Nutczak wrote:When you carved the steamship rounds, did you have them laying with the bone horizontally, or vertically? I have seen stainless-steel bases to hold steamship rounds vertically for carving but I have not found a source for them yet. I started using inside rounds for easier carving and we still get a good presentation especially when we are cooking them.
Attached is a picture of us cooking 160# of inside rounds on our charcoal rotisserie, it was for an outdoor beef cooking competition 43 years in the running. I had another 220# in the enclosed charcoal-fired cooker. If I ind the stands and a way to secure them so my spit-rod is bablanced, I may use steamship rounds again.
Thanks for your earlier reply on your temperature regime. I appreciate your perspective. However, I don't gamble with my guests' health, and run a very clean kitchen. I'm not a caterer, but having served well over a thousand people without incident is beyond luck, to the degree that anyone serving food to guests/customers is lucky when no one gets sick. Nevertheless, I do understand your perspective and appreciate your thoughts on the subject.
That's a fine spit, and those roasts look beautiful! Was that a local Wisconsin event, or part of a competition circuit?
I have to go by the local used restaurant equipment supply store, today, and will ask about the base you described. See if they know a source for those. You never know - it could be a regional thing. I probably won't find anything you haven't already found, but it's worth a shot. I'll pass along anything promising.