X=7 minutes for well done. Anyone who eats prime rib well done cannot be trusted and needs to burn in hell.
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LMFAO, let them eat chicken!
Looks delicious!
I never trust X minutes per pound. Meat thermometers are cheap and so useful.
Also, my Mother taught me the reverse sear method and that's my preferred cooking method for a prime rib.
I've done prime rib both ways and reverse sear (low cook temp, rest, 500 for 10 min to brown) resulted in a much less gray banding. My stepdad did 500*X min for years and it's still good, you just get more uniformly cooked meat with reverse sear.
That's the Kenji way. Dry brine reverse sear is how I do most meat these days. Smaller cuts get seared in a pan, roasts and prime rib get blasted under a preheated broiler as high as my oven will go. And yes, always use a thermometer.
That came out looking great. Thanks for doing a breakdown of everything you added to it.
Thank you and you're welcome!