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Never done Ribs---Tips needed
tclamberth
Posts: 162
bought 2 slabs of baby backs
going to use bad byrons as the rub.
cook temp?
should you foil?
any help appreciated. Haven't been steered wrong here yet
going to use bad byrons as the rub.
cook temp?
should you foil?
any help appreciated. Haven't been steered wrong here yet
Memphis raised me, T-Town made me...Aint never been nothing but a winner
Comments
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Salt, Pepper, 3-4 hours at 275 would be a nice way to prepare your first rack.
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My tip is you should really do some ribs.
You will get a thousand answers and they will all be right/wrong depending on who you ask.
I would do a forum search and pick two or three and try them at the same time and see what you like. Foil, leave on, different rubs. Then you can cut them up into smaller segments and let people try them and see what they like best.
Save yourself half a dozen cooks finding out what the family likes."Brought to you by bourbon, bacon, and a series of questionable life decisions."
South of Nashville, TN
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I got a cyber q...would you place a probe in between two rips ?derka123 said:Salt, Pepper, 3-4 hours at 275 would be a nice way to prepare your first rack.Memphis raised me, T-Town made me...Aint never been nothing but a winner -
I hate it when I go to the kitchen for food and all I find are ingredients!
MichaelCentral Connecticut -
All in with eggsperiment as mentioned above. Successful rib outcomes are quite consumer dependent so change it up til you find what works. I am a big proponent of the toothpick test for the finish-and the only way to go if you cut the racks. Insert into the thick rib meat-no resistance and you are there.
Never have run with a controller or whatever pedigree you would assign to a cyber-q so no help there. FWIW-
My simple definitions of rib cooks:- All rib cooks are some variation around X-0-0 which translates into the following: Basically ribs are cooked as usual (bone side down for me) for the first X hours. Then they are removed from the cooker and wrapped with liquid (Q sauce, some other liquid for flavoring etc) in a foil pouch with the meat side down. This becomes step -0- mentioned above. The sealed ribs are then returned to the cooker. At the end of the "0" time-frame, the ribs are removed from the foil and then put back on the BGE for the final "0" time-frame. This is when sauce is added if your desire. X-X-X defines the cook cycle.
Louisville; Rolling smoke in the neighbourhood. Life is too short for light/lite beer! Seems I'm livin in a transitional period. CHEETO (aka Agent Orange) makes Nixon look like a saint. -
Don't overthink it. First thing I ever cooked on the egg was ribs, without the forum (but I had google) and they were freakin awesome.Upstate SC
Large BGE, Blackstone, Weber genesis , Weber charcoal classic -
Looks awesome. ThanksCarolina Q said:Memphis raised me, T-Town made me...Aint never been nothing but a winner -
Ribs cook fine anywhere between 225 and 350, dome. Lower end may take like forever, 7 -8 hours. At 350, maybe 2.5 hours, but maybe some burnt surface. I aim at 275. For BBs, I expect 5 hrs, but sometimes 4 is enough.
I go with the bend test. I do use a Thermapen to test the meat temp when I think the slab(s) are getting close. But the final determination is when the slab folds almost in half when picked up in the middle. Or the bones start to draw out from the meat with a gentle tug. Or a finger pinch will take away a bite of tasty.
The ribs can be pretty good if a little under done. The meat will be tender, but some shreds will cling to the bone. But best is when the bones are left clean, quite dry, and the meat comes away clean w. the fat crisp, not burnt.
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6-7 hrs at 220. No need to probe, juat watch for when ribs peel back from bone..nothing magic with dry rub, peel membrane from underside
Drip oan with some beer
Brush with sauce 30 mins before pulling them off -
You have already rec'd a lot of good advice, but here's one more suggestion. My wife is a salt-aholic yet even she found Bad Bryons pretty salty. So for your first ribs you might want to leave that BB in the cupboard and just use normal table salt as people advised. Let the taste of the ribs stand on their own legs - or ribs that is! You can always salt to taste on the table. Good luck!Re-gasketing the USA one yard at a time
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forget your temp probes and your thermapens and all that crap.
ribs are for the purist and a feel cook..
shoot for 250-300.. 325 if needing shorter cook.. rub how you like.. wood how you like.. apple, hickory, pecan, oak, cherry, bourbon, wine, maple, peach, it's all good..
uncovered, smoking, till you like the color and bark.. if you want them fall off the bone after roughly 2-3 hours, then wrap them in foil. add moisture, and fat and flavor.. butter, sugar, beer, juice.. whatever.
if you like comp style, pull from bone but a bite, don't wrap.. cook till they can pick up and bend, and almost break in half at the tongs, and crack on the bark.
if you like sauce, remove the stone/platesetter.. sauce up.. direct heat to carmelize the sauce.
dont over think, be flexible like the ribs should be.-FATC1TY
Grillin' and Brewing in Atlanta
LBGE
MiniMax -
Went on about 4 hours ago. Just put the sauce on and threw back on for 30 mins Memphis raised me, T-Town made me...Aint never been nothing but a winner -
I call them done when the bones poke out about 1/2 to 3/4 of an inch
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Looks like I am late to the party but membrane being pulled is a must for me. Desired doneness depends on who is eating. Competition ribs require a little more bite than what I do at home. I tend to go 4 hours with rub only and 30 mins to an hour with sauce depending on how done they are. I shoot for 250 but am fine with anything below 300 usuallyColumbia, SC --- LBGE 2011 -- MINI BGE 2013
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Haven't really pulled back from the bones at all. Meat is very tender but I guess I'll let it roll a little longer
Memphis raised me, T-Town made me...Aint never been nothing but a winner -
i started in the 3-2-1 club where the 2 hours is in foil and liquid such as apple juice. It's really braising the ribs and they are completely fall off the bone. Sometimes to a fault. Now I'm more of a four hour guy with just rub and when they're about done (see guys above) sauce them and crank up the heat to caramelize the sauce. my family's favorite combo is mickey's coffee rub ( search this forum) and sauced with Sweet baby Ray's for the final 20-30 minutesRichmond and Mathews County, VA. Large BGE, Weber gas, little Weber charcoal. Vintage ManGrates. Little reddish portable kamado that shall remain nameless here. Very Extremely Stable Genius.
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Check out the below post from @TexanOfTheNorth - well documented and very detailed. And he's a friggin legend.
http://eggheadforum.com/discussion/1183674/ribs-the-way-i-do-them-pic-heavy
Ajax, ON Canada(XL BGE, MED BGE, La Caja China #2, and the wife's Napoleon gasser) -
Tooth pick don't lie! If it probes like butter between the bones, they done man. If they tug pullling the pick out keep em on.
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They were done and they were damn good Memphis raised me, T-Town made me...Aint never been nothing but a winner -
Nice work!
if you find some baby backs on sale some time, try turbo - 350 degrees - done around 90 minutes or so.Chicago, IL - Large and Small BGE - Weber Gasser and Kettle -
90? You sniffing glue?blind99 said:Nice work!
if you find some baby backs on sale some time, try turbo - 350 degrees - done around 90 minutes or so.
Sandy Springs & Dawsonville Ga -
I can't hardly get drunk in 90 minutes. I'll have to have a few prior to going to the store.blind99 said:Nice work!
if you find some baby backs on sale some time, try turbo - 350 degrees - done around 90 minutes or so.
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Turbo is a great method with ribs, as is L & S. Brother snow-blind99, who by the way is a brilliant guy, (if living in Chicago and brilliant ever equates), had an obvious typo. 350 done at around 190 minutes. I think he was very tired from saving lives overnight.Sandy Springs & Dawsonville Ga
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