1 rack Baby Back ribs, cut into single ribs 1 cup Rib rub 2 cups Water 3 Tbsp Liquid smoke Barbeque sauce 1. Pre heat oven to 350F . 2. In a large plastic bag, place single Rib portions and Rib rub.
There is nothing quite like the flavor of an award-winning pit master’s competition ribs that have been smoking low (temperature) and slow (several hours) in a propane, charcoal, or pellet smoker. If ...
Opening the oven door and finding a rack of beautifully cooked ribs to devour is like magic. The scent is almost so pungent that the kitchen can be warmed with the aroma, tantalizing the taste buds ...
Don’t have a smoking rig? No problem. These ribs, from Mississippi chef and cookbook author John Currence, are almost — almost! — as good. They hark back to the ribs of Currence’s New Orleans ...
Fall-off-the-bone oven-baked ribs are one of the comfort foods. While ribs are often thought of as something easy to slap onto the grill, not everyone has access to one or wants to brave the weather ...
Preheat oven to 350°F. In a 1-gallon, heavy-bottomed saucepot, heat 2 tablespoons vegetable oil over medium-high heat. Add bacon and sauté until fat renders, 6–8 minutes. Do not burn. Add ground chile ...
Let Texans brag about brisket and Carolinians extol pulled pork shoulder. For the rest of us, the ultimate emblem of barbecue — and test of a grill master’s mettle — is ribs. Picture meaty slabs stung ...
Ribs are a unique cut of meat in that there’s really only one way to cook (smoking low and slow until tender) and eat (by hand off the bone). Because under- and overdone ribs are equally disappointing ...