Grilling fall off the bone pork ribs

spidey07

No Lifer
Aug 4, 2000
65,469
5
76
I figured I'd grill some ribs.

three racks of baby-back pork ribs.

I put a nice rub on them and grilled (indirect) them at 225-250 degrees for about two hours.

while the flavor was great they were VERY dry and overcooked.

What did I do wrong? Should I put a pan of water under them? Boil them first and just finish on the grill?

I've had ribs before that were just juicy and literally the meat falls of the bone. I want to make that. Any suggestions? I've searched the net and it seems like BBQ techniques range all over the place.

thanks

oops! wrong forum.

-edit- wow, 8 people viewed the thread in networking. go figure.
 

fractilian

Member
Jun 17, 2001
35
0
0
The way I do it is as follows:
1)toss them on the grill and sear them burn all the fat off. I don't leave them on too long but enough(sorry I never timed it)
2) toss them in the oven for a couple of hours and them slap some sauce on there tward the end.
3) this isn't nessisary BUT it helps to have plenty of beer around(to keep you hydrated while cooking)
Sorry I dont really know any times I dont pay attention(the beer might have something to do with it, but I doubt it)
 

spidey07

No Lifer
Aug 4, 2000
65,469
5
76
Originally posted by: fractilian
The way I do it is as follows:
1)toss them on the grill and sear them burn all the fat off. I don't leave them on too long but enough(sorry I never timed it)
2) toss them in the oven for a couple of hours and them slap some sauce on there tward the end.
3) this isn't nessisary BUT it helps to have plenty of beer around(to keep you hydrated while cooking)
Sorry I dont really know any times I dont pay attention(the beer might have something to do with it, but I doubt it)

but of course....must have beer with grill.

mmm...grilled beer.....mmmm.
 

Thor86

Diamond Member
May 3, 2001
7,888
7
81
If you have a timed crock-pot use it first for the ribs with water and seasonsing until the meat is about to fall off the bones, then grill them the last 5-10mins with your fav bbq sauce for the bbq flava. If you don't have a crock-pot, then I suggest par-boiling them first for about 15mins then bbq them until cooked.
 

spidey07

No Lifer
Aug 4, 2000
65,469
5
76
Originally posted by: Thor86
If you have a timed crock-pot use it first for the ribs with water and seasonsing until the meat is about to fall off the bones, then grill them the last 5-10mins with your fav bbq sauce for the bbq flava. If you don't have a crock-pot, then I suggest par-boiling them first for about 15mins then bbq them until cooked.

thanks, I've heard/read about that way of cooking as well.

Also, some call for baking them in your homemade BBQ sauce.

I'm trying to learn the difference between baby-back ribs and regular port ribs. Maybe I screwed up because baby-back are small.
 

Boscoh

Senior member
Jan 23, 2002
501
0
0
Yes, baby back ribs are small. However, cooked properly they can be just as good as larger pork ribs. There is no substitute, however, for a perfectly BBQ'd full-size pork rib.

And for the beer, I recommend an ice cold Shiner, Bud Ice, or Corona. There isnt too much that goes better with BBQ than those 3.
 

Garion

Platinum Member
Apr 23, 2001
2,331
7
81
A networker's guide to perfect ribs:

1: Remove the fan trays from a Cisco 6509
2: Lay ribs on a customized oven rack that fits in the fan tray slot.
2: Populate the 6509 with at least two gig blades
3: Attach SmartBits to at least 10 gig ports.
4: Start the SmartBits, unthrottled
5: Let the system run for ~4 hours, basting the ribs every 30 minutes.

- Ignore the sizzling sound you hear - That's BBQ sauce dripping onto the heatsinks. It provides the lovely BBQ'd silicon flavor we all love so much.

- For more tender ribs, reduce the SmartBits gig port count to 8 and run for ~6 hours.

- If you're in a hurry, up the port count to 16, throwing in some L3 tests and cook for ~3 hours, but you will sacrifice tenderness (MSFC's tend to cook more unevenly)

- For extra flavor, squirt some pork broth on to the ASICs every hour or so.

Other exciting network BBQ ideas:

Coffee Cup Chicken - Invert a chicken over a cup of Starbucks coffee (Venti!). Place behind a fully populated Sun 4800 and crank up GIMPS for a 4 hours. Rotate every hour, and pour some coffee into the disk subsystem for added flavor. For faster cooking, insert the Sun and the chicken in an airtight box for 2.5 hours, adding disk stress tests to the mix.

BBQ fish fillets - Marinade fish (snapper, halibut, etc.) in home-made BBQ sauce for ~1.5 hours Remove the heatsinks from a Intel XEON-based server. Gently place the filets onto individual heatsinks and let cook for ~3 minutes per side. For more flavorful fish, remove the system fans and re-cover the case while cooking the second side - This keeps that wonderful fried fish / BBQ sauce / thermal transfer grease smoke inside, allowing it to penetrate the fish, enhancing it's natural flavors.

For desert, the old stand-by: Chiller Pops! Always a favorite with the kids! Plug up the drain holes in your data center's air handler, pour in six packages of Rasperry jello mix and two of Lime Jello mix and wait ~2 hours. Remove the drain plugs and out comes the delicious mix. Ignore the other condensing water pouring out of the unit, it's extraneous. If you're in a hurry, you can aim a space heater at the theromstat to increase coolant flow. For extra fun, tap into the glycol loops and add some Cherry Jello - Sugar free works best. Use 1 box for ever 10' of piping. This is a perfect distributed treat - You can access your snack anywhere in the building near the coolant pipes. The taste is unique - Glycol and Cherry mix together to form a lovely sweet-and-sour mix that you'll never find anywhere else!

