I have not found a rib rub yet that I like. The best thing I've found is that kosher salt, course ground pepper and a bit of garlic powder works the best for me.
Yeah I have found also that salt and pepper are the best route. I do a heavy pepper on my ribs and my family loves them. It has a nice almost spicy bite. Kind of like peppered jerky. It has that kick on it but on ribs instead.
In this method I go more by the feel of the ribs. Once the rub is set you can rap. Usually goes to around 2 to 2.5 hours is when it's good. You want to be able to run your finger across the ribs and not pickup and rub. It'll have a good little crust forming and thstz when it's safe to wrap. That means it's taken in enough smoke and the wrap won't wash away the seasoning.
Then after they're in the foil let em go past 200. 202 204 if you still want a little chew on it like competition style. Go to like 208 210 for more tender ribs that fall of the bone
Ribs look great. I just ordered the rub. I noticed you go very heavy on the rub. is the rub low on salt? Im scared that they might come out salty. this will be the first time using my smoker.
Thank you and great question. I love salt. Doesn't bother me at all. So I'm probably the wrong person to ask lol. It's not going to hurt to put on a medium coat and see how that doesn't you. Or maybe taste the rub beforehand to get a feel for how salty it is.
Did you do the 3-2-15 method. I’m very new at this. Also what are your setting. Still learning the p settings and the temp vs smoke setting. Thanks for the input. Enjoy watching your videos and will be trying this.
I don't stick to any one method when I smoke ribs. Although I have tried them and they do work. I do the ribs in 3 phases. First phase is getting smoke and color on the ribs. I smoke them laying on the rack until the ribs start to turn a dark reddish color. When you can rub your finger across the ribs and the rub doesn't come off and it feels a little drier than wet. Once you've done this you've built a good bark and sucked in enough smoke. This will take anywhere from 1.5-3 hours depending on the size of the ribs and the temp you use. Next is wrapping. Wrap with your favorite mixture combo you find. I use a little bit of butter brown sugar and some kind of bbq sauce. Wrap until it gets to be around 200 degrees. Take out of the foil and set back on smoker and lightly glaze the ribs with a sauce and continue cooking like 15ish mins so the glaze can caramelize onto the ribs. Then you can enjoy! Hope this helped
How long did you smoke it in the first step. You just said there done and ready to put in the tin foil. How long and how did you know they were ready for step 2?
It's usually anywhere from 2 to 3 and a half hours depending on how hot or how low your temp is. What you want is the robs to turn a reddish dark tone and be able to run your finger across the ribs and not rub the rub off. This typically will happen around 165 to 175 degrees internal temp. Not always but kind of a guage to follow.
I have never tried that. There's a big difference between comp bbq and backyard bbq. Most people would say these ribs are extra for backyard bbq. Comp bbq is meant to get as much flavor as possible into just 1 bite but not necessarily good for eating half a rack during a game or something. I'll have to check that out though and see if that makes them better. Thanks for the tip!
@@Nicks-BBQ Well thank you far all the great tips you gave me. I ran out and got all sorts of goodies and a couple of slabs...gonna implement all I learned from you later this week
Usually anywhere between 2.25 hours to 3.5 hours. There's a couple indicators. When the rub is set on real nice and once it's getting a good red/dark color I wrap. The ribs will usually be around 165ish IT at that time. Then it'll be in the wrap usually for like 45 minutes to over an hour or so.
Nice job, I used to remove the silver skin but got lazy one day and left it on. After just over 5 hrs. At 250 I think they had more juice, I no longer remove and I can't really tell the difference. By the way using the Rectiq 590 And Plume pellets from Knotty Wood
Never heard of knotty wood. Do you like them? I just recently got. Recteq. Super awesome product. As for the membrane I notice it a bit more tough on the under bite when I don't remove it.
