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the best smoked pork ribs ever

4.8

(13)

sweetcsdesigns.com
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Ingredients

Remove All · Remove Spices · Remove Staples

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Instructions

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Step 1

Mix ingredients for rub together in a bowl.

Step 2

Remove pork from packaging, pat dry with paper towels and allow to come to room temperature. I like to trim off excess fat and silver skin at this point. You do want to keep about 1/4” of fat on the top called the fat cap. As your meat slowly cooks, this melts and keeps the meat moist.

Step 3

Apply rub, and refrigerate over night. Soak wood chips or blocks over night in water.

Step 4

Remove meat from refrigerator and let come to room temperature.

Step 5

Next morning, prepare lump charcoal in smoker using newspaper and charcoal chimney. I do not use lighter fluid or compressed charcoal briquettes because I believe the leave a petroleum taste on the meat.

Step 6

While the coals come to temperature, combine the ingredients for the mop and put in a spray bottle on plastic container.

Step 7

When coals are glowing and grey, add the ribs to the smoker. Keep the meat as far from the fire as possible. If you have a barrel smoker with a fire box, keep on the opposite side of the grill surface from the fire box. If you have a conventional smoker or Weber-style kettle grill, build small fire on one side of kettle and keep meat on the other side.

Step 8

Add handful of wet wood chips/block to fire. Cover and let cook.

Step 9

You’ll likely need to check the fire every 30-45 minutes. After an hour of smoking you should start mopping your meat every time you check the fire.

Step 10

I like to use a silicone basting brush for this. The inexpensive fibre brushes that are commonly sold at big-box stores begin to come apart quickly and in my experience often shed bristles on the meat.

Step 11

I also rotate my meat every hour to ensure that all sides get even exposure to the heat and smoke. This is particularly important if you’re using a conventional kettle grill for your smoking.

Step 12

If you have an outdoor temperature probe, use it to track the internal temperature of you meat. After several hours, your meat may “stall” around 150F. I usually keep smoking mine. In Texas, they wrap them in foil with a cup of mop to finish.

Step 13

You’re shooting for your meat to get to 185F. Once you hit that mark, remove your meat from the smoker, double wrap in foil and let sit in an unheated over for an hour to hour and a half depending on fat content of the meat.

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