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10.1 Dry Heat Methods Introduction

Before You Come to Lab

Name: _________________________________

Watch “Ask the Meat Scientist: Beef Cuts Available in the Marketplace” posted on Canvas.

  1. Why is meat from the rib, short loin, and sirloin naturally tender?

 

 

Watch the short clip of Julia Child’s French Chef chicken video posted on Canvas.

  1. How is she going to prepare one of the chickens later in the video?

 

 

Watch “The Food Lab Breaks Down a Chicken” posted on Canvas.

  1. How long does it take him to cut up a chicken?

 

 

Dry Heat Methods for Tender Cuts of Meat

This lab will focus on dry heat methods used to prepare tender cuts of meat. Here are 5 dry-heat methods.

  • Roasting: to oven-cook food in an uncovered pan. The high heat browns the surface and seals in the juices.
  • Pan Frying: to cook meat in a sauté pan with added fat.
  • Pan Broiling: to cook meat in a sauté pan with minimal added fat, removing additional fat as it accumulates.
  • Broiling: cooking method using direct dry heat. The broiler pan with meat is set a short distance (2–5 inches) below the broiler heat, and the oven door is left slightly open.
  • Deep Fat Frying: to cook food in hot fat or oil deep enough so that the food is completely covered.

Degrees of Doneness by Temperature and Description

Degree of Doneness Temperature Sensory Observations of Steaks by Doneness
Medium rare 145°F Bright pink throughout the interior
Medium 160°F Pink center, gray toward edges
Medium Well 165°F Slightly pink center
Well Done 170°F Cooked throughout, gray, slightly drier

Minimum Internal Temperatures for Safe Consumption of Meat, Poultry, and Fish

Minimum Internal Temperature for Temperature
Whole muscle cuts of beef, veal, lamb, pork 145°F
Ground meat (beef, veal, lamb, pork) 160°F
Poultry 165°F
Fish 145°F, flaky

Wholesale and Retail Cuts Prepared in Lab

Wholesale Cuts Retail Cuts Observations of Raw Meat
Beef Short Loin Club, T-bone, Porterhouse Steaks
Beef Rib Rib Steak
Pork Loin Loin Chop, Rib Chop
Lamb Loin Loin Chop
Lamb Rib Rib Chop

Meat Terms

  • Loin muscle: Longissimus dorsi
  • Tenderloin muscle: Psoas major
  • Epimysium: Connective tissue around the muscle, acts like a rubber band and tightens as it is cooked if not cut. Cut perpendicular in a few places to cook a flat steak.
  • Marbling: Intramuscular fat, adds juiciness and flavor
  • Myoglobin: Meat pigment, related to hemoglobin
  • Oxymyoglobin: Myoglobin exposed to oxygen, bright red in color

License

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Food Preparation Lab Manual for FSHN 1150 Copyright © 2025 by Iowa State University Department of Food Science and Human Nutrition is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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