I had a friend who moved from Porterville California and he cooked Tri Tip all the time. Finally they moved to Kentucky and no one knew what it was. So he told the local butcher where he lived and they cut him a Tri Tip. He finally moved to Massachusetts and it was the same thing. Once he explained how to cut the Tri Tip when he went to the butcher shop they are now catching on.
Worked in West Texas for a while. Had to bring some over during rotations. Getting them to cut you some is like asking for a miracle. They live and die by their brisket. Couldn’t eat it after a while. Had to get my tri trip
Tri-tip is universally known on the lower central California coast and actually in most places on the west coast. I'm glad other states are finding out about what a wonderful cut of beef this is. Many ways to cook it but definitely try the Santa Maria way first if at all possible.
I’ve watched a dozen videos in the last day about smoking a tri tip, and this was by far the best one. Very educational with tri tip history and how to cut the grains and everything. I also never leave comments on videos so that should tell you how much I enjoyed this
Tri Tip, The greatest cut of meat a cow has ever created. ( please note I am not including A5 Wagyu) You make it look easier than I do. But hey there are a number of beers involved in my BBQs. Thank you sir, keep them coming.
Great video! My dad was a tri-tip master, but didn't pass on the magic. He did something that I've tried to duplicate without success. He used classic SM style garlic powder, black pepper and salt, in equal quantities. The thing I miss is that there would be about a 3mm-thick char on the outside. The inside would be perfect. The char was partly the rub and partly a thin layer of the meat. I'm assuming this was something he did early on, like a super hot sear. He used to cook for large outings for a club he was a member of, and could produce nearly identical results on open-air grills with the wheel, gas grills, weber kettles or even the crappy picnic grills that some picnic areas have. He wasn't the kind to keep things secret -- I just missed the chance to have him show me. When his cancer came back, we weren't really worrying about grilled meat products.
Sorry for your loss bud. As for the bark on the tri tip, you sear it early on with the flames covering the tip fat side up. Once you have the dark bark raise it all the way up so that the tip drips very slowly. If it drips too fast it’s too low and if it doesn’t drip it’s too high. I personally flip it every 15 minutes, about 4 flips and it should rach the proper temperature. Baste it with beer and butter and season it generously. Now this is just a baseline as to how to cook it. Tri tip takes a quite a few try’s to master it. That’s my take on it and enjoy.
I usually am not a massive fan of cooking videos like those, but yours are so lovely yo listen to, so clear, so simple and yet detailed enough, they're always a welcome treat
Thank you for the kind words. I'm working on posting more videos on a regular basis. My day job keeps me pretty busy but I'm trying to carve out the time. I really miss doing them. More to come!
I've always seared it first on the barbecue but you just showed me completely new way which I did on my first tri tip yesterday. Came out great. Thank you
I love Tri Tips but with most beef now the price has forced me to become a mostly chicken and pork kinda guy. Our Winco here in Oregon had Tr Tips on sale for 2.98 so I bought a bunch and they even had the fat cap on which was a bonus. Your's is one of the best instructional videos I have seen and had quite a few tricks that I am going to try. I dry cure for 3 days in the refrigerator which helps tenderize the meat. The Tri Tip is my favorite beef flavor so I am going to skip the sauce. Thanks
That tri-tip came out beautiful! I loved how you took the time to explain where the cut comes from on the cow, the history of the tri-tip and then the explanation of slicing and how the grain changes direction. That info on slicing was the best I've seen yet, very clearly shown. I have a nice tri-tip from my local butcher and I'm going to follow your method. LOL, my attack dog is always alert when I'm in the kitchen too. That last shot at the 9:20 mark is excellent! It's 6:30 AM here and my mouth is salivating... I'm so glad I've found you; I've subbed!!
