by RodinBangkok » Mon May 17, 2010 11:42 am
IMHO your method will have you selling essentially leftover ribs. I'd recommend you modify your cooking holding plan. If you must buy and freeze the ribs, then freeze them as purchased, pull and defrost in the fridge on a two day cycle. That is if your selling daily, pull the ribs for day after tomorrow today to defrost. Take todays production and prep, that could be a dry rub, or if your doing these foiled in an oven I find that a good sauce is your best best. Dry rubs do best on open slow cook systems such as a low temp offset smoker, for that by the way make sure your dry rub has a good sugar content, preferably brown sugar, to promote carmelization. But in the case of oven cooking, I'd use a good strong thick sauce. Back to process:
Pull from the fridge, lay on a heavy duty extra wide piece of al foil, or two layers of regular. Apply a layer of sauce, flip and repeat. Seal tight. Do these slow and time your cooking to finish just before you leave for your event, I'd allow at least 3-4 hours at a low oven temp. Take these straight from the oven to a holding container such as a cambro or just a plain insulated plastic cooler will do.
For final prep pull these and place on a low grill, add more sauce and carmelize that sauce. This is best done indirect on a very hot covered grill, but can be done direct, but takes a lot of attention. The problem with ribs is oven and grill area, they are big in size versus their portion size.
I am the master of my fate:
I am the captain of my soul.
_____
Rod