Tried my first hand at ribs this weekend. Used the following method:
1). Yellow Mustard and Dizzy Pig Rub
2). Indirect at 250 degrees (dome temp) for about 3 hours with Cherry Wood Chunks
3). Basted with BBQ Sauce, tented with cranberry juice (no apple juice), and cooked for 2 more hours
Well, some of the ribs were good and others weren't so good. I laid the rib halves out on the grid for the first 3 hours and they all barely fit. The ribs on the extreme sides of the grid got overcooked -- maybe too much direct heat from below? Not sure. But those three rib halves quite frankly were junk. The others were good. I wish the meat were a bit softer -- more of that fall-off-the bone feel. I guess i didn't cook them long enough for that.
So, just to confirm, the longer I cook ribs the more tender the meat should be - right? Before getting the egg, I used to make ribs that all my family loved. The recipe was easy. You rubbed down the ribs with olive oil, salt, pepper, wrap in foil, and cook at 300 in the over for 3 hours. Then you take them off and grill them with BBQ sauce for a short while. That method produced very tender meat which we all love in my house. This weekend produced a tougher meat than I would have liked. So, did I just need more time?
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0 • Off Topic Disagree Agree LikeThis is my process for baby back ribs:
-Season with raging river
-Stabilize egg at 250 (indirect set up)
-Add chips (usually a fruit wood for ribs)
-Put the ribs on and let em go for 4 hours before my 1st tenderness check
-I'm looking for the meat to start pulling back on the bone. If its not, I'll let em go for 30 more min and check. Once they pull back, I'll do the bend test.
-if the pass, I baste with bone suckn' sauce
-Pull them suckers off and start slicing em up!
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0 • Off Topic Disagree Agree LikeSome like the taste of foiled ribs and there are several different methods on various websites.
Bob
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0 • Off Topic Disagree Agree LikeThe last two times I've cooked ribs I've done the following I learned from the Slow Fire cookbook by Dr. BBQ.
1. Sprinkle with "Three Little Pigs" Touch of Cherry rub and let sit overnite.
2. Cooked bone side down for about 2 hours @ 235 F, flip the ribs and cook for an hour.
3. On two double thick sheets of heavy duty allumimun foil lay slab meat side up. Fold foil around ribs pressing out as much air as possible.
4. Return to cooker for 1 hour.
5. Take ribs out of foil and baste well on both side and cook another 30 minutes or until tender.
If I am cooking more the 2 racks of ribs I use a raised rack until time to baste. By that time the ribs have shrunk down enough to fit on the grill rack. Ribs come out tender and juicey.
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