MickZagger
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How should I do these ribs? Am I supposed to boil them first?
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Should I marinate it in the sauce, or just the spices and then add the sauces after you BBQ.
Should I marinate it in the sauce, or just the spices and then add the sauces after you BBQ.
First you want to peel the thin film layer off of the concave bone side. It comes right off. Second, rub the whole thing with a good dry rub. There are tons of good dry rub recipes on the internet. I do brown sugar, sage, oregano, smoked spanish paprika, thyme, pepper, salt, garlic powder, chili powder. Let that sit on it for a while and then grill the damned things. With ribs, "slow and low" is a good idea. I usually turn one half of the grill on high heat and the other half off completely. Place the ribs above the side that is turned off, meat side up. And then leave the thing alone for about an hour. At this point, you can add your bbq sauce. If you put it on earlier, the sugars in the sauce will burn. Sauce them up and cook for another 25-30 minutes. Voila.
Also, if you have a propane grill, you can still get smoky flavor by making a smoke pouch. Just cut small branches of a tree into tiny pieces, soak in water for a while, wrap them up in a tin foil ball and throw it directly into the flame.
Just my thoughts.
Always cook just one or two ribs at first. Especially if you're new to BBQ'ing. You need to learn how long to cook and what over cooking and under cooking looks like. Even after you get your cooking timing down don't throw all the ribs on the BBQ at once. If you go in the house to get a beer or get to talking to someone you can burn all your meat up.
First you want to peel the thin film layer off of the concave bone side. It comes right off. Second, rub the whole thing with a good dry rub. There are tons of good dry rub recipes on the internet. I do brown sugar, sage, oregano, smoked spanish paprika, thyme, pepper, salt, garlic powder, chili powder. Let that sit on it for a while and then grill the damned things. With ribs, "slow and low" is a good idea. I usually turn one half of the grill on high heat and the other half off completely. Place the ribs above the side that is turned off, meat side up. And then leave the thing alone for about an hour. At this point, you can add your bbq sauce. If you put it on earlier, the sugars in the sauce will burn. Sauce them up and cook for another 25-30 minutes. Voila.
Also, if you have a propane grill, you can still get smoky flavor by making a smoke pouch. Just cut small branches of a tree into tiny pieces, soak in water for a while, wrap them up in a tin foil ball and throw it directly into the flame.
Just my thoughts.
Thanks for the tips. I'm gonna try your rub. BTW, I'm doing it old school style with my basic coal BBQ.
How should I do these ribs? Am I supposed to boil them first?
First you want to peel the thin film layer off of the concave bone side. It comes right off. Second, rub the whole thing with a good dry rub. There are tons of good dry rub recipes on the internet. I do brown sugar, sage, oregano, smoked spanish paprika, thyme, pepper, salt, garlic powder, chili powder. Let that sit on it for a while and then grill the damned things. With ribs, "slow and low" is a good idea. I usually turn one half of the grill on high heat and the other half off completely. Place the ribs above the side that is turned off, meat side up. And then leave the thing alone for about an hour. At this point, you can add your bbq sauce. If you put it on earlier, the sugars in the sauce will burn. Sauce them up and cook for another 25-30 minutes. Voila.
Also, if you have a propane grill, you can still get smoky flavor by making a smoke pouch. Just cut small branches of a tree into tiny pieces, soak in water for a while, wrap them up in a tin foil ball and throw it directly into the flame.
Just my thoughts.
Second, rub the whole thing with a good dry rub.......

I might take a picture for your viewing pleasure.
You're talking about the ribs and not the shaving your junk right?