I don't got by an exact temp. More of a combo of 3 things. Color needs to be darker reddish, rub needs to be stuck on the ribs, temp needs to be around 165+ish. If the ribs are 165 but the color is still light ill let it go longer till the color gets darkened a bit
@@brianhagan5212 that's awesome bro. Pellet grills are amazing. It's perfect for long cooks that you don't have time to sit by a fire all night and day. I love making briskets and pork butts in them. Obviously off sets are going to have a better smoke flavor because you are using real wood vs processed pellets. But the ease and convenience kind of out weighs the cons in some ways. Especially for me having a ln 11 month old lol. Set and forget. Hope you love it bro
@@Nicks-BBQ yeah I’ve been using a Weber kettle forever so this is going to be so much more convenient and congratulations soon you’ll have someone to enjoy all that great cooking
@@cutiepiexoxo3794 by the hatch do you mean the part where the smoke comes out? If I'm doing ribs at 250 degrees I usually have it open about 10 percent
Sorry for not including more details in this video. I was still newer at making videos and didn't include a lot of detail. If you watch my more recent baby back rib video it's more detailed. I can't recall exactly what I did for these ribs but lately I've doing the same thing with my ribs. 250 degrees and at the 1.5 hour mark I spray, 2.25 hour mark I spray and usually at the 3 hour mark I spray and take off to be wrapped. Each rack of ribs is different though and the key is to know when to pull them. You're looking for the rub to be fully set onto the ribs, a good mahogany color and a little bit of pull back starting to occur. The internal temp at this point will usually be somewhere around 165 give or take some. At that point I wrap them and let them ride out until they are at 202ish and probe tender.
I usually go by looks and feel. But a safe bet is somewhere around 160-170. You want to make sure the rub is really set on the ribs and they start to get a dark ish color to them.
Hey Dave. Glad you like the videos! So sometimes I use kinders salt pepper and garlic rub. The ratios are proportioned in there and ill use enough to get a light coating of rub on both sides. Then with the BBQ rub I go a little heavier. If I put on my own salt pepper and garlic I'll use about 2 parts salt and 2 parts pepper 1 part or even sometimes a half part of garlic. Depends on your flavor profiles. All of this is trial and error to how you like the meat. BBQ rubs typically have salt in them so I'd you find it's too salty cut back on your salt a bit. I have no measurements for how many tablespoons of SPG I use per rack I just coat it till it looks good. I like to still be able to see meat when I'm done seasoning but have enough on there that it gets that beautiful red color when it's smoked. Go ahead and try out a rack and have fun with it and make adjustments as you go. Hope that helps and feel free to ask any questions you have whenever you have them. ✌
The pullback is all natural. These ribs are the st Louis style cut out of the spare ribs. I always get good pull back from them. Baby back ribs don't pull back as much.
Once they start to turn a nice reddish color. You want to create a good bark and absorb good smoke before braising. For me depending on temp this could be anywhere from 1.5-3 hours. Once you can rub your finger across the ribs and nonrub comes off you're safe but I like my ribs to be nice and smokey so I'll let them sit a little longer. There isn't a magic number of hours to go by. Just looks.
Maybe I missed it but what are your times... how long do you initially smoke before raping and how long once rapped? Just got an austin xl and going to do ribs as my first smoke!
It depends on a few different things. Color and temp. I don't wrap at the same times every cook. I wrap the ribs once they get a really nice red color and are temping around 165ish. I wrap them in till they get really tender which is usually around 200 degrees. Smoking ribs is more about feel and touch. I have a recipe on my channel called the 3 2 1 method you might like. You smoke the ribs in 3 different phases for set amount of times
You're welcome! The internal temperature will vary on each set of ribs. Typically once it gets to like 202 204 range it's good but you'll have to learn how to gauge when it's done by how smooth the probe goes in. If you can stick the probe in and it goes in and goes out without any resistance you know the meat is very tender. It'll take time and practice to get that skill down but the temperature that usually happens around is 200-206 range. Hope that helps!
I use butcher paper for certain things and foil for certain things. When I smoke pork ribs I use foil. The reasoning behind that is I want the ribs to sit in the melted butter and whatever liquid I put in there to help get the meat tender and soak in those flavors. If you were to use butcher paper the paper would absorb a lot of that liquid and the ribs wouldn't get as much. However, when I smoke something like a brisket I use butcher paper to wrap because I don't want the rendered fat and juices it pushes out during the cook to ruin that bark I've created on the meat. In that case I would want the butcher paper to absorb those liquids. hope that helps!
@@loboswildin sweet! Glad I was able to help. If you are using normal foil I would use two sheets to wrap your ribs in. Sometimes when you wrap it right the bones can bust through the foil and you'll have a mess. What kind of ribs are you smoking?
