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Rib fail (no pics... didnt happen?)
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leeman13
Posts: 30
I hosted a big gathering at my place to serve "the best ribs ever" last week. I last cooked ribs on my Egg a year ago and they were sooook perfect fall-off-the-bone. Yesterday, they were just ok. My friends still said they were good and had seconds, and I guess as cooks we are our own worst critic, but I was pretty disappointed. There was a lot of meat sticking to the bone and just not as tender as usual. I needed a knife to cut them... in the past, my ribs were literally fall off the bone if you picked them up by the bone.
I did 3-2-1 about 215 F but after hour 4 the temp started to drop to 170 F and I had to re-light the fire. Also I crammed 8 big racks on a Large. Do you guys think that either of these is what did me in? Otherwise, I followed the same 3-2-1 process I had followed my previous times doing ribs so I'm a bit dumbfounded.
If the rule is "pics or it didn't happen" then I won't post pics. The egg'd jalapeño cornbread I made was amazing, but I forgot to take pics. :(
Thanks!
I did 3-2-1 about 215 F but after hour 4 the temp started to drop to 170 F and I had to re-light the fire. Also I crammed 8 big racks on a Large. Do you guys think that either of these is what did me in? Otherwise, I followed the same 3-2-1 process I had followed my previous times doing ribs so I'm a bit dumbfounded.
If the rule is "pics or it didn't happen" then I won't post pics. The egg'd jalapeño cornbread I made was amazing, but I forgot to take pics. :(
Thanks!
-lee.
LBGE in Waterloo, ON
LBGE in Waterloo, ON
Comments
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Did you cook BB's or spares? Spares take longer. If you want fall off the bone I would foil a bit longer. You can't always go by the strict time constraints. Every cut of meat is unique. The varied amounts of fat and connective tissues makes it a bit of an adventure. You really need to test the doneness to your liking. If you can pick them up and they don't brake in half, they are not fall off the bone. Good news is like the meat, people re all different. I like mine with a little tug. Sounds like they hit the mark with your guests. We are definitely our own toughest critics.
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Depending on how you "crammed" them, yes, it could have affected the cook time (e.g., if they were stacked one on another). You may have also created some air flow issues; may be why you had to relight.---------------------------------------------------------------------------------Well, "spa-Peggy" is kind of like spaghetti. I'm not sure what Peggy does different, if anything. But it's the one dish she's kind of made her own.____________________Aurora, Ontario, Canada
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Temp seems really low to me, even before you had fire issues.
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Legume said:Temp seems really low to me, even before you had fire issues.
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Sorry to hi-jack this post in a way but can someone explained 3-2-1 to me? I am new here and I have ribs on my radar. Thanks!LBGE- Charleston, SC
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ChucktownEggHead said:Sorry to hi-jack this post in a way but can someone explained 3-2-1 to me? I am new here and I have ribs on my radar. Thanks!---------------------------------------------------------------------------------Well, "spa-Peggy" is kind of like spaghetti. I'm not sure what Peggy does different, if anything. But it's the one dish she's kind of made her own.____________________Aurora, Ontario, Canada
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@TexanOfTheNorth thanks for the input. That makes perfect sense. What temp do you shoot for with the direct finishing? Also- what kind of ribs to you guys prefer?LBGE- Charleston, SC
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pgprescott said:Legume said:Temp seems really low to me, even before you had fire issues.
My egg can't hold that temp by itself without my Pitmaster IQ ... my egg's 'sweet' spot is right around 275.I've slow smoked and eaten so much pork, I'm legally recognized as being part swine - Chatsworth Ca. -
ChucktownEggHead said:@TexanOfTheNorth thanks for the input. That makes perfect sense. What temp do you shoot for with the direct finishing? Also- what kind of ribs to you guys prefer?
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------Well, "spa-Peggy" is kind of like spaghetti. I'm not sure what Peggy does different, if anything. But it's the one dish she's kind of made her own.____________________Aurora, Ontario, Canada -
Thanks, guys.
I have a large Napoleon rib rack: http://barbecuesgalore.ca/products/napoleon-rib-roast-rack ...it was quite crammed on this, so probably did lack a lot of air flow. I think the best, most fall-off-the-bone ones that came off were near the back so clearly there wasn't enough flow around the entire egg.
A fellow EGGer said 210-240 for ribs and I thought that's what I tried last year but maybe I'll go closer to 240 next time given others seem to be leaning that way... 275 seems too high for me. Maybe I'll invite less hungry people over to not have to try to fit so many ribs on it as well.
Another solution.... get the XL?
-lee.
LBGE in Waterloo, ON -
ChucktownEggHead said:@TexanOfTheNorth thanks for the input. That makes perfect sense. What temp do you shoot for with the direct finishing? Also- what kind of ribs to you guys prefer?
I like the spares because they're meatier. But watch for shiners if buying from a butcher shop or meat market
And FYI- 3-2-1 for spares. 2-2-1 for baby backsXL & MM BGE, 36" Blackstone - Newport News, VA -
I have done several racks of spares....all going 3-2-1 @225*.....all were fall off the bone
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I don't like spares. Always had success with 3-2-1 for baby backs. But I will definitely try hotter temps and expirment with 2-2-1 if it works for you, @johnnyp. I think air flow and losing the temp in the middle probably was the downfall for me this time.
Thanks for the support, everyone!!-lee.
LBGE in Waterloo, ON -
Airflow was not the issue. Temp and time were. If it's 215 it is 215 thru out the dome. Remember grate temp is lower them the dome temp gauge is reading, so if the gauge was reading 215 then the grate temp was closer to 200.1 XXL BGE, 1 LG BGE, 2 MED. BGE, 1 MINI BGE, 1 Peoria custom cooker Meat Monster.Clinton, Iowa
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I agree the temp was just too low. When the egg dropped to 170 you weren't really cooking any more...you were just "holding".
I find 250 dome is the sweet spot I can maintain for low and slow.Which came first the chicken or the egg? I egged the chicken and then I ate his leg. -
250 grate is where I go. Usually means around 275 dome. Also did you remove the membrane on back of ribs?Columbia, SC --- LBGE 2011 -- MINI BGE 2013
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