Western Living Magazine
Home Tour: Inside a Bold, On-Budget Cabin on Wabamun Lake
WL Reader Survey 2026: Win Round-Trip Harbour Air Flights and More!
The Room: 3 Beautiful Home Offices Designed to Make Work Feel Calmer
6 Egg Recipes for Your Easter Brunch
Recipe: Mini Egg-Topped Cream Puffs
Vancouver Chef Vikram Vij’s Indian Chai Tiramisu (A Coffee-Free Twist on the Classic)
Cowichan Valley Travel Guide: Farms, Wineries and Food on Vancouver Island
5 Reasons to Visit Osoyoos This Spring
Tofino’s Floating Sauna Turned Me Into a Sauna Person
Spring 2026 Shopping List: Western Canada’s Best New Home Arrivals
The Hästens 2000T Is the Bed of All Beds
“Why Don’t Towels Stretch?” Herschel Co-Founder’s New Home Goods Brand Rethinks the Towel
WL Designers of the Year 2026: Meet the Industrial Design Judges
WL Designers of the Year 2026: Meet the Furniture Judges
WL Designers of the Year 2026: Meet the Interior Design Judges
Somewhere between the prime rib and the tenderloin sits the sweet spot of roasts.
Last week I had somewhere north of 150 tartan clad revellers over for Robbie Burns Day and I needed to feed them simply but with something that had a sense of occasion. Last year there was a deal on standing rib roasts (that’s the technical name for a prime rib) that spoke to my inner Scot and while the meat was great it had two problems:
There’s always a full tenderloin, and while I do love that on a sandwich, it’s simply too pricey for a large crowd. And that left the striploin roast. It’s a cut you don’t often see, although technically any place that sells individual striploins—which is pretty much everywhere—is them cutting from one. I bought mine at Costco, which always has them on hand and a 6 kilo roast—that’s a big chunk of meat and it was about $130. Not cheap, but in these days of the lower-priced cuts of beef getting more expensive (has anyone else gagged at the price of flank steak these days?) the high-end actually begins to make more sense.In terms of preparation, it couldn’t be more simple. No rubs and definitely no marinades. Salt, pepper and roast at 350 F until the interior temperature hits 120 F. I like to use a blowtorch on the outside before cooking to get some browning, but I’m a bit of a pyro. Take it out and let it sit for at least 15 minutes and then carve like you’re Henry VIII.
Are you over 18 years of age?
Get the latest headlines delivered to your inbox 3 times a week.