Low and Slow: How to Cook Meat

No kitchen dramas or barbecue fails ever again. Just perfectly cooked meat.

OFM award-winner Neil Rankin knows how to cook meat. In this book he explains how he does it, using the foolproof methods he has honed to perfection and relies on in the kitchens of Temper in London.

"If you have ever cooked a steak medium-well instead of medium-rare, a chicken that ends up dry, a stew that's tough or stringy or a rack of ribs that fall too much off the bone then this book will make your life that little bit better." Neil Rankin

'You've cost me a bloody fortune. Steak on four nights...Perfect every time. My boys - steak mad - are so happy.' Diana Henry

'Simply put: Rankin's book will make you 100% more brilliant behind the stove.' Grace Dent

'The first time I ate Neil's food, I was blown away' Tom Kerridge

'Fire-cooking is unavoidably tactile 'real' cooking and Neil is one of the heroes leading the charge. He eschews sterility and embraces flame.' Adam Perry Lang

'Meat hates to be overcooked, says Neil, so low and slow is the way to go which obviates brining, resting, letting joints come to room temperature and other shibboleths learned at our mothers' knee. There is a great deal useful and inspiring to be absorbed here from a battle-scarred Scotsman in a trucker's cap... and tongs as an extension of his fingers.' Fay Maschler

'Without any doubts the best meat/bbq book I've read! Everything about it is just spot on.' @artisanbaker

'The book is fantastic. Managed not to overcook a beef joint for the first time ever!' @KungFuBBQ

1124015067
Low and Slow: How to Cook Meat

No kitchen dramas or barbecue fails ever again. Just perfectly cooked meat.

OFM award-winner Neil Rankin knows how to cook meat. In this book he explains how he does it, using the foolproof methods he has honed to perfection and relies on in the kitchens of Temper in London.

"If you have ever cooked a steak medium-well instead of medium-rare, a chicken that ends up dry, a stew that's tough or stringy or a rack of ribs that fall too much off the bone then this book will make your life that little bit better." Neil Rankin

'You've cost me a bloody fortune. Steak on four nights...Perfect every time. My boys - steak mad - are so happy.' Diana Henry

'Simply put: Rankin's book will make you 100% more brilliant behind the stove.' Grace Dent

'The first time I ate Neil's food, I was blown away' Tom Kerridge

'Fire-cooking is unavoidably tactile 'real' cooking and Neil is one of the heroes leading the charge. He eschews sterility and embraces flame.' Adam Perry Lang

'Meat hates to be overcooked, says Neil, so low and slow is the way to go which obviates brining, resting, letting joints come to room temperature and other shibboleths learned at our mothers' knee. There is a great deal useful and inspiring to be absorbed here from a battle-scarred Scotsman in a trucker's cap... and tongs as an extension of his fingers.' Fay Maschler

'Without any doubts the best meat/bbq book I've read! Everything about it is just spot on.' @artisanbaker

'The book is fantastic. Managed not to overcook a beef joint for the first time ever!' @KungFuBBQ

35.64 In Stock
Low and Slow: How to Cook Meat

Low and Slow: How to Cook Meat

by Neil Rankin
Low and Slow: How to Cook Meat

Low and Slow: How to Cook Meat

by Neil Rankin

eBook

$35.64 

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Overview

No kitchen dramas or barbecue fails ever again. Just perfectly cooked meat.

OFM award-winner Neil Rankin knows how to cook meat. In this book he explains how he does it, using the foolproof methods he has honed to perfection and relies on in the kitchens of Temper in London.

