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📘 Temperature strategy

Lamb & Game Pull Temperature guide

Pull Temperature advice for lamb & game with attention to doneness, carryover, and measurement accuracy.

Pull Temperature for lamb & game works best when you treat the thermometer reading as part of a complete process, not the only variable.

Best use case

This profile is useful when lamb & game can overshoot, rest unevenly, or cook faster at the surface than in the center.

  • Pull temperature matters because carryover heat keeps cooking the food after it leaves the heat source.
  • Larger cuts rise more after cooking than thin pieces do.
  • Resting and tenting decisions change how much carryover you actually get.

What changes results

Cut size, thickness, and heat source all change how closely the number matches the final finish.

  • Thicker cuts carry over more.
  • Direct heat increases overshoot risk.
  • Rest timing is part of accuracy, not optional.

Relevant categories

Frequently asked questions

How should you use pull temperature for lamb & game?

Use it together with correct probe placement and a realistic rest plan.

What is the common miss?

Most misses come from checking the wrong spot or waiting too long after the target is already reached.

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