Lord-Foul wrote:
These ribs were boiled prior to bbq'ing and were the most tender I've ever tasted.
Are we looking for tender, or a proper flavor?
A guy could boil meat until it falls apart, but how is that appetizing? Especially if you are trying for a true BBQ flavor and texture.
Ribs can be done from a fresh raw state cooking directly over charcoal or hardwoods, just keep the temps low and baste to keep them from burning.
I am not trying to be a "Richard Cranium" or anything, but I am having difficulty trying to keep my breakfast from re-appearing with all this talk of boiled meat.
Ribs should be cooked at low temperatures over hardwoods or charcoal with hardwoods for flavor
If you are trying to duplicate true to form American-Stlye Barbecue ribs, they need to be lightly seasoned with a dry rub a few minutes before cooking in a smokey environment between 225F-250F
Simple rub recipe,
3 parts sugar
1 part salt (Uniodized)
Then use the following items for flavor and color
Paprika
Granulated garlic
Granulated onion
Black pepper
Maybe some dried mustard powder
Ground bay leaf or whatever flavor you care to use besides cinnamon, nutmeg, anise and other highly aromatic things.
Sprinkle the rub liberally on the meat while you smoker is coming up to temp, then cook the ribs until they are tender but not falling apart.
If you season the ribs with salt and/or sugar several hours or days before cooking, you are effectively curing the meat and it will make the texture similar to a ham.