"If you have ever cooked a steak medium-well instead of medium-rare, a chicken that ends up dry, a stew that's tough or stringy or a rack of ribs that fall too much off the bone then this book will make your life that little bit better." Neil Rankin

'You've cost me a bloody fortune. Steak on four nights...Perfect every time. My boys - steak mad - are so happy.' Diana Henry

'Simply put: Rankin's book will make you 100% more brilliant behind the stove.' Grace Dent

'The first time I ate Neil's food, I was blown away' Tom Kerridge

'Fire-cooking is unavoidably tactile 'real' cooking and Neil is one of the heroes leading the charge. He eschews sterility and embraces flame.' Adam Perry Lang

'Meat hates to be overcooked, says Neil, so low and slow is the way to go which obviates brining, resting, letting joints come to room temperature and other shibboleths learned at our mothers' knee. There is a great deal useful and inspiring to be absorbed here from a battle-scarred Scotsman in a trucker's cap... and tongs as an extension of his fingers.' Fay Maschler

'Without any doubts the best meat/bbq book I've read! Everything about it is just spot on.' @artisanbaker

'The book is fantastic. Managed not to overcook a beef joint for the first time ever!' @KungFuBBQ


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781473527904
Publisher: Ebury Publishing
Publication date: 05/05/2016
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 272
File size: 167 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.

About the Author

Neil is the chef behind Temper Soho and Temper City. Temper won best newcomer at the OFM Awards in 2017. Temper Soho is an open fire-pit restaurant serving up barbecue with a South American influence - tacos, tortillas and mezcal. Temper City serves up barbecue with an Indian influence - offering curry, tandoor and roti breads.

Before opening Temper, Neil Rankin had cooked at Rhodes 24 and Chez Bruce, Barbecoa, Pitt Cue and John Salt. Neil opened Smokehouse in 2013 and a second Smokehouse in 2015 as well as Bad Egg, all in London. Neil is also a regular at Meatopia and part of London Union.

Low and Slow is Neil Rankin's first book.

Table of Contents

  • 1: PREFACE
  • 2: FOREWORD BY ADAM PERRY LANG
  • 3: FOREWORD BY FAY MASCHLER
  • 4: INTRODUCTION
  • 1: What is low and slow?
  • 2: How to cook meat
  • 3: Before cooking
  • 4: Meat quality
  • 5: Rare breeds
  • 6: Mutton and hogget vs lamb
  • 7: Corn-feeding vs grass-feeding
  • 8: Farming and the environment
  • 9: When to colour meat
  • 10: Searing meat
  • 11: Why you should move meat around the pan
  • 12: Why you should flip meat regularly during cooking
  • 13: How meat cooks in an oven
  • 14: Using higher temperatures
  • 15: Reheating meat
  • 16: Equipment
  • 5: STEAKS
  • 1: Introduction
  • 2: Bashing out steaks
  • 3: Bone or no bone?
  • 4: Colouring steak/searing
  • 5: Seasoning steak
  • 6: Let’s lay ‘resting’ to rest
  • 7: Internal cooking temperatures
  • 8: Rare to well-done
  • 9: A temperature guide
  • 10: How to cook steak
  • 11: Different steaks to consider
  • 12: Sauces, butters and sides for steaks
  • 6: ROASTS
  • 1: Introduction
  • 2: How to roast meat
  • 3: To brine or not to brine?
  • 4: Marinades
  • 5: Crispy skin
  • 6: Pink pork
  • 7: General food safety tips
  • 8: Roast methods
  • 9: Stocks, gravies and side dishes for roasts
  • 7: BRAISES
  • 1: Introduction
  • 2: The overnight braise
  • 3: A braising timeline
  • 4: Cooking without a lid
  • 5: The result
  • 6: Braising stock
  • 7: Braised meat dishes
  • 8: BBQ/SLOW-SMOKING
  • 1: Introduction
  • 2: How to light a BBQ
  • 3: What wood to use
  • 4: Choosing charcoal
  • 5: Wood or charcoal and wood?
  • 6: Meat starting temperatures
  • 7: The stall
  • 8: How hot should my smoker be?
  • 9: Spraying meat and water pans
  • 10: Types of barbecues for smoking
  • 11: BBQ methods
  • 12: Rubs, sauces and sides for BBQs
  • 13: A note on meat rubs
  • 9: Glossary
  • 10: Index
  • 11: Acknowledgements
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