How to Make Great Ribs

This is a cooking method for ribs, using an oven or an electric smoker, or even your covered grill if you can control the temperature evenly enough. You can use any BBQ sauce, but personally, I like K.C. Masterpiece® BBQ sauce, or BULL'S-EYE® original BBQ sauce. If you are a purist, and must make your own sauce, try this recipe for BBQ sauce. It really is excellent. The BBQ sauce you use will make a big difference in how your ribs turn out.

Cooked BabyBack Ribs, prepared with a rub and cooked with sauce on.

Ribs Recipe by: Craig

Preparation Time: 6:00

Categories: American, Main Dishes, Pork


It seems that there are as many opinions on how to cook ribs as there are people. I've tried a variety of ways to make pork ribs. I've tried the methods where you start the raw ribs on the grill, and put barbecue sauce on them only near the end of cooking. I've tried marinating them over night before cooking them. I've tried pre-cooking them by boiling them for a half an hour before cooking them. I've tried the crock pot method. I've tried different kinds of BBQ sauces. Some of the ribs I've made using those methods have been quite good, but not as good as the ribs I make using the oven method described below. One time that I made ribs, I marinated them over night in a ginger teriyaki sauce, and then grilled the raw ribs directly on the grill. They were really  good, but I've never been able to reproduce that experience. The method I describe here has consistently made the best BBQ ribs.

Different Types of Ribs

The oven cooking method described here works best on pork spareribs and baby back ribs. Cooking times will differ for the three different cuts of ribs. I recommend spareribs, as they are less expensive, and have more fat, and this barbecue process renders them tender and flavorful. Diagram showing from where on the pig the various cuts of pork are found.

If you are serving adults, then one serving is officially half a rack of ribs, but in my experience an adult can eat more than that. Half a rack of untrimmed spareribs is about the same size as a full rack of baby back ribs, so take that into account too. If you have leftovers, send them to me!

Equipment

Raw ribs with rib rack and bottled BBQ sauce
Raw Ribs with Rib Rack and BBQ Sauce
(Looks like an advertisement for K. C. Masterpiece)

The trick to great ribs is to cook them very slowly with the BBQ sauce on them. You can do this in an oven, just set the temperature to 225° F (about 107° C). I usually use an electric smoker, which cooks at about 200 to 225 degrees Fahrenheit. I've also used this method on my gas grill and in my oven. Cook the ribs for 4½ to 5 hours. The time it takes you to cook the ribs may vary depending on the true temperature of your grill, oven, or smoker, the temperature of the ribs when you start, and other factors. Baby back ribs take 30 to 45 minutes less than spareribs. Try a half rack the day before you intend to use this method the first time, so you can get the timing correct.

I don't actually smoke the ribs; I don't put any wood chips in the smoker, although that might be good if I weren't using any barbecue sauce. I do have a pan of water below the meat in the smoker though, just as if I were smoking them. Don't use a pan of water if you're cooking your ribs in the oven or on your grill. The pan of water isn't necessary, however you will need a pan or aluminum foil to catch any drippings and keep from making a mess of your oven.

Uncooked ribs with BBQ sauce on them.
Uncooked ribs with BBQ sauce on them.

Also, use a rack, so the ribs can be cooked standing up. This will save you room, and it separates the racks of ribs so that the sauce cooks on to the ribs. I generally cut the rack of ribs in half before cooking it, to make it easier to handle. There are a few rib racks available at Amazon.  I'd recommend the Weber rack, as it is less expensive than others, but any of them will work. The rack I use came from Home Depot, and is a Char-Broil brand rack.

What about Rubs?

Liberally apply the rub.
Liberally apply the rub.

I do not recommend using a rub if this is the first time you are making ribs. It is much simpler to prepare the ribs without a rub, and the ribs will still taste great if you use a good BBQ sauce and this cooking method.

A rub is a mixture of spices that is liberally applied to meat, usually before cooking, to impart flavor to the meat. Most "award winning" recipes use a rub, which is generally a secret mixture that is guarded by the owner. The main ingredients in most rubs are sugar and salt, followed by pepper of some sort, and various herbs and other spices. Rubs are generally applied to the raw meat and allowed to stand for a period of time anywhere from an hour to over night. The sugar and salt draw moisture out of the meat and dissolve forming a saline solution with the herbs and spices that is then drawn back into the meat imparting flavor to the meat. So the rub works in a way that is similar to brining a turkey.

I often do not use a rub since the flavors the rub adds are generally already in a good barbecue sauce, and if they aren't, then they can be added to the sauce. Also, since a large part of the rub is sugar and salt, I feel that they draw some moisture out of the meat, and they can make the ribs salty. I do not recommend using a rub if this is the first time you are trying this cooking method.

The baby back ribs in the picture at the very top of this page were cooked with Rub 1 and sauce on them. Another rub to try is Rub 2.

Wrap in plastic wrap and store in the fridge.
Wrap in plastic wrap and store in the fridge.