Flattened BBQ Chicken: Place a chicken breast on a floor tile in the main walking path of the data center. Remove a neighboring tile and place on top of the breast, inverted. Allow normal foot traffic to flatten it for ~6 hours. Place on top of the chiller's radiators for ~4 hours. Baste with BBQ sauce occasionally. For a faster cook time, flatten a variety of radiators and cook at the same time as your glycol-loop-based Chiller Pops, discussed above, which adds increased heat and cooks faster. Be sure to share with your facilities guy, although you might have to take it to the hospital - He probably stepped into the hole left by the missing tile and broke his ankle.

Bon appetit!

- G

 

Dravic

Senior member
May 18, 2000
892
0
76
Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: Thor86
If you have a timed crock-pot use it first for the ribs with water and seasonsing until the meat is about to fall off the bones, then grill them the last 5-10mins with your fav bbq sauce for the bbq flava. If you don't have a crock-pot, then I suggest par-boiling them first for about 15mins then bbq them until cooked.

thanks, I've heard/read about that way of cooking as well.

Also, some call for baking them in your homemade BBQ sauce.

I'm trying to learn the difference between baby-back ribs and regular port ribs. Maybe I screwed up because baby-back are small.

I have had the best results barsing my ribs in a reasonable dark(amber)beer broth before the final grlling with the bbq sauce.. you can skip the searing since it will finish on the grill with bbq sauce.. when its grey, foamy, a bit smelly and looks like nothing you would want to eat.. they are done.. seriously... boiled meat isnt the prettiest thing.. :)

the beer will act as a tenderizer, and the darker beers add a nice flavor.

To Braise: A cooking method in which the main item, usually meat, is seared, then simmered in stock or another liquid in a covered vessel.
 

spidey07

No Lifer
Aug 4, 2000
65,469
5
76
Originally posted by: Garion
A networker's guide to perfect ribs:

1: Remove the fan trays from a Cisco 6509
2: Lay ribs on a customized oven rack that fits in the fan tray slot.
2: Populate the 6509 with at least two gig blades
3: Attach SmartBits to at least 10 gig ports.
4: Start the SmartBits, unthrottled
5: Let the system run for ~4 hours, basting the ribs every 30 minutes.

- Ignore the sizzling sound you hear - That's BBQ sauce dripping onto the heatsinks. It provides the lovely BBQ'd silicon flavor we all love so much.

- For more tender ribs, reduce the SmartBits gig port count to 8 and run for ~6 hours.

- If you're in a hurry, up the port count to 16, throwing in some L3 tests and cook for ~3 hours, but you will sacrifice tenderness (MSFC's tend to cook more unevenly)

- For extra flavor, squirt some pork broth on to the ASICs every hour or so.

Other exciting network BBQ ideas:

Coffee Cup Chicken - Invert a chicken over a cup of Starbucks coffee (Venti!). Place behind a fully populated Sun 4800 and crank up GIMPS for a 4 hours. Rotate every hour, and pour some coffee into the disk subsystem for added flavor. For faster cooking, insert the Sun and the chicken in an airtight box for 2.5 hours, adding disk stress tests to the mix.

BBQ fish fillets - Marinade fish (snapper, halibut, etc.) in home-made BBQ sauce for ~1.5 hours Remove the heatsinks from a Intel XEON-based server. Gently place the filets onto individual heatsinks and let cook for ~3 minutes per side. For more flavorful fish, remove the system fans and re-cover the case while cooking the second side - This keeps that wonderful fried fish / BBQ sauce / thermal transfer grease smoke inside, allowing it to penetrate the fish, enhancing it's natural flavors.

For desert, the old stand-by: Chiller Pops! Always a favorite with the kids! Plug up the drain holes in your data center's air handler, pour in six packages of Rasperry jello mix and two of Lime Jello mix and wait ~2 hours. Remove the drain plugs and out comes the delicious mix. Ignore the other condensing water pouring out of the unit, it's extraneous. If you're in a hurry, you can aim a space heater at the theromstat to increase coolant flow. For extra fun, tap into the glycol loops and add some Cherry Jello - Sugar free works best. Use 1 box for ever 10' of piping. This is a perfect distributed treat - You can access your snack anywhere in the building near the coolant pipes. The taste is unique - Glycol and Cherry mix together to form a lovely sweet-and-sour mix that you'll never find anywhere else!

Flattened BBQ Chicken: Place a chicken breast on a floor tile in the main walking path of the data center. Remove a neighboring tile and place on top of the breast, inverted. Allow normal foot traffic to flatten it for ~6 hours. Place on top of the chiller's radiators for ~4 hours. Baste with BBQ sauce occasionally. For a faster cook time, flatten a variety of radiators and cook at the same time as your glycol-loop-based Chiller Pops, discussed above, which adds increased heat and cooks faster. Be sure to share with your facilities guy, although you might have to take it to the hospital - He probably stepped into the hole left by the missing tile and broke his ankle.

Bon appetit!

- G
you sir are quite simply not right.

;)

 

Garion

Platinum Member
Apr 23, 2001
2,331
7
81
Must be all the emissions from the dozen or so UL Class B devices we all have running our lab.. Er.. Cube.

But, from you, I'll take that as a compliment.

- G