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📘 Temperature strategy

Carryover cooking guide

How carryover heat changes the final result after food leaves the heat source.

Carryover heat explains many “it looked right and still overshot” outcomes. Larger cuts and hotter exteriors keep moving after they leave the heat.

Why carryover happens

The surface and outer layers keep pushing heat inward after the cut leaves the grill, oven, or pan.

  • Bigger cuts carry over more.
  • Hotter exteriors raise the final number further.
  • Rest timing is part of the cook, not a separate optional step.

How to use it

Pull earlier when the cut is large, dense, or running hot on the outside.

  • Check before the final target, not after.
  • Use a rest timer.
  • Slice only after the center settles.

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Frequently asked questions

What is carryover cooking?

It is the continued rise in temperature after food leaves the heat source.

When does it matter most?

It matters most on larger, thicker, and hotter-roasted cuts.

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