RIBS for the 4th ......Please help

Started by smoke an Fire, June 29, 2006, 06:44:47 AM

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smoke an Fire

Hey All,

Newbie here... ;D

After reading the forums for a couple of days I decided to go ahead and dip into my retirement fund an buy the Digital 4 rack smoker. :o

I'm going to try a selection of ribs for the 4th but I want to smoke them on Sat or Sun and then fire up the grill on the 4th to heat them up.

Whats the best way to do this? I have a couple racks of baby backs / some boneless pork ribs / country spare ribs. Can i put all of this in the smoker at one time and " Set it and forget it "

I was thinking about dry rubbing them the night before then 3 hours of hickory smoke and then spray them with apple juice, wrap them in foil and through them back in the smoker for 2 hours.

Please help a newbie noob.

goalieboy29

Welcome Brother,

Great decision to buy the Bradley!

I think you're plan is the most popular method so far. I have had my rig for a year and was never truly satisfied with my ribs. I tried the method that was suggested by numerous members and it is the same as yours; Coat ribs in mustard (optional) and then your favorite rub. Cover and rest overnight. I take'em out an hour b4 cooking. I get the smoker to 250 or so and put the ribs in the middle rack. Having just got a Maverick remote thermometer I can easily keep the temp between 195 and 230.
I use 3-4 hours worth of apple pucks. I spray with a mix of Jack Daniel, apple juice and maple syrup, (Canadian eh?)When smoking is done I take 'em out, slather 'em in BBQ sauce (optional),wrap in foil and put bak in smoker for 2 or so hours. GUARNTEED< they will be the most tender, succulent ribs ever....

Anticipate your accolades now!

Have fun and all the best for July 4.

Goalieboy
It's the wood that makes it good.

icerat4

I do my ribs as followed.Rub down the night before.4 hours of alder at temps of 200-210.Spaying apple juice after the first hour.And then every hour up til smoke is done.In the 3rd hour i put the sweetbabys rays on.then at the 4 hour mark i put them in foil wrap.Then in the over for 3-4 hours .And that fall off the bone meat when done.LOW and slow.None of my stuff in the bradley when its a pork product goes abouve 220 never.Chicken meatloaf etc no problem.BUTT not pork ;D.




Just another weekend with the smoker...

acords

Quote from: icerat4 on June 29, 2006, 08:01:35 AM
I do my ribs as followed.Rub down the night before.4 hours of alder at temps of 200-210.Spaying apple juice after the first hour.And then every hour up til smoke is done.In the 3rd hour i put the sweetbabys rays on.then at the 4 hour mark i put them in foil wrap.Then in the over for 3-4 hours .And that fall off the bone meat when done.LOW and slow.None of my stuff in the bradley when its a pork product goes abouve 220 never.Chicken meatloaf etc no problem.BUTT not pork ;D.
This is pretty much how I do ribs.  I can't get invited anywhere now without someone asking if I can bring a rack or 2
Grab me another stout, or scotch, or martini, or........
http://www.yardandpool.com - for all your Bradley needs!
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asa

smoke an Fire -
Welcome to the forum. I realize that by now, you've probably already smoked your ribs for the Fourth. But for next time, if you want to try making up your own rub, I have posted mine here in the past 2 weeks or so. Here is a link you can try:  http://forum.bradleysmoker.com/index.php?topic=3409.msg31111#msg31111
If that doesn't work, search on the word "barkaboo" without the quotation marks. It is a rub for which I've received excellent reviews, most recently this past week.

I've been smoking ribs for about 4 hours, but 3 would probably do as well. After smoking, I wrap them in foil with a little sauce and then continue cooking them for several more hours (4 should do it, but I've gone much longer too, but at a lower temperature). You can do that in the BS or in your oven at an air temp of around 180 or so (probably varies from 170-185). I find they are hard to stick a probe into, so go more by time. And you can probe with an instant when you want to.

Good luck,
     Art
Enjoy good Southern-style smoked barbecue -- it's not just for breakfast anymore!
Play old-time music - it's better than it sounds!
     And
Please Note: The cook is not responsible for dog hair in the food!!