Rotisserie Beef Round Roast Let It and Forget It
I get the occasional question about less expensive beef roasts on the rotisserie: "That prime rib roast looks great, but what about something cheaper, like a rump roast? Or a round roast?"
3My favorite cheap roast is a chuck roast - but they are best cooked low and slow, like barbecue.
The problem is, cheaper roasts are tougher. They come from harder working muscles in the cow, and have more connective tissue. But, we can work around that. Cook the roast to no more than medium and slice it as thin as possible, and you have the makings of great sandwiches. Sure, it's not a ribeye, but it *is* big, beefy flavor for a lot less money.
My local grocery store has a sale on Certified Angus Beef eye of round roasts - $2.49 a pound, but I have to buy the entire 7.5 pound roast - so it is time to try it on the rotisserie.
This recipe is inspired by Baltimore pit beef sandwiches. 4I love that Boog Powell is famous for pit beef sandwiches at Boog's BBQ. I know him as a baseball slugger from the 70's - mainly because I had a baseball card of him, and loved his name. I can't think of a better name for a baseball slugger than "Boog." Thin sliced beef, piled high on a bun, and topped with sliced onions and prepared horseradish sauce. I cook it with a reverse sear, starting the roast out low and slow, then finishing with high heat to brown the outside. Enjoy!
Recipe: Rotisserie Eye of Round Roast, Baltimore Pit Beef Style
Equipment
- Grill (I love my jumbo Weber Summit gas grill)
- A drip pan to catch the drippings (I used an 11- x 13-inch aluminum foil pan)
- Instant Read thermometer (I love my Thermapen)
Description
Rotisserie Eye of Round Roast recipe, Baltimore Pit Beef Style. Thin sliced rotisserie beef roast, perfect for sandwiches.
- 7 pound eye of round roast
- 1 ½ tablespoons Diamond Crystal kosher salt (or 1 tablespoon fine sea salt)
- 2 teaspoons fresh ground black pepper
- 2 cups smoking wood chips (gas grill) or 2 fist-sized chunks wood (charcoal) - I used a mix of oak and hickory chips
Accompaniments (optional)
- Kaiser rolls
- Thin-sliced onions
- Prepared horseradish (or horseradish sauce)
- Dry brine the roast: The night before cooking, season the roast with the salt and pepper. Put the roast in a baking dish, using the bones as a rack to lift it off the bottom of the dish, and refrigerate overnight. One hour before cooking, remove the roast from the refrigerator. (Or, salt and pepper the roast right before trussing and spitting, below.)
- Set the grill for indirect medium-low heat: Set the grill up for rotisserie cooking at medium-low heat (300°F). For my Weber Summit, this means removing the grates, turning the two outer burners (burners 1 and burner 6 or the smoker burner) to medium, and leaving the infrared rotisserie burner off. Then I put my drip pan in the middle, over the unlit burners, and let the grill preheat for ten to fifteen minutes.
- Spit the roast: While the grill is preheating, truss and spit the roast. Tie a truss around the roast every two inches, pulling it into into a tight cylinder. Run the spit through the center of the roast, and secure the roast to the spit with the spit forks.
- Start the smoking wood: If you don't have a smoker box, on your grill, wrap the wood chips in an envelope of aluminum foil and poke a few holes in it for the smoke to escape. Put the wood chips in the smoker box (or put the foil envelope under the grill grate, directly on the burner cover over a lit burner.)
- Slow cook the roast: Put the spit on the rotisserie and start it spinning. We're cooking the roast until it reaches an internal temperature of 120°F for medium. (Cook to 100°F for rare, 110°F for medium-rare. I prefer my round roasts cooked to medium, pink all the way through.) This will take about 1 hour, but the time will vary - go by temperature, not by time. Check the temperature of the roast after 45 minutes of cooking (it should be about 90°F). At that point, start checking every five to ten minutes - you want to get as close to 120°F as you can without going over (I quit at 116°F - close enough). As soon as the roast reaches 120°F, turn the grill to indirect high heat. On my Summit, I turn the outer burners up to high, then light the infrared rotisserie burner and set it to high. Sear the roast on high heat until it is well browned on the outside, 10 to 15 minutes. The internal temperature should measure 130°F for medium. (115°F for rare, 120°F for medium-rare).
- Rest, carve and serve: Remove the spit from the grill. Be careful - the spit is rocket hot. Immediately remove the roast from the spit, transfer to a platter, and remove the twine. Cover the roast with foil and rest the roast for 15 minutes, then slice the roast as paper-thin as possible and serve.
- Prep Time: 30 minutes
- Cook Time: 1 hour 15 minutes
- Category: Rotisserie
- Cuisine: American
What do you think?
Questions? Other ideas? Leave them in the comments section below.
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My other Rotisserie Recipes
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