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QUOTE (Chevy @ Jan 08, 2019 - 07:33 pm)
I used pork side and back ribs and forgot to mention it was in a propane smoker. Also SDC, I used your special pork rub also. AS I pointed out, the flavor was there. I am leaning towards Dbfish's suggestion. They should of been cooked more. I'm looking forward to mastering this style of cooking. Thanks, Kerry...
If you didn't last time try pulling the membrane off the back of the ribs next time as well.
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4 hours is good for ribs i feel,but i start in the oven for 3 hours and finish on the smoker because i like a more subtle smoke flavor,and braising in the oven guarantee's a great rib every time
did you have moisture while smoking?like a bowl of water in there?you really need some moisture for a good tender rib
This post has been edited by simcoesod on Jan 09, 2019 - 11:21 am
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QUOTE (FatRap @ Jan 09, 2019 - 10:54 am)
QUOTE (Chevy @ Jan 08, 2019 - 07:33 pm)
I used pork side and back ribs and forgot to mention it was in a propane smoker. Also SDC, I used your special pork rub also. AS I pointed out, the flavor was there. I am leaning towards Dbfish's suggestion. They should of been cooked more. I'm looking forward to mastering this style of cooking. Thanks, Kerry...
If you didn't last time try pulling the membrane off the back of the ribs next time as well.
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QUOTE (Chevy @ Jan 08, 2019 - 05:33 pm)
I used pork side and back ribs and forgot to mention it was in a propane smoker. Also SDC, I used your special pork rub also. AS I pointed out, the flavor was there. I am leaning towards Dbfish's suggestion. They should of been cooked more. I'm looking forward to mastering this style of cooking. Thanks, Kerry...
Hey Kerry
Look at my earlier long post and download the PDF at the bottom. That is the Bradley Smoker recipe.
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Chevy I have smoked alot of pork ribs, and pork in general, I find Mesquite is a very strong flavour and use it sparsley, I tend to use apple. Always take the membrane off side ribs, Back ribs its ok if you don't but I will remove it. The use of a paper towel works great to grip and rip, your cooking temp seems fine, smoking pork just a bit cooler works better for me. Use time lines as just that, I have found variations in wind, weather, temperature a bit of a challenge at times, but the only way to truly tell is to pull 2 ribs apart or bend a rack at a 90 if it breaks its good to eat otherwise return to smoker. The other mention should be always smoke rib bone down meat side up. The mop I use is 2parts cider vinegar to 1 part butter or olive oil. But remember "if your looking it not cooking" so don't mop or spray to often. Also I use waterdown apple juice in the humidity bowl. My smoker is propane as well. Always try to obtain good quality meat. The number one thing to do is tent them in tinfoil when you remove them from the smoker, you will get moist succulent ribs otherwise they will be dry. Good Luck, when your ready to do a pork butt let me know Ive down a few pounds of them but that's an all nighter.
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QUOTE (mydogbites @ Jan 10, 2019 - 08:18 pm)
Chevy I have smoked alot of pork ribs, and pork in general, I find Mesquite is a very strong flavour and use it sparsley, I tend to use apple. Always take the membrane off side ribs, Back ribs its ok if you don't but I will remove it. The use of a paper towel works great to grip and rip, your cooking temp seems fine, smoking pork just a bit cooler works better for me. Use time lines as just that, I have found variations in wind, weather, temperature a bit of a challenge at times, but the only way to truly tell is to pull 2 ribs apart or bend a rack at a 90 if it breaks its good to eat otherwise return to smoker. The other mention should be always smoke rib bone down meat side up. The mop I use is 2parts cider vinegar to 1 part butter or olive oil. But remember "if your looking it not cooking" so don't mop or spray to often. Also I use waterdown apple juice in the humidity bowl. My smoker is propane as well. Always try to obtain good quality meat. The number one thing to do is tent them in tinfoil when you remove them from the smoker, you will get moist succulent ribs otherwise they will be dry. Good Luck, when your ready to do a pork butt let me know Ive down a few pounds of them but that's an all nighter.
Thank you for the advice. I really do appreciate you and the other members on here taking the time to help. I may take you up on your pork butt recipe. Cheers, Kerry.
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Hi Chevy, sad to hear about the ribs. I’ve used the 3-2-1 method for ribs for a couple years now and they’ve been bang on every time. I like my ribs just a bit less than fall off the bone but close to it. I use the Bradley smoker. There is one difference between what you did and how I do it so I’ll add that below.
3 hours smoke (apple or if I’m out than hickory). 225 degrees. I’ve now changed this to 2 hours as I saw no difference between 2-3. 2 hours wrapped in foil with some apple juice at bottom of the foil wrap (meat side up). 225 degrees. You mention just spraying, I actually have a bit of liquid sitting at the bottom of the foil packet and I think this steams them a bit which gives them fall off the bone character. 1 hour bbq. I put my sauce on and put on the grill to get a bit of a char. I actually do this for 30 minutes as I’ve lost patience and want to eat em!
Give foil wrap variation a shot and see if that changes things.
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A little trick I do when pre-boiling ribs before smoking, BBQin or anything is to boil them with a couple cups apple cider vinegar added to the water or 1/2 water and apple cider vinegar. Adds a really nice flavor and makes up for most anything I find I lose from boiling them to shorten the cooking time! Also finishing them off on a bbq adds a nice char or caramelizes the sauce a little bit.