Dinner Meat Dishes Beef Main Course Prime Rib Salt-and-Pepper-Crusted Prime Rib with Sage Jus 5.0 (1,102) Add your rating & review "The great thing about doing a whole rib roast is that you don't have to concentrate," Michael Mina says. "Season it right with salt and pepper, put it in the oven and then you can focus on all the dishes that go along with it." By Michael Mina Michael Mina F&W Star Chef » See All F&W Chef Superstars Restaurants: Michael Mina (San Francisco and Las Vegas); Bourbon Steak (Scottsdale, AZ; Washington, DC; Miami; San Francisco); Arcadia (San Jose, CA); Pabu and Wit & Wisdom (Baltimore, MD); American Fish, Nobhill Tavern, Pub 1842, Stripsteak (Las Vegas); The Handle Bar (Jackson Hole, WY); Stonehill Tavern (Dana Point, CA); RN74 (San Francisco and Seattle); The Clock Bar (San Francisco) Experience: Aureole, Aqua (New York City) Education: Culinary Institute of America (Hyde Park, NY) Surf-and-turf titan Michael Mina, raised among the dairy farms and sheep pastures of rural Washington state, tends to an empire of 19 restaurant and lounge concepts from Vegas to Baltimore. His Mina Group was cofounded with tennis champ Andre Agassi. He has cooked for three US presidents, written one eponymous cookbook and founded Cook Taste Eat—a digital media firm that produces culinary video content. The chef talked with Food & Wine about mysterious spice blends and dirt bikes. What dish are you most famous for? Probably my lobster potpie. It’s a two-pound lobster that is done in a brandy cream sauce with a little bit of truffle when they are in season. It all goes into a pot with puff pastry over the top, and then it’s baked in the oven. Then we bring it into the dining room and carve it at the table. It’s very theatrical and it releases a lot of aroma in the room. What two dishes really tell us your story as a chef? My tuna tartare exemplifies my approach: a balance of acidity, sweetness and richness, and an emphasis on global ingredients. This dish is made with tuna, pears, pine nuts, Scotch bonnet peppers and sesame oil, so it really has that global sensibility. The restaurant Michael Mina has always been known for its trios: taking one main product and doing three variations on it. The striped bass trio we do at Michael Mina at the Bellagio is particularly good. It’s tapioca-crusted fish served with three accompaniments: forbidden rice and a citrus reduction; basmati rice with curry and dried fruits; and a crispy rice cake with a dashi jus. Who are your food mentors? What are the most important things you learned from them? I have a few mentors. Gerry Hayden taught me about pastry and how it connected to savory food. I learned a lot about balancing flavors from him. Then George Morrone taught me how to really understand and cook for the guests. He told me that you need to learn how to wow people in different ways. You might wow one guy by showing him the time that you put into cooking a steak. You’ll wow someone else with four different preparations of the same animal. But the point is to wow them all, as much as you can. And then of course Charlie Palmer. He taught me about how to have presence as a chef, and opened my eyes to the notion of design in a restaurant. As a guest, you don’t just keep your eyes on your plate. There’s more to a great restaurant than that. What was the first dish you ever cooked yourself? My father used to go get us salmon at the markets in Seattle, and my mom would cook it forever. You’d need a hammer and a chisel to eat it. One time we were cooking salmon, and she asked me to check on it. When I took it out a piece of fish flaked off that hadn’t been cooked all the way through yet. I ate it, and I thought “Oh, God. This is really good!” I served it like that with lemon and rice. Everybody loved it except my dad—he said it was undercooked. What is one cooking technique that everyone should know? People need to learn how to taste. You watch people cook at home, and they’re so panicked. They’re not tasting and they don’t know what they’re tasting for. Let’s say you’re supposed to squeeze a lemon into something. Well, depending on what time of year it is, and what type of lemon it is, the citrus will have a completely different acid-to-sweet ratio. You need to check in with your food as you go or there’s no way you’ll ever become a great cook. Is there a culinary skill or type of dish that you wish you were better at? I would love to be able to cut fish like Masa Takayama. I’ve sat there and watched him cut the sinew out of the toro perfectly. It’s mind-blowing, because when you watch it you actually can convince yourself that you can grab a knife and do it too. I would love to have that skill in my