want too much charcoal smoke from the new charcoal, you will want to start the coals in another location and distribute the lighted coals along the coal banks with a shovel.
The roasts will brown sufficiently without having to sear them with high heat at the start. After 6-8 hours, they will be beautiful.
130°F at the center is too cool. After you remove them and let them rest, they will still be too rare in the center. I agree with RodinBangkok - you want to cook them to an internal temperature of 140°. After 10-20 minutes rest, the roasts will have risen about 10 degrees at the center. Most people do not appreciate truly rare meat. You are cooking for a large group and most will prefer their meat more done.
The thermal efficiency of the meat will keep it warm for carving, but you will overcook the meat if you allow it to cool and try to reheat it. When you pull it off the grill, you will need to be prepared to carve it without reheating. If your chickens average 4 lbs, then they will cook over indirect heat at about 20 minutes per pound, so about 80 minutes. If you keep the roasts under foil for that time, they will be warm, but cooling by the time you start carving.
Good luck, however you end up approaching it. Cooking for large groups is challenging, but fun when it all works out.