Jacob I've destroyed every steak I ever attempted to grille EXCEPT the tri-tip that I followed your tutorial on. My goodness, perfection! And lo and behold I carved it up properly too (again, your tutorial was irreplaceable). Thank you! -
Your guard dog did a good job. I hope a reward was offered. Your videos give me a lot more confidence in cooking because you explain some of the background science details of whatever you are demonstrating, and that knowledge can be applied more broadly. Thanks Jacob!
Rubbed & then cooked immediately. I like the contrast of the salty crust versus the un-seasoned interior, but that's just a personal preference I've developed over time. Didn't spray it with anything during cooking.
Jacob Burton OK I didn’t waste time I just cooked this. I used a couple fist size chunks of Hickory. It tasted a lot like brisket but cheaper. This side dish was your famous roasted red potatoes!!! I’m getting laid tonight!! 🤘
Thanks for the BBQ techniques, I usually sous vide my tri-tip for 2hrs @132F & then pan sear w/cast iron skillet. Tri-tip is on sale at my local store, and I will be BBQ it. I still have not made up my mind about soucing it.
Learned a lot from this video especially on the grain of the meat. I am currently doing this method do not have a dual zone temp probe so Im wingin it just with my single prober
Great vid! You answered my questions completely as I'm grilling tri tip for the first time today. And good old Cooper there, just like my wolf-hound/lurcher mutt, Trixie - where would we be without our faithful grilling companions?
Whenever I cook a tri tip I feel so proud being from the area that it originated from. Moved to az and trips me out how hard it is to find a tri tip cut. Back home you could drown in tri tips. 9/10 times butchers will trim the hell out of cut gota have that fat cap
I NEVER leave comments but I had to after this. Awesome Video. I watch alot of different grilling, smoking, bbq, and cooking videos and this is by far the BEST! Thanks!!!
@@mordantly Most folks who cook these in the 805 insist on Santa Maria style cooking over oak wood in an open grill with adjustable grate heights. This reverse sear method is far from from what most 805'ers would recommend. They are missing out. I'm from Santa Barbara originally, now I live in Austin, TX. Have had the Santa Maria style, and the reverse sear style cooks. Reverse sear with fat cap totally removed beats the pants out of the SM method.
Enjoyed the video, especially how to cut the tri tip the proper way. One tip is exterior fat doesn't add flavor to this cut. I've cooked hundred of these and found that to be the case. Other than that great job.
I’ve been able to get Tri tips with fat cap on. I usually leave the fat cap on but score it down to the meat to help break up any silver skin under the fat cap and allow marinade to penetrate. For a Tri tip with fat cap do you do the slow cook fat side up or down and why? Also for final sear do u start with fat cap up or down or does it matter?
Definitely try removing the fat cap completely for this method. This allows you to get rub and smoke and crust on all sides of the roast. If it is a decent cut with good marbling, there is no need to keep that fat cap on the roast.
I don't know why but I really struggle getting my temp that low. I did what you said but it's been an hour and I'm still sitting at 275. The bottom vent has been 95% closed the whole time. Top vent 95% closed as well.
I've always struggled with my Weber keeping it low and slow as well. It's great for some things, but the Kamado is definitely a step up if you want to invest in perfect low and slow.
@Chris Ridgeway try using fewer coals in your chimney. Based on anecdotal evidence it looks like I get 7-8 degrees per coal, so when I cook this tomorrow I’ll use 28-30 lit coals (aiming for 225 degrees) and pour those on top of a “snake” charcoal chain.
Haven't jumped on that train quite yet mainly because old habits die hard and I've always been happy with my results. Plus, natural chunk can be so expensive for something you're just going to light on fire and burn anyways. :-)
I just enjoys your videos over and over again, I love the principle ( flavour+ technique)* execution ,also these equals to being in safe range of acceptance of great cook, the concept is so simplified, who could put these in math like this. Thank you for being so generous and honest😊
Every time i see this i wonder. . . when charcoal is starting to burn it puts out a nasty smoke because its not lit yet. Well this will create that smoke over and over. Does that not matter if it gets on the food?
