My fellow meatheads. 

I have been trying to get the perfect pork sparerib for some years.
I have gotten some good ribs in the past but never seemed to get the flavor or texture right at the same time.
I did a BBQ bonanza over the weekend and gave Sarina big loads of meat with Chinese BBQ pork belly, eye of round beef jerky, chicken breasts, and 4 racks of St. Louis cut spare ribs. I was on fire... Not literally...
Anyway, I digress....
The ribs were done using my modified method 3-1.5-1 in Sarina using oak whisky barrel chunks.
So, what did I do differently?
1) Salted ribs with Lawry's seasoned salt
2) put a layer of Head Country original rub on both sides
3) Finish with a rub layer of Jeff's Original Rub
I usually only used one type of rub in the past.
Had a bottle of Trader Joe's Organic BBQ sauce. This sauce was sweet and bland on it's own. I added about 2T apple cider vinegar and 1/t garlic powder and it was okay.
So, after the cook, I cut the ribs into 2 bone sections and served.
OMG they were perfect! I even told folks I could win a contest with that result.
So finally to my point....
I think I have now gotten the art of ribs down pat with Sarina. Hope I can replicate this success with a barrel cooker.
Thanks for reading...
JC

I have been trying to get the perfect pork sparerib for some years.
I have gotten some good ribs in the past but never seemed to get the flavor or texture right at the same time.
I did a BBQ bonanza over the weekend and gave Sarina big loads of meat with Chinese BBQ pork belly, eye of round beef jerky, chicken breasts, and 4 racks of St. Louis cut spare ribs. I was on fire... Not literally...
Anyway, I digress....
The ribs were done using my modified method 3-1.5-1 in Sarina using oak whisky barrel chunks.
So, what did I do differently?
1) Salted ribs with Lawry's seasoned salt
2) put a layer of Head Country original rub on both sides
3) Finish with a rub layer of Jeff's Original Rub
I usually only used one type of rub in the past.
Had a bottle of Trader Joe's Organic BBQ sauce. This sauce was sweet and bland on it's own. I added about 2T apple cider vinegar and 1/t garlic powder and it was okay.
So, after the cook, I cut the ribs into 2 bone sections and served.
OMG they were perfect! I even told folks I could win a contest with that result.
So finally to my point....
I think I have now gotten the art of ribs down pat with Sarina. Hope I can replicate this success with a barrel cooker.
Thanks for reading...
JC
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