Member Login

Do I have to register?
Username

Password

Remember me
Forgotten your password??
No account yet? Create one
Have a profile? Activate it
Home arrow Forums arrow EggHead Forum
SPECIAL EVENTS    
*** NEW - YellaWood Backyard Bonanza! ***
YellaWood Backyard Bonanza
Big Green Egg Cookbook Now Available
BGE and Professional Bull Riders
Nascar Sprint Cup Series - PHOTO GALLERY
EGG Eggsperience
BGE Academy
EGGFEST CENTRAL    
Oklahoma Eggfest 2010 - Oklahoma City - April 16 & 17, 2010
Gulf Coast Eggfest - April 23-24, 2010
EggAnnapolis - Edgewater, Maryland - April 24, 2010
*** NEW! - Waldorf Eggfest - May 1, 2010 ***
Waldorf Eggfest - May 1, 2010
Smokin' Buddies Eggfest - Norfolk, Nebraska - May 1, 2010
Texas Eggfest 2010 - Austin, Texas - May 1, 2010
*** UPDATED! - Carolina Eggfest 2010 - May 8th 2010 ***
Carolina Eggfest 2010 - May 8th 2010
Mid EGG-lantic Eggfest
Smokin' in Seattle - June 5, 2010
Dickson's Eggfest Toronto - Toronto, ON - June 5, 2010
Peoria Eggfest - Peoria, Illinois - June 5, 2010
Green Eggs and Jam - Branson Missouri - June 11 & 12, 2010
KC Eggfest - Liberty Missouri - June 19, 2010
NewEGGlandfest III - June 26th 2010 - NH
Eggs by the Bay Eggfest - 5th Annual - June 26, 2010
Montana Eggfest - August 28, 2010
Ozark Mountain Eggfest - September 25, 2010
Egghead Forum
Re: Another new Egg owner needing rib advice



Return to index

Posted by: chattanooga choo choo on 2007/09/03 08:07:43  

In Reply to: Another new Egg owner needing rib advice posted by mb168 on 2007/09/02 22:37:35

mb168,


I think the key for ribs is to have a properly operating temperature gauge/thermometer. If the egg gets too hot, you will dry out your ribs.

That said, if you have no platesetter, I would put a drip pan, perhaps an aluminum one that can be discarded, under the grid. It also is a heat barrier for you.

If you have baby back ribs, the 3-1-1 should be about right. It usually takes longer for spares in my experience. But the method is as close to fool-proof as you can get.

Get the temp to 240-275 and go three hours indirect. Then wrap in foil or stand the ribs in a pan with about an inch of apple juice and cover with foil. Cook for an hour.

Then I like to stay indirect for the last hour. The racks or half racks should be flexible when grasped with tongs at the end of the hour. If they are already about to fall off the bone when you remove from foil, then maybe you should shorten this stage. Also, some like to go direct now to cook the sauce onto the ribs, but they are so tender now that you must be careful not to tear them up or burn them.

Saturday night I attended a party where each couple was asked to bring a rack of ribs and an easy side dish. I cooked spares in a method similar to above. My egg settled in a little lower temp-wise than I had hoped (I ran an errand during the first three hour-stage, so I erred on the low-temp side), so I had to cook a bit longer, and it ended up being roughly a 7-hour cook. These were very thick, meaty ribs, and they turned out great, to the delight of our friends at the party.

I recommend Dr. BBQ's original book for cooking, rub, sauce and glaze ideas. I used his Big-Time rub and his glaze for these ribs, and I was pleased with the result. I own books by Raichlen, Kirk, Smoke & Spice, but I come back to Dr. BBQ, along with this forum, more often than any.

Return to index



Thread map:

Post a reply to chattanooga choo choo in "EggHead Forum"
Name/Handle:
email*:
Subject:
topic icon:
no
boardcode:
 Color:  Size:   Close all tags
Message:

emoticons
B) ;) :) :laugh:
:ohmy: :x :mad: :blink:
:P :( :unsure: :rolleyes:
:woohoo: :lol: :silly: X)
:side: :whistle: :evil: :S
:blush: :cheer: :ermm: :huh:
Guests, please use the guest password found in the grapic below.
Members, please enter your username and password.
Username:  Use my handle.
Password:
Guest Password:Guest Password
 
* - your email address will only be available to registered users.