1. Pat pork racks dry with paper towels and rub oil all over the ribs. Mix smoked pecan wood rub or rub of choice with salt. Rub spice mix all over the ribs. 2. Place on a sheet pan lined with ...
When you’re craving barbecue but don’t want to spend hours outside tending the grill, take the “grill” inside for low and slow oven-roasted ribs. This recipe takes inspiration from Korean barbecue and ...
Before you cry blasphemy at thought of cooking ribs in an oven rather than on a grill as nature intended, hear us out. Your oven-cooked ribs can be tender, juicy and flavorful! Not to mention, if you ...
Opening the oven door and finding a rack of beautifully cooked ribs to devour is like magic. The scent is almost so pungent that the kitchen can be warmed with the aroma, tantalizing the taste buds ...
Don’t have a smoking rig? No problem. These ribs, from Mississippi chef and cookbook author John Currence, are almost — almost! — as good. They hark back to the ribs of Currence’s New Orleans ...
If you want leftover ribs that taste like they just came off the grill, then you need to know how to reheat ribs. And whether you’re warming up a rack of ribs, BBQ ribs, spare ribs, or pork ribs, a ...
The process of making Yearwood’s Barbecue Pork Ribs is twofold. However, the singer and Food Network host of Trisha’s Southern Kitchen says the time spent is “well worth it.” Yearwood’s pork ribs are ...
James Beard award-winning chef John Currence feels stupid for releasing a tailgating cookbook in the middle of the plague. His words. It’s true that “TAILGREAT: How to Crush It at Tailgating” (Ten ...
There is nothing quite like the flavor of an award-winning pit master’s competition ribs that have been smoking low (temperature) and slow (several hours) in a propane, charcoal, or pellet smoker. If ...
Grocery store ribs shoppers swear taste smoky, tender, and straight from a smokehouse.