If you are interested in using a rub, then this is how you do it: Start the night before you plan to cook the ribs. Lay out your ribs lengthwise on a long sheet of plastic wrap. Liberally apply your rub to all surfaces of the meat pressing it on to the meat a bit. The top surface of the ribs is the main one where the rub will be effective. Fold the plastic wrap around the ribs sealing in all the spice mixture, and store in your refrigerator over night.

When I use a rub on ribs, I apply the sauce over the rub before cooking.

Cooking Methods

The "1 - 2 - 3" Method

Cook spareribs, in the oven, for a total of six hours at 225° F. For the first (1) hour cook the ribs in the oven as I have outlined here, but without the sauce. Then wrap the ribs in foil and cook them two (2) hours. For the final phase, remove the foil and cook them for three (3) more hours. Cover with sauce during the last two hours of cooking.
 
If you want to use this method on baby back ribs, make the time intervals 45 minutes instead of one hour: so (1) - 45 minutes without sauce or foil; (2) - 90 minutes wrapped in foil; (3) - 2 hours 15 minutes unwrapped. Cover with sauce last 90 minutes

If you really want the meat to just fall off the bones, then you might try the "1 - 2 - 3" method. Personally, I think the "1 - 2 - 3" method can dry out the ribs, especially baby backs, too much, so I don't generally use it.  The "1 - 2 - 3" method works better with spareribs or country style ribs, both of which have more fat, and longer cooking times, than baby backs.

You also might try the crock pot method of cooking ribs, but I find the crock pot method produces ribs that are generally not as flavorful as the oven method described here.  I definitely wouldn't do baby back ribs in the crock pot, but I find that country style ribs done in the crock pot are quite good, and spareribs done in the crock pot are passable.

The Oven Method

If you are oven or smoker cooking your ribs, which is what I recommend, then cover the ribs with BBQ sauce from the start. Put more sauce on about half way through cooking.  I know that common wisdom says not to touch the ribs while they are cooking, and not to put sauce on them while they are cooking, but try my method and you will find that you get great ribs.

About half way through cooking, I generally turn the ribs over and re-coat them with BBQ sauce. I put the sauce on pretty thick, and try to cover any bare spots. You want the sauce to thicken and cook on to the ribs. If you put the sauce on too often, you'll prevent it from cooking onto the ribs.

Because you are cooking the ribs at a low temperature, the sugar in the barbecue sauce does not burn -- but DO NOT GO ABOVE 225° F.   In addition, because you are cooking the ribs at a low temperature, you do not need to pre-cook them or boil them.

Ribs just out of the oven.
Just out of the Oven
Ribs just out of the oven and cut once.
Isn't that pretty.


Please do not boil, parboil, or steam your ribs, which removes moisture, fat, and flavor along with it, and can produce dried out ribs. Would you boil a beef steak before you grilled it? How about pork chops?  No, of course not, you'd end up with dried out, or rubbery and tough steak or chops. When you make soup, you boil meat in water, the water gets flavor from the meat, and the meat itself loses its flavor to the water. This is fine if you are making soup, but not if you are making ribs. We want the ribs to retain their flavor.

If your goal in boiling the ribs is to remove the fat from the ribs, then... well, why are you eating ribs? Boil a skinless chicken breast and put barbecue sauce on it and it will taste about the same as boiled ribs and it won't have the fat.

I believe that the rib meat should not just fall off the bone, but that you shouldn't have to work too hard to get the meat either.  Cooking 4½ to 5 hours at 225° F should do the trick.   Experiment with the timing to get it just right.

With spare or baby back ribs, when the ribs are done, the tips of the rib bones should be exposed, as they are in the picture at the top of this recipe. To determine the done-ness of the ribs, grasp one of these rib bone tips and twist, you should be able to turn the bone (a little) in the meat, without too much trouble. If the meat is still firmly attached to the bone, then you need to cook the ribs longer. If the bone rips right out, then your ribs are really ready.

Ribs cut to serve.
Ribs cut to serve

Try this method on a half a rack of ribs for yourself before you try it for company or a group of people: since oven and smoker temperatures vary, you need to experiment to get the cooking time just right -- nobody wants undercooked ribs, or burned barbecue sauce or overcooked dried out ribs either.

Add more sauce just before serving, or serve with extra sauce on the side.

Summary

  1. Use the Oven / Smoker Method.
  2. Cover raw ribs with sauce.
  3. Use a rib-rack to cook ribs standing up.
  4. Cook in smoker or oven at 225°F for 4½ to 5 hours for spareribs
      (3¾ to 4½ for baby backs).
  5. Add more BBQ sauce just before serving, or serve extra sauce on the side.

Wondering what to serve with ribs?

  • coleslaw or Texas Caviar
  • home cut or steak fries or sweet potato fries
  • baked beans or black beans
  • hush puppies, cornbread muffins, buttermilk biscuits or Jalapeño Cheddar Grits
  • Greens (collard, beet greens, kale, spinach, or Swiss chard)
  • grilled corn on the cob
  • grilled vegetables

 

Enjoy!

Craig