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Updated BBQ Rub and Seasoning

This entry is part 5 of 5 in the series Bradley Digital Smoker

I’ve written before about how most bar-b-que cooks are secretive about their rub and sauce recipes. I’m not. Even if I were cooking competitively I’d tell you 99.9% of what I do. But I’m not cooking competitively (yet – I need something to save for retirement 20 years from now) so I’ll tell you 100% of how I do things and you can use my recipes as a base from which to experiment.

My wife recently had her Aunt and Uncle here in the US from Germany. For the first of several dinners I thought I’d introduce them to something uniquely American. And what’s more American then bar-b-que? I’d argue that even the Hamburger has been exported so much that it’s lost its unique American-ness. You can get a hamburger in any country in the world now. But bar-b-que? That hasn’t been exported yet.

So I decided to make real spare ribs – using a rub I’ve been working on for several months. I also did these in my Bradley smoker since I wanted to actually be able to sit and talk to my guests rather than spend my time tending a fire.

Here’s how I did it:

Smoked Pork Ribs in a Bradley Smoker

Ingredients:

  • 2 racks of St. Louis cut Spare Ribs. (I buy whole cryo-vac ribs and trim them myself. See my BBQ guide for a good video link and explanation, including how to remove the membrane from the back of the slab.
  • ¼ cup molasses or Grade B maple syrup
  • ¼ cup BBQ sauce (I use Sweet Baby Ray’s sauce)
  • 1 T Dark Brown Sugar
  • 2 T Apple Cider Vinegar
  • Rib Rub (see recipe in this post, about half way down the page. Basically 6 parts Brown Sugar, 3 parts salt, 1 part other spices.)

Preparation (12 to 24 hours before smoking)

  1. Pat the ribs dry.
  2. Mix molasses, BBQ sauce, and 2 T vinegar together until blended. Use the brown sugar to sweeten to your taste if using molasses. Probably not needed if using maple syrup. Brush the mixture over the slabs until completely covered.
  3. Sprinkle rib rub liberally over the surface of the ribs.
  4. Wrap in plastic wrap and place in refrigerator for at least 8 hours and up to 24.

Smoking

I used the 3-2-1 method on these ribs. Especially because I had people eating who have never had ribs before and might not appreciate the chew and pull of regular smoked ribs. I use hickory smoke as always.

  1. Remove ribs from refrigerator at least 1 hour prior to smoking and let them come t room temperature.
  2. Set Bradley Smoker oven temp to 220° F. Timer set for 6 hours and 40 minutes.
  3. Let smoker warm up for 40 minutes.
  4. Place ribs on Bradley racks.
  5. Set smoke generator for 3 hours of smoke and start. (You’ll need 11 bisquettes in the tube for this).
  6. After 3 hours, remove ribs from smoker and wrap in aluminum foil. I add a splash of cider vinegar to each foil pouch at this point.
  7. Put foil covered ribs back in smoker for 2 hours. No smoke during this time.
  8. After 2 hours, remove foil packs from smoker. Unwrap ribs and place back on Bradley racks. Be careful to reserve the liquid from the foil pouches – collect it in a small saucepan.
  9. Start the smoke again for one hour (5 bisquettes).
  10. While smoking, reduce the collected liquid to a glaze by heating until reduced by half. Mix this with any additional sauce or spices that you prefer. It will be the final finishing sauce.
  11. After the final hour, remove the ribs from the smoker (they may fall apart at this point, so handle carefully). Brush on your reduced glaze and serve.

They were a hit! I think I may have started a German BBQ cult. Hope this recipe works for you too.

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Series NavigationPulled Pork From My Bradley Smoker

Post Revisions:

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Related posts:

  1. Updated BBQ Rub (Again)
  2. First Smoke in the Bradley Digital Smoker
  3. Six BBQ Lessons I’ve Learned
  4. New Bradley Digital Smoker – A Summary
  5. My BBQ Arsenal