repertoire. Name one indispensable store-bought ingredient. Rao’s tomato sauce is very good for a jarred product, and they have a lot of different flavors. I’ll get the marinara and then doctor it, depending on what I’m using it for—from red sauce for meatballs to a cioppino base. You’re planning a budget-friendly food trip—where would you go and why? I would say Peru. Peruvian food is right up my alley—fresh, with high acid, sweetness and spice—and it’s very affordable. What is the most cherished souvenir you’ve brought back from a trip? I bought a spice mix from a guy in a Lebanese market. I couldn’t tell you what was in it, there were probably 60 ingredients in there. I brought back six pounds of it and when I ran out I tried for three years to get in contact with him to get it again. I even took it to Le Sanctuaire, which is a big spice company out here, to try to get them to replicate it. If you were going to take Mario Batali out to eat, where would you bring him? In San Francisco, I would take him to Aziza from Mourad Lahlou, a really terrific Moroccan chef. He blows your mind because his food is so refined, very artful and executed with great technique, but it still has the soul of his country coming through. What is your favorite cookbook of all time? I would have to say El Bulli: 1998–2002. Flipping through those pages is so powerful, and in a strange way that book dated all food that came before it. It’s one of those books where you pick it up and four hours later you haven’t even gotten through 40 pages. What are your talents besides cooking? I love motocross, both two-wheelers and four-wheelers. I live out in the country and there are tons of trails and tracks, it’s very cool. You have to be extremely focused to ride dirt bikes. I have a two-wheel Honda CR250 that I love. It’s light but extremely powerful. I’m a big guy, and I can really throw it around. Who are some of your favorite people to follow on Twitter? I follow José Andrés, he’s funny and all over the map. I follow Michael Chiarello and François Payard too. I’m really into sports and the 49ers, so I follow a lot of players like Vernon Davis and Patrick Willis. And I follow Rihanna. She’s amusing as hell. Food & Wine's Editorial Guidelines Updated on January 15, 2020 Save Rate PRINT Share Close Photo: © Frances Janisch Active Time: 45 mins Total Time: 4 hrs Yield: 10 Cook Mode (Keep screen awake) Ingredients One 14-pound prime rib bone-in roast, tied Kosher salt and freshly ground pepper 20 large sage sprigs 20 large thyme sprigs 8 bay leaves 8 shallots, peeled and halved 1 head garlic, cloves crushed, plus 4 cloves thinly sliced 2 cups water 1 onion, thinly sliced 3 tablespoons freshly cracked black peppercorns 1 cup dry red wine 5 cups beef stock or low-sodium broth 2 tablespoons all-purpose flour Directions Preheat the oven to 400°. Set the meat in a large roasting pan, fat side up. Season the meat generously with salt and pepper. Around the roast, scatter 10 sprigs each of sage and thyme, 6 of the bay leaves, the shallots and the crushed garlic cloves. Pour in 1 cup of the water and roast for 45 minutes. Reduce the temperature to 275°. Roast the meat for about 2 hours and 15 minutes longer, adding the remaining 1 cup of water to the pan as the juices evaporate. The roast is done when an instant-read thermometer inserted in the thickest part registers 135°. Transfer the roast to a large carving board. Pour the fat in the roasting pan into a large heatproof bowl, stopping when you reach the syrupy pan juices at the bottom. Pour the pan juices into a small bowl and discard the vegetables and herbs. Set the pan over 2 burners and add 2 tablespoons of the reserved fat. Add the onion, peppercorns and the sliced garlic, remaining 2 bay leaves and 10 sprigs each of sage and thyme. Cook over moderate heat until the onion is softened, about 8 minutes. Add the wine and cook, scraping up any bits stuck to the bottom and sides of the pan. Pour the mixture into a medium saucepan and bring to a boil over high heat. Add the beef stock and pan juices and cook over moderate heat until slightly reduced, about 15 minutes. In a small bowl, whisk the flour with 2 tablespoons of the reserved fat. Whisk the paste into the saucepan and simmer the gravy until thickened, about 5 minutes. Strain the gravy through a fine sieve and keep warm until ready to serve. Cut the bones off the roast and slice the meat 1/2 inch thick. Cut in between the bones and serve them on the side. Pass the gravy at the table. Suggested Pairing This juicy prime rib roast needs a powerfully structured but fruit-driven red, such as a Napa Valley Cabernet Sauvignon. Originally appeared: December 2005 Rate It Print