I love making ribs in my smoker! Best thing to smoke. Do you have to deal with the people that walk in an hour before its done complaining about how long it takes lol? They only had to wait an hour I been smelling em all day! Great video.
HAHA yes I have had that happen to me. People don't understand when you are smoking food that it is an art and can't be rushed. I used to tell people a time when dinner should be done but I've been BBQing long enough now to know not to do that. I tell them the food will be done when the food will be done lol!
FOLLOWING FAITHFUL: 'Faith is the magical elixir that gives life and power to the impulse of thought.' And I openly show you my faith by my anointed artworks. Advancing an ancient aboriginal ancestry = AMERICAS1_AM-ERI-CA_ANTIQUIY2 BBQ.. By ArtistCHD AmeriOriginal One. + Texas Style Smoked Sauage Soul Savior. - secret sauce + culinary cures of curses GHARLES contends!
When I do ribs I usually wrap after 2.5-2.75 hours. Keep them in the wrap until they get tender which usually takes about 45 minutes or so. Let them cool for about 10 minutes then glaze them and smoke em for another 10-15 minutes.
@@Nicks-BBQ Thanks. So from start to finish should be less than 5 hours I guess. Prep time and all. I just recently got a smoker and have some ribs and brisket. I wanted to try the ribs first since they shouldn't take as long and if I make any mistakes, I didn't want to ruin an expensive brisket. Thanks and wish me luck!
A good rule of thumb is 165 degrees. But I like to wait until it gets dark red and charred looking. That's when you built a really good crust on it and it won't get wanted off in the wrap.
That is an option. Seasoning and smoke won't go thru the membrane though and it still has a tougher bite than without it. I only score if I'm doing a bunch of ribs for a party and want to save time. If I'm doing just a couple for family and friends I take em off.
It's definitely a lot less meat taste than if you just used salt and pepper. Still can taste the meat though. If you like more of a meat taste use less rub and maybe no glaze.
Myself, I would not cross the street to get BBQ no matter how good it was suppose to be, but people seem to like it so I cook it for them (ie friends, neighbors and family) and it makes them happy which makes me happy, I am told I am good at it, thank god for plebeian tastes. In general you did a good job although I would use a thermometer (ie remote probe) for the whole cook, ie cook to 162-165 then wrap and cook to 202... bla bla not rocket science. Your big sin was discarding all of those juices when you unwrapped the ribs. Those are liquid gold, protein rich highly seasoned gelatinous liquid meat. Drain them to a pan and reduce them to a syrup consistency and use as a glaze. You can add a little vinegar to them to balance them out or add them straight to your BBQ sauce, big big big umami boost, or just glaze with them as is, point is that is a lot of flavor you are throwing away.
@@robertcarlos78 no not at all. Depends on what kind of flavor profile you are going for. I add in brown sugars and butter to my wrap so I have a lot of rich and sweet flavors going on so I like to balance it out with the cider vinegar and it adds a tang to the meat. Spraying the meat also helps from it drying out.
Mustard is being used as a binder. It helps the rub stick to the meat if you don't have 45 minutes to let the rub naturally stick onto the meat. The mustard is not for flavor. If mustard scares you. Use olive oil, hot sauce something of that nature.
Obviously Mr. Hernandez doesn't know much, I use an UDS I made, Webber grill, traditional stick burner, custom pit I made, and the pitboss Austin XL. You just have to know how to use them, they all put out great food. You did a great job with this video and I agree Malcom Reed has great products and great videos as well . Thanks for sharing
@@aztecwarior1967 thanks! I'm looking to expand my arsenal pretty soon as well. I've used a weber grill my whole life. Just got into the pellet grill world and live how simple it is to make great bbq. I'm definitely getting a stick burner for my next purchase though.
FOLLOWING FAITHFUL: 'Faith is the magical elixir that gives life and power to the impulse of thought.' And I openly show you my faith by my anointed artworks. Advancing an ancient aboriginal ancestry = AMERICAS1_AM-ERI-CA_ANTIQUIY2 BBQ.. By ArtistCHD AmeriOriginal One. + Texas Style Smoked Sauage Soul Savior. - secret sauce + culinary cures of curses GHARLES contends!
Hey Nick i just cooked them this week for my friends and it was a conplete success.
That's awesome km glad to hear that!
Thanks Brother for the rib lesson. We are going to try it! That was beautiful!
