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Reheating Spare Ribs
dstearn
Posts: 1,705
Plan to reheat a slab of spare ribs that I cooked on Sunday. They have been sitting in the fridge wrapped in foil and were brushed with sauce already.
Should I just heat them in the oven or would it be better to reheat in the Egg?
Would it make sense to reheat in the foil in the oven or on the egg unfoiled?
Should I just heat them in the oven or would it be better to reheat in the Egg?
Would it make sense to reheat in the foil in the oven or on the egg unfoiled?
Comments
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Never have tried to reheat a whole rack of ribs but I would take advantage of the moisture retention properties and use the BGE. Given they are already wrapped I would start out wrapped and around 30-45 minutes in (just guessing here) I would unwrap and then decide if they need more sauce or a spritz. Go til they pass the tooth-pick test.
Hopefully others with more rib reheat experience will be along but the above is my take. FWIW-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 get too aggressive with the heating or you risk scorching the sauce and bones. Take your time.
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To be honest, I would just reheat in a 300 degree oven for 30 minutes or so (wrapped in foil). Won't be perfect but will still be excellent.Toronto ON
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I always eat my leftover ribs cold. Lately I've been wondering if a hot tub or sous vide would be a good way to reheat ribs.
Let us know what you do and whether or not you like it :-)“There are three rules that I live by: never get less than twelve hours sleep; never play cards with a guy who has the same first name as a city; and never get involved with a woman with a tattoo of a dagger on her body.”
Coach Finstock Teen Wolf -
They actually nuke pretty well. If you reheat on the egg or oven, be careful if you leave them in the foil because the sauce can scorch and make the foil stick to the ribs. No bueno.
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You just need to get the heat up to where the gelatinized collagen goes soft. Typically not much above 100F. So into a bag, and hot tub.
Unsauced, I'd suggest waving at medium power w. a bunch of butter on top.
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Vacuum seal the rack or put in a Ziploc. Then put in a pot of hot (almost boiling) water for about an hour, sous vide style.
They'll be just as good as fresh from the egg. -
I have nuked ribs that I have pre carved before and in the past I have reheated entire slabs in the oven. I am looking for feedback on a better method.pgprescott said:They actually nuke pretty well. If you reheat on the egg or oven, be careful if you leave them in the foil because the sauce can scorch and make the foil stick to the ribs. No bueno. -
I wrap mine in plastic wrap and put them in the oven bone side up for about a half hour at 250. Dont worry the plastic wont melt.
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Would wrapping in pink butcher paper on the egg be a better method?
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