blazerboy65

joined 1 year ago
[–] blazerboy65@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

I like control or tempo strategies because you're faced with critical decisions so often. I like the game of trying to have the right thing at the right time.

[–] blazerboy65@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago

Empirical evidence suggests that it takes many hours for the center of the steak, the part that matters for doneness, to rise any appreciable amount.

Drying the outside of your steak is good advice because your can see the results. The same with brining because you can taste it.

If your technique is otherwise good whether that's low/slow or hot/fast then "letting it warm up" is just bunk advice.

Another note is that if your cooking set up can't crank up high enough to get a good sear fast then you may benefit from the center being cold to start with to give you more time to develop the crust.

[–] blazerboy65@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago

Generally no. Ground beef doesn't have a "surface" the same way a cut off meat does. As meat cooks fibers (can't remember if it's the muscle of the protein fibers specifically) contract and squeeze out water. In ground beef the water will be escaping every which way. In a cut of meat more of that water has a better chance of staying within the piece.

[–] blazerboy65@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

The edges and corners mean nothing for the purposes of counting holes. Counting holes is a concept of topology that relies on continuous deformation. All non-opening features of the object just get squished and stretched away in the process of identifying holes.

For the purpose of counting holes a can with two openings punched into it is equivalent to a donut which we know has only one hole.