No problem! Hope it turns out great for you guys. Nothing beats good BBQ!
Wow! I’m definitely doing this for Mother’s Day! Looks amazing!
Hope it's killer!
I have not found a rib rub yet that I like. The best thing I've found is that kosher salt, course ground pepper and a bit of garlic powder works the best for me.
Yeah I have found also that salt and pepper are the best route. I do a heavy pepper on my ribs and my family loves them. It has a nice almost spicy bite. Kind of like peppered jerky. It has that kick on it but on ribs instead.
@@Nicks-BBQ I'll be trying this.
Try voo do rub by church
Please try famos Dave's if you haven't it's amazing.. also good on burgers 5:12
Great vid bro!!
Hey thanks I appreciate it!
I was thinking of using the juice inside the foil with the bbq sauce to create the glaze at the end. Is there a reason not to?
I don't see why you couldn't. Let me know how it goes!
Just took my ribs off the camp chef. Did the 3-2-10 minutes. They look awesome.
That's sweet!
Good job BBQ Backyard warrior 💪🏾💰👨🏻🍳
Thanks!
instead of mustard I like to use Siracha sauce it gives it a slit hint of heat
That's a good idea! I'll keep that in mind if I make some spicy ribs.
Outstanding job BBQ Backyard warrior
Thanks! Love me some ribs forsure
Thanks for the recipe! Appreciate it
No problem hope it helps!
How long do you smoke the ribs till you wrap them?
In this method I go more by the feel of the ribs. Once the rub is set you can rap. Usually goes to around 2 to 2.5 hours is when it's good. You want to be able to run your finger across the ribs and not pickup and rub. It'll have a good little crust forming and thstz when it's safe to wrap. That means it's taken in enough smoke and the wrap won't wash away the seasoning.
@@Nicks-BBQ thx a million. 👍🏻
Best video I’ve watched on how to thnx Bro
Thanks so much for the compliment!
What’s the final temperature you want to pull the ribs off. What temp do you take ribs off before putting it in the foil?
The temp will usually be around 165ish but you want to make sure that the rub is set on and that it has good color before you wrap it.
Then after they're in the foil let em go past 200. 202 204 if you still want a little chew on it like competition style. Go to like 208 210 for more tender ribs that fall of the bone
To smoke, do I need the heat protector over the fire. I’m still new to smoking. Haha 12:56
Yeah heat protector on
Ribs look great. I just ordered the rub.
I noticed you go very heavy on the rub. is the rub low on salt? Im scared that they might come out salty. this will be the first time using my smoker.
Thank you and great question. I love salt. Doesn't bother me at all. So I'm probably the wrong person to ask lol. It's not going to hurt to put on a medium coat and see how that doesn't you. Or maybe taste the rub beforehand to get a feel for how salty it is.
Did you do the 3-2-15 method. I’m very new at this. Also what are your setting. Still learning the p settings and the temp vs smoke setting. Thanks for the input. Enjoy watching your videos and will be trying this.
I don't stick to any one method when I smoke ribs. Although I have tried them and they do work. I do the ribs in 3 phases. First phase is getting smoke and color on the ribs. I smoke them laying on the rack until the ribs start to turn a dark reddish color. When you can rub your finger across the ribs and the rub doesn't come off and it feels a little drier than wet. Once you've done this you've built a good bark and sucked in enough smoke. This will take anywhere from 1.5-3 hours depending on the size of the ribs and the temp you use. Next is wrapping. Wrap with your favorite mixture combo you find. I use a little bit of butter brown sugar and some kind of bbq sauce. Wrap until it gets to be around 200 degrees. Take out of the foil and set back on smoker and lightly glaze the ribs with a sauce and continue cooking like 15ish mins so the glaze can caramelize onto the ribs. Then you can enjoy! Hope this helped
What do you have your P setting set too?
I actually didn't have anything crazy for this cook. I just turned it on to 250.
To smoke, do I need the heat protector over the fire. I’m still new to smoking. Haha
Yeah you do
How long did you smoke it in the first step. You just said there done and ready to put in the tin foil. How long and how did you know they were ready for step 2?
It's usually anywhere from 2 to 3 and a half hours depending on how hot or how low your temp is. What you want is the robs to turn a reddish dark tone and be able to run your finger across the ribs and not rub the rub off. This typically will happen around 165 to 175 degrees internal temp. Not always but kind of a guage to follow.
