How to Smoke Baby Back Ribs Blog Post

5 Comments

    1. FBS,

      Tiger Sauce “is an exotic, moderately spicy blend of Ingredients in a cayenne pepper base. With a touch of sweet and sour, it’s perfect for meats, seafood, and poultry. Delicious on sandwiches, in dips and soups.” It’s usually available at WalMart located near the BBQ and cajun sauces.

      Thanks!
      -Kim

  1. enjoyed the stuff about ribs and cooking, however I have a new electric smoker. I would assume the
    cooking and stuff would be different.

    1. Jere,

      The tips with cold weather smoking apply to electric cookers too. Insulating your smoker, extra fuel, and extra time are the main tips you’ll need to be aware of. Read through Meathead’s post on Cold Weather Grilling and Smoking for more specific tips and pics of insulation techniques.

      Thanks!
      -Kim

  2. I’ve been smoking and enjoying Baby Back Ribs for years. Nothing wrong with what you are describing, but I find temp monitoring of the meat is hit or miss with ribs as the bone makes up so much of the total mass, it’s hard to gauge done-ness with a meat probe thermometer. Instead, I use a digital probe thermometer to watch my pit temps, but gauge when they are done by the “bend test”. You know the ribs are done when you pick them up from one end of the rack (use an insulated BBQ glove) and the meat just cracks between the bones. If there are no cracks cook a little longer. If they break off they are a bit over done, but will be tender and delicious anyway, just not optimum.

    I also have used the 3-2-1 method at times (3 hours in the smoke, 3 hours in foil (texas crutch), and 1 more hour unwrapped to firm up), which works well for SDt Louis or spare ribs, but the baby back ribs are usually overdone by following this age old advice.

    Lately I’ve just been forgoing the foil wrapping altogether on babies, and shooting for about 5 hours of total time on the smoker. I do flip and flop my ribs as my smoker is not completely uniform in heat distribution, but that also gives me time to check using the bend test for done-ness.

    The BBQ pitmaster’s best friend is a false cambrio. This is just a place to put your meat in when it is done that will hold it hot for a long while but not continue cooking. I use a dry picnic cooler and wrap the ribs in foil first, then several large old bath towels as insulation. I can hold the cooked ribs for up to 5 hours without them going cold or overcooking themselves. Give it a try!

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