The first smoke to appear will be whitish in color. Don't expose the meat to this. Wait until your fire source (charcoal, logs, pellets) produce a light and barely visible blue smoke. That's what you're looking for.
I like cooking my tri-tip in a smoker pit. With a firebox off to the side of the pit. I smoke mine till it reaches at least 150. I can't do the 130. Too bloody for me. I like to be able to see a smoke ring around my cuts of meat almost like a brisket so I know it's infused with smoke. But that's me.
MOOOOO, MOOOOO for Medium 🐮! Different strokes for different folks. I love offset smokers; so much better flavor than a direct fired chamber like the one I'm using in the video. Thanks for watching!
You can still follow the exact same process. The gas grill is much easier to control temperature on. Get yourself a little smoke box and some wood chips if you want to add in the smoke flavor.
Too many rules, thermometers, steps. Must be an engineer. I just cooked a tip this eve. Don't use brickettes (tourists), use wood. Do put coals to one side, do cook the meat high and turn about 5-7 minutes then poke the meat to figure out how rare you want it (method chef's use) If you cook past medium rare then sadly u are a tourist.
I had a friend who moved from Porterville California and he cooked Tri Tip all the time. Finally they moved to Kentucky and no one knew what it was. So he told the local butcher where he lived and they cut him a Tri Tip. He finally moved to Massachusetts and it was the same thing. Once he explained how to cut the Tri Tip when he went to the butcher shop they are now catching on.
IM from Porterville ca haha tri tip is the best.. thanks for shouting out the town!
Haha yeah I've had all my family from Missouri and Tennessee trip the hell out when I said I was gonna bbq tri tip
Worked in West Texas for a while. Had to bring some over during rotations. Getting them to cut you some is like asking for a miracle. They live and die by their brisket. Couldn’t eat it after a while. Had to get my tri trip
Tri-tip is universally known on the lower central California coast and actually in most places on the west coast. I'm glad other states are finding out about what a wonderful cut of beef this is. Many ways to cook it but definitely try the Santa Maria way first if at all possible.
Yessssss I’m from Santa Maria Cal. Thanks for shouting out my hometown. Love love out tri- tip
I’ve watched a dozen videos in the last day about smoking a tri tip, and this was by far the best one. Very educational with tri tip history and how to cut the grains and everything. I also never leave comments on videos so that should tell you how much I enjoyed this
Tri Tip, The greatest cut of meat a cow has ever created. ( please note I am not including A5 Wagyu)
You make it look easier than I do. But hey there are a number of beers involved in my BBQs.
Thank you sir, keep them coming.
It’s not a bbq without a brew! Cheers 🍻
Great video! My dad was a tri-tip master, but didn't pass on the magic. He did something that I've tried to duplicate without success. He used classic SM style garlic powder, black pepper and salt, in equal quantities.
The thing I miss is that there would be about a 3mm-thick char on the outside. The inside would be perfect.
The char was partly the rub and partly a thin layer of the meat. I'm assuming this was something he did early on, like a super hot sear.
He used to cook for large outings for a club he was a member of, and could produce nearly identical results on open-air grills with the wheel, gas grills, weber kettles or even the crappy picnic grills that some picnic areas have.
He wasn't the kind to keep things secret -- I just missed the chance to have him show me. When his cancer came back, we weren't really worrying about grilled meat products.
Sorry for your loss bud. As for the bark on the tri tip, you sear it early on with the flames covering the tip fat side up. Once you have the dark bark raise it all the way up so that the tip drips very slowly. If it drips too fast it’s too low and if it doesn’t drip it’s too high. I personally flip it every 15 minutes, about 4 flips and it should rach the proper temperature. Baste it with beer and butter and season it generously. Now this is just a baseline as to how to cook it. Tri tip takes a quite a few try’s to master it. That’s my take on it and enjoy.
