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JohnnyB

is one Smokin' Farker
Joined
Feb 23, 2015
Location
Backwoods, NH
So I stopped by the Market Basket on my way home. Thought I'd take a shot in the dark and ask the meat guy if they had any beef ribs. Says, "yep, just got a case in!" Awesome. He said they only get them in a few times a year, so I grabbed a couple double rack packages. They definitely took as much prime as they could, but there's still lots of good meat in between the ribs (Or am I wrong and I got hosed?).

Questions are, while the 275* range seems to be what people recommend, am I cooking these for temp or tender? About how long should I expect them to take? Wrap, or no? And is $4/lb a good buy?

Hit me up, please. Im so excited to do these up tomorrow. Thanks guys!
 

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Those are nice. At 275 probably 4 to 5 hours. I start checking for doneness at 3 though because I've been surprised before. Those are nice and meaty looking for back ribs. I usually only see them in select grade but they're often available.
 
Rub them with your favorite beef rub and cook them till probe tender. No need to wrap if you don't want to.
Here's a thread from the other day you may be interested in. Good luck with your cook!

http://www.bbq-brethren.com/forum/showthread.php?t=218077

Great, thanks. I didn't even think to do a search. I don't think you guys realize what it's like to see these things around these parts. Haha.
 
Those are nice. At 275 probably 4 to 5 hours. I start checking for doneness at 3 though because I've been surprised before. Those are nice and meaty looking for back ribs. I usually only see them in select grade but they're often available.
One is ok, I would put it lower choice, not a ton of marbling. The other is definitely in the prime area, lots of good fat running through it. The meat guy got them for me, and wouldn't bring the box out to let me sort through it. Beggars can't be choosers. Literally.
 
They look amazing! Can't wait to see how they turn out. That is if you choose to post results of corse! Beef ribs are some of the most forgiving meats out there to smoke. Great advice given already! One thing I would add is don't over season them. Enjoy!
 
Those are really nice back ribs! Nice marbling. Definitley post the cook! Don't pull em till they probe tender!
 
My pooches would love the bones. They get REAL happy when they see me cooking beef anything on the grill. They nearly lose their mind when I cook their beef ribs.
 
Bout 5 hours seems to be the norm. Im gonna do em unwrapped, simple rub. I'll post some pics (if I don't mess em up too much). Thanks for all the tips and thread links, guys. Great help as usual here!
 
So here are the results. Sorry it took me until today, I had an incident yesterday involving my son and needing some X-rays to check for a swallowed soda can tab, and didn't get home until late. But all is well now.

All in all, they were very good for my first time. I did them unwrapped, goal temp of 275* (went as high as 325 for a while), and they were done at the 3 hour mark, which surprised me. Seems the going timeframe was 5 hours, but I was running a bit over my temp. Very tender, not fall off the bone, but bite off the bone. I'd say good enough. What kinda turned me off was the bark, it was a little too crunchy for me. So next time I am going to turn the temp down a bit, wrap at probably two hours, and see how that goes.

Lessons learned: Do NOT over season! I was told this, and I went lighter than usual, but the Montreal Steak Seasoning was a little over powering when the meat shrank to it's final state.

Thanks for all the help, it was appreciated. And im glad I can now see why these beef ribs are talked about so much.
 

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They look real good

I only salt and pepper them before cooking. You can always add flavor later, too much bark and you lose the great beef flavor
 
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