71Rcode
New member
Thanks in advance for your thoughts on what went wrong. The #2 smoker arrived a couple weeks ago and I seasoned it as directed. Today I smoked 2 slabs of back (baby?) pork ribs from Kroger for 5 hours on 235 or so (dial between 225 and 250 - no peek method) and they seemed dry yet undercooked on the fat ones. My boys (15 and 12) were pretty disappointed in the outcome. Bummer when Dad lets 'em down on cooking!
Details on my process:
[list type=decimal]
[*]Removed the silver skin on the back of the ribs / cut the slabs in half
[*]Rubbed yellow mustard on the ribs front and back, and sprinkled Stubbs BBQ spice rub on the ribs front and back (yeah, picked that bottle up from Kroger, too... ) - wrapped the ribs in plastic wrap and refrigerated for 6-7 hours.
[*]Placed the half slabs (4 pieces) bone down on the top two racks, with the fattest ribs in the lower position. Placed a chunk of apple wood in the firebox and a small aluminum pan of water next to the firebox, touching the firebox, and turned the temp knob halfway between 225-250. I was aiming for 235.
[*]Let her run outside for 5 hours at that temp. Never opened her up and wasn't regulating the inside temps in the smoker nor the meat.
[*]After 5 hours I did the bend test - still pretty rubbery and not breaking/nor falling off the bone. But very nice bark. Dryish but bendy. Weird. Had hungry boys so I took them out of the smoker, slathered them with BBQ sauce and popped them on the grill for a couple minutes, flipping a couple times.
[*] There were no drippings in the pan underneath the smoker. The bottom of the smoker is covered in foil with a hole made for the drippings to drain.
[/list]
The meat was somewhat dry and tough to get off the bone. And for the thicker pieces of rib meat, it didn't look completely cooked through.
What I know is this:
Where are all the places you think I went wrong? Thanks for the help. (BTW - cooked them outside in north Texas in December with the outside temps around 65).
Details on my process:
[list type=decimal]
[*]Removed the silver skin on the back of the ribs / cut the slabs in half
[*]Rubbed yellow mustard on the ribs front and back, and sprinkled Stubbs BBQ spice rub on the ribs front and back (yeah, picked that bottle up from Kroger, too... ) - wrapped the ribs in plastic wrap and refrigerated for 6-7 hours.
[*]Placed the half slabs (4 pieces) bone down on the top two racks, with the fattest ribs in the lower position. Placed a chunk of apple wood in the firebox and a small aluminum pan of water next to the firebox, touching the firebox, and turned the temp knob halfway between 225-250. I was aiming for 235.
[*]Let her run outside for 5 hours at that temp. Never opened her up and wasn't regulating the inside temps in the smoker nor the meat.
[*]After 5 hours I did the bend test - still pretty rubbery and not breaking/nor falling off the bone. But very nice bark. Dryish but bendy. Weird. Had hungry boys so I took them out of the smoker, slathered them with BBQ sauce and popped them on the grill for a couple minutes, flipping a couple times.
[*] There were no drippings in the pan underneath the smoker. The bottom of the smoker is covered in foil with a hole made for the drippings to drain.
[/list]
The meat was somewhat dry and tough to get off the bone. And for the thicker pieces of rib meat, it didn't look completely cooked through.
What I know is this:
- Need a temp probe
- Need a better rub
- Boys don't like em dry - I need to do that 2-2-1 method that some of you guys do and cook them in foil/juice to keep them moist.
Where are all the places you think I went wrong? Thanks for the help. (BTW - cooked them outside in north Texas in December with the outside temps around 65).