Enjoyed the video definitely useful...have you tried injecting them before you cook. I saw all the pro BBQ competition guys doing that
I have never tried that. There's a big difference between comp bbq and backyard bbq. Most people would say these ribs are extra for backyard bbq. Comp bbq is meant to get as much flavor as possible into just 1 bite but not necessarily good for eating half a rack during a game or something. I'll have to check that out though and see if that makes them better. Thanks for the tip!
@@Nicks-BBQ Well thank you far all the great tips you gave me. I ran out and got all sorts of goodies and a couple of slabs...gonna implement all I learned from you later this week
@@stevejoyce3151 this awesome sounds yummy. Let me know how it goes!
how long do you let it cook at 250? before the foil
Usually anywhere between 2.25 hours to 3.5 hours. There's a couple indicators. When the rub is set on real nice and once it's getting a good red/dark color I wrap. The ribs will usually be around 165ish IT at that time. Then it'll be in the wrap usually for like 45 minutes to over an hour or so.
Each rack is different. Some are thicker or less weight. So better to go by those indicators than a set time every time.
Nice job, I used to remove the silver skin but got lazy one day and left it on. After just over 5 hrs. At 250 I think they had more juice, I no longer remove and I can't really tell the difference. By the way using the Rectiq 590
And Plume pellets from Knotty Wood
Never heard of knotty wood. Do you like them? I just recently got. Recteq. Super awesome product. As for the membrane I notice it a bit more tough on the under bite when I don't remove it.
I actually prefer to eat the membrane! I like the way it get crunchy / chewy! I think it’s delicious and I like to peel it off the bone with my teeth
Main reason to remove membrane is so juices can penetrate and fats metabolize better
Great vid I glaze for a while longer and I also ad sweet and sour and seatcha sauce you have to try it
Those sound like really good combos. I'll have to try that!
The smoke gives the color you don't need paprika
Not 100 percent. If you use a coffee rub or a brown sugar costing it'll take on the color blackish or brownish color.
Those looked perfect. Thanks for the video.
No problem. I had fun making the video and eating them afterwards lol!
What temp do you pull the ribs off before the tin foil?
I don't got by an exact temp. More of a combo of 3 things. Color needs to be darker reddish, rub needs to be stuck on the ribs, temp needs to be around 165+ish. If the ribs are 165 but the color is still light ill let it go longer till the color gets darkened a bit
Just got a new grill gonna try this for my first cook
Sweet! Hope it turns out great. Which grill did you get?
Got the camp chef smokepro dlx it’s my first pellet grill can’t wait to do some amazing cooking
@@brianhagan5212 that's awesome bro. Pellet grills are amazing. It's perfect for long cooks that you don't have time to sit by a fire all night and day. I love making briskets and pork butts in them. Obviously off sets are going to have a better smoke flavor because you are using real wood vs processed pellets. But the ease and convenience kind of out weighs the cons in some ways. Especially for me having a ln 11 month old lol. Set and forget. Hope you love it bro
@@Nicks-BBQ yeah I’ve been using a Weber kettle forever so this is going to be so much more convenient and congratulations soon you’ll have someone to enjoy all that great cooking
Me and my gf are gonna try this just got our pellet grill!
Nothing like smoked ribs forsure! Hope it goes great! If you ever have any questions I respond pretty quickly most times. Feel free to ask!
@@Nicks-BBQ hii do you leave the hatch open or close if open how open? whenever you put the ribs on
@@cutiepiexoxo3794 by the hatch do you mean the part where the smoke comes out? If I'm doing ribs at 250 degrees I usually have it open about 10 percent
@@Nicks-BBQ the flame boiler part where the pellets catch fire
@@cutiepiexoxo3794 have that completely closed.
How long did you have them in the smoker before your wrapped them??
Sorry for not including more details in this video. I was still newer at making videos and didn't include a lot of detail. If you watch my more recent baby back rib video it's more detailed. I can't recall exactly what I did for these ribs but lately I've doing the same thing with my ribs. 250 degrees and at the 1.5 hour mark I spray, 2.25 hour mark I spray and usually at the 3 hour mark I spray and take off to be wrapped. Each rack of ribs is different though and the key is to know when to pull them. You're looking for the rub to be fully set onto the ribs, a good mahogany color and a little bit of pull back starting to occur. The internal temp at this point will usually be somewhere around 165 give or take some. At that point I wrap them and let them ride out until they are at 202ish and probe tender.