I usually am not a massive fan of cooking videos like those, but yours are so lovely yo listen to, so clear, so simple and yet detailed enough, they're always a welcome treat
Wish you were posting more often stuff. Beautiful results, perfect explanation.
Thank you for the kind words. I'm working on posting more videos on a regular basis. My day job keeps me pretty busy but I'm trying to carve out the time. I really miss doing them. More to come!
I've always seared it first on the barbecue but you just showed me completely new way which I did on my first tri tip yesterday. Came out great. Thank you
The history / origins part was really great too, thx!
I live an hour away from Santa Maria
Thumbs up to Cooper guarding against the beef ninjas! LIRL Great explanation on your technique. Thank you.
I love Tri Tips but with most beef now the price has forced me to become a mostly chicken and pork kinda guy. Our Winco here in Oregon had Tr Tips on sale for 2.98 so I bought a bunch and they even had the fat cap on which was a bonus. Your's is one of the best instructional videos I have seen and had quite a few tricks that I am going to try. I dry cure for 3 days in the refrigerator which helps tenderize the meat. The Tri Tip is my favorite beef flavor so I am going to skip the sauce. Thanks
One of the COOLEST videos I have EVER seen!!! I just learned about cutting against the grain which I always had issues with!
THANK YOU! 🍖
That tri-tip came out beautiful! I loved how you took the time to explain where the cut comes from on the cow, the history of the tri-tip and then the explanation of slicing and how the grain changes direction. That info on slicing was the best I've seen yet, very clearly shown. I have a nice tri-tip from my local butcher and I'm going to follow your method. LOL, my attack dog is always alert when I'm in the kitchen too. That last shot at the 9:20 mark is excellent! It's 6:30 AM here and my mouth is salivating... I'm so glad I've found you; I've subbed!!
Love how the dog is just staring at the steak from the background
Jacob I've destroyed every steak I ever attempted to grille EXCEPT the tri-tip that I followed your tutorial on. My goodness, perfection! And lo and behold I carved it up properly too (again, your tutorial was irreplaceable). Thank you! -
This is a great video on cooking tri tip. And you perfectly explained correctly slicing tri tip. Way to go Jacob.
Great job holding guard, Cooper👍🏻
Your guard dog did a good job. I hope a reward was offered. Your videos give me a lot more confidence in cooking because you explain some of the background science details of whatever you are demonstrating, and that knowledge can be applied more broadly. Thanks Jacob!
Thanks John, glad you are enjoying the videos. And yes ... Cooper always gets a taste as a reward for his vigilance!
I lived in Santa Maria for 14 years man I must say the BBQ was the best!!!!! In high school i even made my own Santa Maria style bbq
This was an amazing video, thanks bro 👍
Thank you! I just tried this last night. Delish!
Highest quality cooking videos on You Tube period!!
Thank you! Glad you're enjoying them.
Questions: 1. How long did you leave that rub on? 2. Did you spray it with anything when it was smoking?
Rubbed & then cooked immediately. I like the contrast of the salty crust versus the un-seasoned interior, but that's just a personal preference I've developed over time. Didn't spray it with anything during cooking.
Jacob Burton OK I didn’t waste time I just cooked this. I used a couple fist size chunks of Hickory. It tasted a lot like brisket but cheaper. This side dish was your famous roasted red potatoes!!! I’m getting laid tonight!! 🤘
@@passionforguns HAHA! That sounds like an awesome dinner! Glad it worked out well for you!
Finally someone who can explain grilling with science.
Don't forget the Santa Maria Tri Tip bounce, the tri tip is ready when it bounces.
Great job. I will use your technique this weekend.
Loved the history! I’ll be doing it tomorrow! Thank you! Mmm mmmm good!
Thanks for the BBQ techniques, I usually sous vide my tri-tip for 2hrs @132F & then pan sear w/cast iron skillet. Tri-tip is on sale at my local store, and I will be BBQ it. I still have not made up my mind about soucing it.
chef de cusine , recent grad of culinary school, love the way u teach sir, thanks for sharing.
