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Prime Rib with Garlic Herb Butter

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Prime Rib with Garlic Herb Butter (Tasty)

Total Time: ~ 2 hr 50 min
Active Prep Time: ~ 15 min
Servings: ~ 7

Ingredients

  • 1 cup (≈ 230 g) softened butter
  • 7 cloves garlic, minced
  • 2 tablespoons fresh rosemary, finely chopped
  • 2 tablespoons fresh thyme, finely chopped
  • 2 tablespoons salt
  • 1 tablespoon black pepper
  • 5 lb boneless ribeye roast (~ 2.2 kg), trimmed
  • 2 tablespoons flour
  • 2 cups beef stock (≈ 475 mL)
  • (Optional sides) mashed potatoes, green beans, etc.

Instructions

1. Preheat & Prepare

  • Preheat your oven to 500 °F (260 °C).
  • In a bowl, mix together butter, garlic, rosemary, thyme, salt, and pepper until well combined. This is your garlic-herb butter.
  • Rub that butter mixture all over the rib roast—covering all surfaces.

2. Roast – First Phase

  • Place the roast on a rack in a roasting tray (so air can circulate).
  • Roast for 5 minutes per pound (i.e. ~ 10 min per kg). For a 5‑lb roast, that’s ~ 25 minutes.

3. Let it Rest in the Oven

  • After that initial roast, turn off the oven (i.e. you don’t continue heating).
  • Do not open the oven door. Let the roast sit inside, using the residual heat, for 2 hours.
  • During this time, the roast will continue cooking slowly, gently, from the existing heat.

4. Make the Pan Sauce / Gravy

  • Remove the roast from the pan, and pour out the pan drippings into a saucepan over medium heat.
  • Add the flour, whisking well to avoid lumps.
  • Gradually add the beef stock, stirring. Bring the sauce to a boil and cook until thickened.
  • Optionally strain it into a gravy dish.

5. Carve & Serve

  • Carve the roast into ¾‑inch (≈ 20 mm) thick slices.
  • Serve with the pan sauce (gravy), and your choice of sides (e.g. mashed potatoes, green beans).

Tips, Notes & Adjustments

  • Because ovens differ, use a meat thermometer to check doneness. For medium-rare, aim for 120‑125 °F (≈ 49‑52 °C) internal before resting.
  • When the roast rests, its internal temperature will carry over (rise a bit).
  • If your roast is larger or smaller, scale the butter & herbs proportionally.
  • Make sure your roast is at room temperature before you begin rubbing and roasting, so it cooks more evenly.
  • Don’t open the oven during the 2-hour resting phase — letting the heat escape will spoil the slow‑cooking effect.
  • If you want a crispier crust, you might sear it or raise oven temp again briefly at end (some recipes do that). (Other Tasty version: roast low first, then blast at high temp to crisp)

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