I would recommend watching my new rib video if you have any further questions. I did a better job explaining the process. Good luck bro!
@@Nicks-BBQ where is the new rib video ?
@@89ajcell ua-cam.com/video/ALcp1aAIiK8/v-deo.html
@@Nicks-BBQ thanks man . Currently attempting my first ribs on the xl! Using everything from the Original video
What temp did you wrap them ?
I usually go by looks and feel. But a safe bet is somewhere around 160-170. You want to make sure the rub is really set on the ribs and they start to get a dark ish color to them.
Great video. Subbed, looking forward to watching more of your stuff
Thanks I appreciate it!
Hi Nick, what are the ratios of the salt, pepper, and Garlic? I've watched your videos like a dozen times each. Thanks for all your help.
Dave
Hey Dave. Glad you like the videos! So sometimes I use kinders salt pepper and garlic rub. The ratios are proportioned in there and ill use enough to get a light coating of rub on both sides. Then with the BBQ rub I go a little heavier. If I put on my own salt pepper and garlic I'll use about 2 parts salt and 2 parts pepper 1 part or even sometimes a half part of garlic. Depends on your flavor profiles. All of this is trial and error to how you like the meat. BBQ rubs typically have salt in them so I'd you find it's too salty cut back on your salt a bit. I have no measurements for how many tablespoons of SPG I use per rack I just coat it till it looks good. I like to still be able to see meat when I'm done seasoning but have enough on there that it gets that beautiful red color when it's smoked. Go ahead and try out a rack and have fun with it and make adjustments as you go. Hope that helps and feel free to ask any questions you have whenever you have them. ✌
A rub does not soak in to the meat.
Great video
Thank you!
What temp did you smoke at?
I believe I smoked these at 250.
Dude, where's the fridge handle?
Hahahah you are very observant. It broke off and took a while to order the replacement. I have a new one now though lol.
Lmao
Nice video Nick. Did you get that bone pull back naturally or did you do something to help that along? Thanks.
The pullback is all natural. These ribs are the st Louis style cut out of the spare ribs. I always get good pull back from them. Baby back ribs don't pull back as much.
Hey Nick - they look great! How long on the smoker before you wrap..4 hours?
Once they start to turn a nice reddish color. You want to create a good bark and absorb good smoke before braising. For me depending on temp this could be anywhere from 1.5-3 hours. Once you can rub your finger across the ribs and nonrub comes off you're safe but I like my ribs to be nice and smokey so I'll let them sit a little longer. There isn't a magic number of hours to go by. Just looks.
Nailed it
Rule of thumb is you take the scraps you trimmed off and give it to the 🐕
Lol indeed!! I don't have a dog though
You deserve way more subs my bro
It doesn't bother me. As long as I can help people make great food I'm happy 😊
Maybe I missed it but what are your times... how long do you initially smoke before raping and how long once rapped? Just got an austin xl and going to do ribs as my first smoke!
It depends on a few different things. Color and temp. I don't wrap at the same times every cook. I wrap the ribs once they get a really nice red color and are temping around 165ish. I wrap them in till they get really tender which is usually around 200 degrees. Smoking ribs is more about feel and touch. I have a recipe on my channel called the 3 2 1 method you might like. You smoke the ribs in 3 different phases for set amount of times
So you cooked it at 250 from start to finish?
Yes! You can smoke these at a lower temp for more smoke flavor. Totally up to you!
I wish you gave a description of how they tasted in the end
Yeah I seem to have forgotten that lol. They were good
Ey bro thanks for the video.. its there a temperature interno gor the ribs so that we know went they are ready??
Ohh its 205 jeje sorry
You're welcome! The internal temperature will vary on each set of ribs. Typically once it gets to like 202 204 range it's good but you'll have to learn how to gauge when it's done by how smooth the probe goes in. If you can stick the probe in and it goes in and goes out without any resistance you know the meat is very tender. It'll take time and practice to get that skill down but the temperature that usually happens around is 200-206 range. Hope that helps!
My kinda cook,, I'm loving it good video bro
Thanks bro! I love some good ribs forsure!
