ronnie_suburban wrote:Yesterday, I seasoned them up with a bit of kosher salt, some freshly-ground black pepper and a hearty sprinkling of G Wiv's excellent Chicago BBQ Rub (which is now available through The Spice House), then cooked them low and slow, over lump charcoal and some apple wood, at 275 F, for about 4 hours. The results were terrific . . .
Beef ribs; rare, smokey and tender
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Jamieson22 wrote:Wait, 275 F for 4 Hours and they were rare??
mhill95149 wrote:Great looking shot there Ronnie!
How much per pound for the Zier's aged prime NY strips?
We had some age primes from Bryan Flannery in CA
this weekend at $35.99 pp and while they were really good
I'd love to try some local meat...
Here's a shot of one of the steaks from this weekend
ronnie_suburban wrote:Jamieson22 wrote:Wait, 275 F for 4 Hours and they were rare??
Yep. When I put them in the cooker, they were about 35 degrees F and I did have a few other things in there, too. I guess it may have been closer to 3.5 hours and I can't say that the temp was an exact 275 for the entire time but it was pretty close, as it dropped down a bit each time I opened the cooker to check them.
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Jamieson22 wrote:ronnie_suburban wrote:Jamieson22 wrote:Wait, 275 F for 4 Hours and they were rare??
Yep. When I put them in the cooker, they were about 35 degrees F and I did have a few other things in there, too. I guess it may have been closer to 3.5 hours and I can't say that the temp was an exact 275 for the entire time but it was pretty close, as it dropped down a bit each time I opened the cooker to check them.
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Wow, guess that just seems to defy logic, and has me scratching my head as I can't imagine 3.5 hours @ 275 = Rare. May just have to hunt down some more beef ribs and "experiment"
Jamie
ronnie_suburban wrote:Well, as you know, BBQ is as much art as it is science. I didn't monitor things too closely. At 11:30 am, I put a bunch of meat on, including the beef ribs and ran the cooker as I always do. I checked things about every 30 minutes. After what was about 4 hours, I twisted one of the rib bones and it was moderately loose, so I took them off at that point. But again, I'm sure the temperature varied while I was cooking and I did have about 6-7 pounds of other meat on the cooker, so that probably played a part in things, too and may have slowed down the overall cooking process. The important thing is to get out there and cook!
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Jamieson22 wrote:ronnie_suburban wrote:Well, as you know, BBQ is as much art as it is science. I didn't monitor things too closely. At 11:30 am, I put a bunch of meat on, including the beef ribs and ran the cooker as I always do. I checked things about every 30 minutes. After what was about 4 hours, I twisted one of the rib bones and it was moderately loose, so I took them off at that point. But again, I'm sure the temperature varied while I was cooking and I did have about 6-7 pounds of other meat on the cooker, so that probably played a part in things, too and may have slowed down the overall cooking process. The important thing is to get out there and cook!
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Oh yeah totally understand, and certainly not questioning your methods or abilities. Just more so curious. Were the beef ribs good served rare?
ronnie_suburban wrote:Oh yeah. I would have never thought to even try them. But Dave Zier is familiar with my cooker and thought they'd turn out well. He was definitely right about it. I was very pleased. And thinking about it now, perhaps some of that red color in the finished meat could be attributed to the cooking process/smoke ring. I wish I'd taken more (and better) pics.
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Jamieson22 wrote:ronnie_suburban wrote:Oh yeah. I would have never thought to even try them. But Dave Zier is familiar with my cooker and thought they'd turn out well. He was definitely right about it. I was very pleased. And thinking about it now, perhaps some of that red color in the finished meat could be attributed to the cooking process/smoke ring. I wish I'd taken more (and better) pics.
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Honestly those ribs look rare, not pink from a smoke ring. Could be that the photo is deceiving, but either way they are making me hungry.
Jamie
ronnie_suburban wrote:These steaks were juicy and really flavorful. Amazingly, those faint white streaks, which look like they might be sinew, are actually pockets of soft, delectably-marbled fat.
Coming from someone 7 hours ahead of Chicago and in a country that celebrates Christmas on Christmas Eve, Happy holidays, everyone.
Mhays wrote:Ditto, Bridgestone!
Quick question - does anybody have a time range for the low-roast then sear method? I've got a 9-lb roast and am trying to figure out when to cook everything else, since it's the only thing I'll be cooking at 250. I've looked all over the interenet and gotten from between 15-30 minutes per lb, which is a BIG differential. Anybody experienced with this method care to chime in?
ronnie_suburban wrote:Was it wrong of me to not serve these ribs to the group? :wink
ronnie_suburban wrote:Was it wrong of me to not serve these ribs to the group?