I've cooked several pork ribs on my Masterbuilt electric smoker. I have been doing the ribs at 230 degrees for about 4 hours and 15 minutes and they have come out nicely as they looked to me. Last night I decided to check the internal temp as I have read when they are 190-200 they are done. After cooking at 225 for about 4 hours 15 minutes the ribs were about 172 and doing the lift test (Lifting in the middle) the ribs didn't really want to break apart so I figured they are not done. I put them back in the smoker for another hour at about 245 degrees and the internal temp still not coming about 175. I sliced and ate them then and while the fattest ribs were nicely cooked most of the medium to smaller ribs were a bit dry to me. They did have a really nice pull and weren't falling off the bone but they were kind of dry.
So my questions are why isn't the internal temp of the ribs coming about 175? Am I not cooking long enough? Also, why are most of the ribs on the dry side if they aren't coming up to the 190-200 that is supposed to be the finished internal temp of ribs? Should I wrap my ribs after a few hours to keep the meat from going dry but cook longer to get the internal temp up? (Wasn't just the internal temp, the ribs also weren't passing the lift test where you pick them up in the middle and it starts to break apart)
So my questions are why isn't the internal temp of the ribs coming about 175? Am I not cooking long enough? Also, why are most of the ribs on the dry side if they aren't coming up to the 190-200 that is supposed to be the finished internal temp of ribs? Should I wrap my ribs after a few hours to keep the meat from going dry but cook longer to get the internal temp up? (Wasn't just the internal temp, the ribs also weren't passing the lift test where you pick them up in the middle and it starts to break apart)