labdogs42
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Dec 2, 2005
- Messages
- 6,867
The cut of meat DOES matter. You need a TOUGH, fatty piece of meat like a chuck roast. Tough meat falls apart with long, slow, moist cooking methods. The low, slow heat dissolves the connective tissue and that's what makes the meat "fall apart". Other cuts don't have that connective tissue and long, slow cooking just makes them dry out. E.g. eye roast should be roasted dry and yields a more traditional "roast beef" that is sliced.
I brown my chuck roast in a little oil before throwing it in the crock pot (this step is probably unnecessary). I put the roast in the crock pot with a can of beef broth (or equivalent amount of water if I dont have a can of broth) and a packet of Lipton onion soup. Turn the crock pot on low all day (8 hours at least) and fest on dee-licious pot roast after work!
(BTW, I actually have my degree in Food Science. I took a whole semester long class on meat!)
Here's a website with a whole list of the cuts that are suitable for pot roast:
http://busycooks.about.com/od/howtocook/a/potroast101.htm
I brown my chuck roast in a little oil before throwing it in the crock pot (this step is probably unnecessary). I put the roast in the crock pot with a can of beef broth (or equivalent amount of water if I dont have a can of broth) and a packet of Lipton onion soup. Turn the crock pot on low all day (8 hours at least) and fest on dee-licious pot roast after work!
(BTW, I actually have my degree in Food Science. I took a whole semester long class on meat!)
Here's a website with a whole list of the cuts that are suitable for pot roast:
http://busycooks.about.com/od/howtocook/a/potroast101.htm