edicehouse
Member
Well how are you all going to spend your Christmas Eve? I am going to my father in laws, hit the woods for a few hours. Do a little deer hunting, then run all over, visiting wife's family.
yes ham is better than tobacco, but nothing beats smoked ribs. if it wasn't for all the people at Christmas dinner I would be having baby Back Ribs.
yes ham is better than tobacco, but nothing beats smoked ribs. if it wasn't for all the people at Christmas dinner I would be having baby Back Ribs.
We had slow smoked baby back ribs tonight. The ham will be ready tomorrow night.
yes ham is better than tobacco, but nothing beats smoked ribs. if it wasn't for all the people at Christmas dinner I would be having baby Back Ribs.
We had slow smoked baby back ribs tonight. The ham will be ready tomorrow night.
Merry Christmas to you!
Wifey wants to know what temp and how long you smoke your ribs. Thanks.....
Charlie:
I can't really give you a time or temperature. I load one side of a barrel smoker with my coals, and a water pan with wine and wood chips. The other end of the smoker is loaded ribs sealed with my dry rub.
I GUESS the temperature at the meat is +\- 200 degrees. I lock the smoker and don't even peek in for three hours. Then, I open the smoker and go to the center bone of each rib rack and perform the "twist test". If the meat doesn't seperate effortlessly from the bone, I check again in 45 minutes. If it does seperate, I mop each rack with homemade BBQ sauce and continue to smoke for another 30 minutes.
This is a rather "inexact science", but if you do this long enough, you can actually smell when the ribs should be removed to let stand in foil. I'd rather be inexact than puncture my meat with a thermometer and let those great juices escape.
The twist and "sniff" tests have proven to be a very accurate indicators. On the "big" (pull behind) smoker, the lid thermometer ideally reads 185 degrees and that takes about 5 hours. That's why I'm guessing 200 degrees.
Merry Christmas.