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Resting

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By Jeremiah Tower

Published 2002

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When meat and poultry are cooked in the oven (and, to a lesser extent, when they are spit-roasted or grilled) they tighten up, and if you slice into them as soon as they are finished cooking, the juices will flow out and the meat will be tough and taste dry as well.

Let the meat rest in a warm place for twenty to forty-five minutes so that the juices will be reabsorbed into the cells of the meat, keeping it moist and tender.

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