Syed Ahmed thank you. Best of luck to you in your career. Glad you’re enjoying the channel.
Fantastic video! Subbed.
repped for the frozen tri tip. Showing real stuff!
Thanks for adding the carving tip!!😷👍
AESOME video! Thank you for the great info!
Learned a lot from this video especially on the grain of the meat. I am currently doing this method do not have a dual zone temp probe so Im wingin it just with my single prober
Nice work
Great video man! I really liked the history and info on the cuts….by the way u tried this method and everyone loved it!
If you get a tri tip with the cap, do you cook with the cap on top or bottom when slow cooking and searing. Thanks Jake
Well explained here.
Great vid! You answered my questions completely as I'm grilling tri tip for the first time today. And good old Cooper there, just like my wolf-hound/lurcher mutt, Trixie - where would we be without our faithful grilling companions?
Whenever I cook a tri tip I feel so proud being from the area that it originated from. Moved to az and trips me out how hard it is to find a tri tip cut. Back home you could drown in tri tips. 9/10 times butchers will trim the hell out of cut gota have that fat cap
Just perfect
That seriously looks incredible ❤️❤️❤️
Very nice. Well done Sir. Love your vids btw. Your glazed rib recipe was unbelievable good.
Awesome. Thanks for watching.
I NEVER leave comments but I had to after this. Awesome Video. I watch alot of different grilling, smoking, bbq, and cooking videos and this is by far the BEST! Thanks!!!
Thanks for the comment Greg. Glad you enjoyed it!
Great video
The optimal internal temp is 140, producing the best flavor and chew.
Excellent video!!
Great video, good content. Cooking my first tri tip today
Great video!
Welcome back Jacob! I've missed you.
It's great to be back. I've really missed making videos!
Real good video. Thank you. Especially like the carving portion but wish you finished the entire cut.
Welcome back! Amazing!
Thanks! Great to be back!
Thanks I am going to try it. It looks so great and enjoy it with the family . Thanks
amazing video
friend
say thanks to a lot for your video it helps a whole lot.
Nice. Thanks.
I cook alot of tri tip on cinco de mayo for tacos and 🌯
805 representing! Interesting how our local bbq methods are so nationally known.
Great food has a tendency to travel! :-)
Yes sir chef! Not many things can top a bbq'd rare tri tip and some fresh from the taproom Firestone beer.
@@mordantly Most folks who cook these in the 805 insist on Santa Maria style cooking over oak wood in an open grill with adjustable grate heights. This reverse sear method is far from from what most 805'ers would recommend. They are missing out. I'm from Santa Barbara originally, now I live in Austin, TX. Have had the Santa Maria style, and the reverse sear style cooks. Reverse sear with fat cap totally removed beats the pants out of the SM method.
Great looking tri-tip. Potentially question. You don't put meat on until grill is up to temp right?
Everything looked great! However on the sear the fewer turns the better. If you can do just 2 turns it ends up more juicy imo.
Enjoyed the video, especially how to cut the tri tip the proper way. One tip is exterior fat doesn't add flavor to this cut. I've cooked hundred of these and found that to be the case. Other than that great job.
Chief Jacob, any plans in the future to bring back your masterclasses.
Nothing solid. Would love to do it eventually though. Biggest problem is I don't have a kitchen to do it in.
@@JacobBurton Hope to see it happen!
How long did the sear take .
I’ve been able to get Tri tips with fat cap on. I usually leave the fat cap on but score it down to the meat to help break up any silver skin under the fat cap and allow marinade to penetrate. For a Tri tip with fat cap do you do the slow cook fat side up or down and why? Also for final sear do u start with fat cap up or down or does it matter?
Definitely try removing the fat cap completely for this method. This allows you to get rub and smoke and crust on all sides of the roast. If it is a decent cut with good marbling, there is no need to keep that fat cap on the roast.