I AM STARVING TO DEATH!!! 😂 Good vid!
Hahaha thanks glad you like it! Get ya some food now.
You made us hungry human. I was an excellent presentation as well
Thanks! I'm glad to know if you invaded earth and came to my town I might be allowed to live.
@@Nicks-BBQ Humans think all aliens are mean for some reason. We are freindly!
HAHAHA I guess that is the stereotype. My apologies!
I’m trying today
Awesome sweet! Feel free to ask any questions if ya have any I'll be by my phone most the night!
He used spareribs for the meat if anyone was wondering
Thanks. If I forgot to mention that I'm sorry
Daaaaaaamn. What about wrapping in butcher paper?
I use butcher paper for certain things and foil for certain things. When I smoke pork ribs I use foil. The reasoning behind that is I want the ribs to sit in the melted butter and whatever liquid I put in there to help get the meat tender and soak in those flavors. If you were to use butcher paper the paper would absorb a lot of that liquid and the ribs wouldn't get as much. However, when I smoke something like a brisket I use butcher paper to wrap because I don't want the rendered fat and juices it pushes out during the cook to ruin that bark I've created on the meat. In that case I would want the butcher paper to absorb those liquids. hope that helps!
@@Nicks-BBQ Now THIS makes perfect sense! Thanks! Smoking 6 racks for the game tomorrow.
@@loboswildin sweet! Glad I was able to help. If you are using normal foil I would use two sheets to wrap your ribs in. Sometimes when you wrap it right the bones can bust through the foil and you'll have a mess. What kind of ribs are you smoking?
Nice down to earth video. Thanks
No problem!
Love pork ribs
New videos coming soon? It's been a while 😢
Just uploaded a new rib video a few days ago - the best ribs I've ever made! Lmk what you think.
I love making ribs in my smoker! Best thing to smoke. Do you have to deal with the people that walk in an hour before its done complaining about how long it takes lol? They only had to wait an hour I been smelling em all day! Great video.
HAHA yes I have had that happen to me. People don't understand when you are smoking food that it is an art and can't be rushed. I used to tell people a time when dinner should be done but I've been BBQing long enough now to know not to do that. I tell them the food will be done when the food will be done lol!
FOLLOWING FAITHFUL: 'Faith is the magical elixir that gives life and power to the impulse of thought.' And I openly show you my faith by my anointed artworks. Advancing an ancient aboriginal ancestry = AMERICAS1_AM-ERI-CA_ANTIQUIY2 BBQ.. By ArtistCHD AmeriOriginal One. + Texas Style Smoked Sauage Soul Savior. - secret sauce + culinary cures of curses GHARLES contends!
Love the sweet baby rays going to try an do 3 racks of baby back ribs today
I love sweet baby rays too! Such a classic sauce. good luck with your ribs!!! making me hungry lol
What's the total amount of cook time?
When I do ribs I usually wrap after 2.5-2.75 hours. Keep them in the wrap until they get tender which usually takes about 45 minutes or so. Let them cool for about 10 minutes then glaze them and smoke em for another 10-15 minutes.
@@Nicks-BBQ Thanks. So from start to finish should be less than 5 hours I guess. Prep time and all. I just recently got a smoker and have some ribs and brisket. I wanted to try the ribs first since they shouldn't take as long and if I make any mistakes, I didn't want to ruin an expensive brisket.
Thanks and wish me luck!
Ok, when did you know it was time to wrap?
A good rule of thumb is 165 degrees. But I like to wait until it gets dark red and charred looking. That's when you built a really good crust on it and it won't get wanted off in the wrap.
@@Nicks-BBQthx. Just did this and the family loved it. Awesome recipe.
Leave the membrane on but score it
That is an option. Seasoning and smoke won't go thru the membrane though and it still has a tougher bite than without it. I only score if I'm doing a bunch of ribs for a party and want to save time. If I'm doing just a couple for family and friends I take em off.
Looks amazing, can you taste the natural meat with all that seasoning tho ?
It's definitely a lot less meat taste than if you just used salt and pepper. Still can taste the meat though. If you like more of a meat taste use less rub and maybe no glaze.
Im gonna do it..
I think you should!
Wow😍
Thanks :D
Still waiting for the, "fall of the bone," part...
Lol what do you mean
CARAMBA!.
