Kc-Style Baby Back Ribs
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Try this Kc-Style Baby Back Ribs recipe, or contribute your own.
Yield: 8 Ready in 1 hours
Cuisine: AmericanMain Ingredient:
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Kc-Style Baby Back Ribs Preparation
Hello, Barbecue Enthusiasts! We could not offer you our collection of recipes honoring National Barbecue Month without providing you with the classic of all barbecued ribs. Break out the paper towels and rib bibs ?? were making Kansas City-Style Baby Back Ribs tonight! Otherwise known as loin ribs, baby back pork ribs are more expensive than other styles of pork or beef ribs. However, the price is well worth the money; and dont hesitate to work with the butcher at your local market to get the perfect size or shape of ribs to fit your grill. Prepare the dry rub by sifting together the sugar, seasoned salt, garlic, celery, and onion salts, paprika, chili powder, black, cayenne, and lemon peppers, sage, mustard, and thyme in a large glass mixing bowl. Store in an airtight container, preferably a glass jar, and utilize as a dry rub for todays recipe and other barbecued meals, too. Kitchen Staff Tip: Remember, the "dry rub" mixture is not actually rubbed into the meat. You simply sprinkle it on the cut of meat youll be preparing on the grill or in your smoker. Prepare your grill to maintain a temperature of 230 F to 250 F degrees while cooking the ribs. You may elect to utilize oak, hickory, or apple-flavored wood chips. If you do, remember to soak the bag of wood chips in a bucket of water next to your grill and add them as you grill the baby back ribs. This water-soaked method helps release the full essence of the smoky flavor from the wood chips in the steam and smoke created on your grill. Blot ribs with a paper towel to remove excess moisture, then sprinkle both sides of the ribs with the dry rub. Arrange slabs on the grill and prepare to cook the ribs for 4 to 6 hours, adding more coals as necessary to maintain the heat. Halfway through cooking, turn the ribs. The ribs are done when you can gently pull them apart with safely gloved hands. Transfer ribs to the cutting board and allow them to cool slightly before cutting and serving. Serve with your favorite warmed barbecue sauce on the side, or return the cut ribs to the grill and bathe them in your favorite barbecue sauce as you grill for about 10 minutes more, being sure to turn them once, then serve. Kitchen Staff Tips: You can reduce your grilling time by precooking or parboiling the baby back ribs. Either parboil them in a large stock pot until they are gray, or bake in a moderate 350-F degree oven until lightly browned. Apply dry rub as directed. You may also want to mix up and keep ready keep a light basting liquid of 1 cup water, 1/2 cup olive oil, and 3 tablespoons dry rub, just in case the ribs start drying out on the grill. Total cooking time will be about 1 or 2 hours, depending on the thickness of the ribs. Spareribs are a little less pricey and may also be used with todays recipe. Because they come from the underbelly of the pig, situated right next to the bacon, they dont contain as much meat as baby back ribs. Spareribs are also full of fat and small gristle bones, which end up making the meat juicier on the grill. You may substitute 2 slabs of skinned spareribs for each 3 to 4-lb. portion of baby back ribs, and prepare todays recipe as directed. Grilling time varies if you elect not to parboil or precook the spareribs. Total grilling time runs about 6 to 8 hours. Posted to dailyrecipe@recipe-a-day.com by Recipe-a-Day
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Raw baby back ribs.
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sgrishka
Removed membrane from back side of ribs. Use a paper towel to grasp the membrane and peel away from ribs.
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sgrishka
Sprinkle dry rub onto both sides of prepared ribs.
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sgrishka
Coals are ready when completely ashed over.
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sgrishka
Hickory wood chips, soaked in apple cider for an hour, ready to for the grill.
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sgrishka
Grill with coals and wood chips in foil - set up for indirect cooking (meaning not directly over the coals). Cooking low-and-slow this way, the meat is infused with pure wood smoke rather than with smoke from fat dripping on the coals.
photo by
sgrishka
Ribs on...ready to close lid and adjust vents to maintain temperature between 230° F and 250° F degrees while cooking the ribs.
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sgrishka
After first hour.
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sgrishka
Midway through cooking, turn ribs.
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sgrishka
Ribs ready to come off the grill. When cooking over indirect heat, low-and-slow at about 230° F, you can paint ribs with warmed bbq sauce for the last 30 minutes of cooking, if desired. If you like your sauce caramelized and crispy, perhaps even a bit burnt or with char marks, paint on the sauce and place ribs over hot direct heat for ten minutes or so per side, watching carefully so as not to burn (ff using this technique, shorten the cooking time by about 30 minutes to avoid overcooking the ribs).
photo by
sgrishka
Perfectly slow-cooked and smoked baby back ribs with a nice, crisp "bark" on the outside and tender, juicy and flavorful meat on the inside that pulls off the bone cleanly with little effort. Ready to enjoy with your favorite Kansas City style barbecue sauce.
photo by
sgrishka
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