Starving here!
I don't have a meat thermometer, is there a total of minutes on how long you can cook it if i don't have all the equipment?
What make model is your temp gauge?
Its slightly undercooked but still good
I don't know why but I really struggle getting my temp that low. I did what you said but it's been an hour and I'm still sitting at 275. The bottom vent has been 95% closed the whole time. Top vent 95% closed as well.
I've always struggled with my Weber keeping it low and slow as well. It's great for some things, but the Kamado is definitely a step up if you want to invest in perfect low and slow.
@Chris Ridgeway try using fewer coals in your chimney. Based on anecdotal evidence it looks like I get 7-8 degrees per coal, so when I cook this tomorrow I’ll use 28-30 lit coals (aiming for 225 degrees) and pour those on top of a “snake” charcoal chain.
Surprised to see you use briquettes, figured you'd be a natural chunk charcoal guy.
Haven't jumped on that train quite yet mainly because old habits die hard and I've always been happy with my results. Plus, natural chunk can be so expensive for something you're just going to light on fire and burn anyways. :-)
Thank you
I just enjoys your videos over and over again, I love the principle ( flavour+ technique)* execution ,also these equals to being in safe range of acceptance of great cook, the concept is so simplified, who could put these in math like this. Thank you for being so generous and honest😊
Every time i see this i wonder. . . when charcoal is starting to burn it puts out a nasty smoke because its not lit yet. Well this will create that smoke over and over. Does that not matter if it gets on the food?
The first smoke to appear will be whitish in color. Don't expose the meat to this. Wait until your fire source (charcoal, logs, pellets) produce a light and barely visible blue smoke. That's what you're looking for.
@@rickalexander2801 - Yeah but when this method is setup it looks like it just burns exposed to everything
I like cooking my tri-tip in a smoker pit. With a firebox off to the side of the pit. I smoke mine till it reaches at least 150. I can't do the 130. Too bloody for me. I like to be able to see a smoke ring around my cuts of meat almost like a brisket so I know it's infused with smoke. But that's me.
MOOOOO, MOOOOO for Medium 🐮! Different strokes for different folks. I love offset smokers; so much better flavor than a direct fired chamber like the one I'm using in the video. Thanks for watching!
This is a very good video unfortunately I have a gas grill!
You can still follow the exact same process. The gas grill is much easier to control temperature on. Get yourself a little smoke box and some wood chips if you want to add in the smoke flavor.
@@JacobBurton I appreciate that, but I just found another video that was using a gas grill!
I didn't catch how long you cook it
Did you put ketchup on that puppy.
うまそう!🤤🤤🤤🤤🤤
Beef ninja took my tri tip :(
To each their own, but to see the sauce go on just made me shiver and cringe
Me too, especially on tri tip
Bbq sauce on a tritip? 🤣🤣 ive seen it all now
Putting BBQ sauce on a Tri-Tip is sacrilegious. Kosher salt, coarse ground pepper, and garlic powder.
Informative. Could have done without the product placement. You are dangerously close to being an info commercial.
River River no product placement. Paid full price for everything in the video. Just showing the different tools I use. Glad you found it informative.
Sorry. Now I feel like an ass. I was in a hurry earlier working on dinner. It’s a good video, nice to have context.
River River no worries. Again, glad you enjoyed it. 😁
LOST ME AT BBQ SAUCE
Too many rules, thermometers, steps. Must be an engineer. I just cooked a tip this eve. Don't use brickettes (tourists), use wood. Do put coals to one side, do cook the meat high and turn about 5-7 minutes then poke the meat to figure out how rare you want it (method chef's use)
If you cook past medium rare then sadly u are a tourist.
Beef theif 😂
When will people learn...history lesson,,,,,don’t care....3 minute video tops, lost it.
I believe you can get your ass kicked out here [santa barbara county] for putting ANY kind of bbq sauce on your tritip.
So I've been told...
GREAT VIDEO!