Glad you enjoyed the video
Nice video for sure! But if you stop saying "go ahead and" it would have been much shorter.
I will go ahead and do that for ya lolol 😂😂
❤❤❤ good 🇰🇭🙏🙏🤝
Thank you!
His poor mustard covered wedding ring
hahah yeah that is a downfall of not using gloves.
🔥🔥🔥🔥🤙🏾🤙🏾🤙🏾
Thanks 😎
You had me until I saw that electric grill! 🤔🤭😂
You'll come around one day.
Myself, I would not cross the street to get BBQ no matter how good it was suppose to be, but people seem to like it so I cook it for them (ie friends, neighbors and family) and it makes them happy which makes me happy, I am told I am good at it, thank god for plebeian tastes. In general you did a good job although I would use a thermometer (ie remote probe) for the whole cook, ie cook to 162-165 then wrap and cook to 202... bla bla not rocket science. Your big sin was discarding all of those juices when you unwrapped the ribs. Those are liquid gold, protein rich highly seasoned gelatinous liquid meat. Drain them to a pan and reduce them to a syrup consistency and use as a glaze. You can add a little vinegar to them to balance them out or add them straight to your BBQ sauce, big big big umami boost, or just glaze with them as is, point is that is a lot of flavor you are throwing away.
Thanks for taking the time to give feedback. I'll have to try that next time I make some ribs.
You use apple cider vinegar
I use a combination of things sometimes but lately I've been using 50/50 apple cider vinegar and water for everything. Seems to be doing just fine.
@@Nicks-BBQ but don’t that taste nasty just asking
@@robertcarlos78 no not at all. Depends on what kind of flavor profile you are going for. I add in brown sugars and butter to my wrap so I have a lot of rich and sweet flavors going on so I like to balance it out with the cider vinegar and it adds a tang to the meat. Spraying the meat also helps from it drying out.
I do zero trim and all that fat will render down ur just cooking it to high and fast slow it down and lower the temp and all of it will render down😂
You just leave your ribs under a lamp for a week or what? I Smoked these at 250 how much lower you want me to go lol.
apparently I am poor cause I would never trim my ribs :)
Naw your not poor bro! I trim them to look good for the videos. I know people the trim them and smoke the scrap pieces and make rib tips out of em
@@Nicks-BBQ HAHA thanks man I enjoyed your video
@@russramirez7533 thanks bro! Appreciate it
Looks awfully complicated there must be an easier way. I would be so pissed by the time they were done.
The method is pretty standard. Smoke. Braise. Glaze. Not complicated. Not making spaghetti bro 🤣
The sedate beaver provisionally notice because supply worrisomely found via a hesitant watchmaker. curved, evasive fork
I'm not sure whether or not to say thank you or hide under a rock.
If you’re using a pellet grill you’re not “backyard bbqing” Bud!
I think this was bbqd in my backyardol
You lost me at mustard
Mustard is being used as a binder. It helps the rub stick to the meat if you don't have 45 minutes to let the rub naturally stick onto the meat. The mustard is not for flavor. If mustard scares you. Use olive oil, hot sauce something of that nature.
Do we need “go ahead” every statement??
No you don't. I've worked on that lol. My early filming days have lots of mistakes
No meat on them ribs.
There's definitely meat lol
Your audio sucks, I hope the ribs don’t
Buy me a mic then
Video was good till I seen that fake grilling
I will stay awake at night knowing you are dissatisfied with my fake grilling.
Looks pretty real to me. 🤤
@@Ruger556 haha thanks bro 🤣
Obviously Mr. Hernandez doesn't know much, I use an UDS I made, Webber grill, traditional stick burner, custom pit I made, and the pitboss Austin XL. You just have to know how to use them, they all put out great food. You did a great job with this video and I agree Malcom Reed has great products and great videos as well . Thanks for sharing
@@aztecwarior1967 thanks! I'm looking to expand my arsenal pretty soon as well. I've used a weber grill my whole life. Just got into the pellet grill world and live how simple it is to make great bbq. I'm definitely getting a stick burner for my next purchase though.
Martin. Gas
Times my nigga. I need times.
Do the 3 2 1 method if you want times. This way of smoking is by temp and look
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Yo not gonna lie I don't understand lol
To smoke, do I need the heat protector over the fire. I’m still new to smoking. Haha