January 3, 2011 5:35 PM

Rack Up Grill Flavor with Ribs

By
CBSNews
(CBS)  Ribs are a summertime favorite for the backyard barbecue.

But do you know ribs taste different all over the country?

Chris Kimball, editor in chief of Cook's Illustrated and host of "America's Test Kitchen" on public television, has come out with a new book called "Cook's Country Best Grilling Recipes" with his team at Cook's Country magazine that highlights some of America's diverse barbecue tastes.

And on "The Early Show" Thursday, Kimball showed how infuse your grill with those spice combinations, from classic Texas-style barbecue to Memphis, Kansas City and Chicago tastes.

When grilling ribs, you can choose between pork and beef. Where things get a bit confusing, according to Kimball, is that there are many different cuts of pork ribs from which to choose. They include:

- Spareribs: Whole racks of pork spareribs (cut from the underside of the pig, near the belly) contain the brisket bone and surrounding meat. They weigh four to five pounds. Their large size and irregular shape make them bulky and unwieldy (large racks don't fit on some smaller grills).

- St. Louis cut spareribs: These are pork spareribs trimmed of the brisket bone and surrounding meat. They are uniformly rectangular and weigh about three pounds per rack.

- Baby back ribs: Baby back ribs, also called back ribs, loin ribs, or loin back ribs, are cut from the area of the ribs closest to the backbone (above the spareribs) of mature hogs. They can be cooked like spareribs, but watch the clock: They will become tender more quickly because they are smaller and leaner. Depending on how the animal was butchered, racks of baby back ribs can contain anywhere from eight to 15 bones.

RECIPES

Texas Beef Ribs

Pork ribs are delicious, but don't even think about telling this to a Texan! Texans are all about beef ribs. The hallmark of beef ribs is, quite simply, their meatiness. The seasonings take a backseat to big, meaty flavor. It's also interesting to note that unlike pork ribs you're not after fall-off-the-bone tenderness -- a bit of "pull" is OK.

In Texas, good beef ribs are the secret handshake between experienced grillers. With a price tag of roughly $2 a pound and availability at nearly every butcher counter, beef ribs are both economical and convenient. But it is their huge meaty flavor -- combined with spice, smoke, and fire-that makes them a Texas favorite.

Serves 43 tablespoons brown sugar
4 teaspoons chili powder
1/2 teaspoon cayenne pepper
1 tablespoon salt
2 teaspoons pepper
3-4 beef rib slabs (3 to 4 ribs per slab, about 5 pounds total) (see note)
1 cup wood chips , soaked for 15 minutes

1. MAKE RUB Combine sugar, chili powder, cayenne, salt, and pepper in bowl. Pat ribs dry with paper towels and rub sugar mixture all over ribs. (Ribs can be wrapped in plastic and refrigerated for 24 hours.)

2. STEAM RIBS Adjust oven rack to middle position and heat oven to 300 degrees. Arrange ribs on wire rack set inside rimmed baking sheet. Add just enough water to cover pan bottom, then cover pan tightly with aluminum foil and bake until fat has rendered and meat begins to pull away from bones, about 2 hours.

3. SMOKE RIBS Tightly seal wood chips in foil packet and cut vent holes in top of packet. Open bottom vent on grill. Light about 100 coals; when covered with fine gray ash, carefully pile on one side of grill. Arrange foil packet directly on coals. Set cooking grate in place and heat, covered, with lid vent open halfway, until wood chips begin to smoke heavily, about 5 minutes. (For gas grill, place foil packet directly on primary burner. Heat all burners on high, covered, until wood chips begin to smoke heavily, about 15 minutes. Leave primary burner on high, shut other burner(s) off.) Scrape cooking grate clean. Arrange ribs on cool side of grill and barbecue, covered, flipping and rotating slabs once, until ribs are lightly charred and smoky, about 1 1/2 hours. Transfer to cutting board, tent with foil, and let rest 10 minutes. Serve.

Kansas City Sticky Ribs

Kansas City ribs are slow-smoked pork ribs slathered in a sauce so thick, sweet, and sticky that you need a case of wet naps to get your hands clean after eating them. Aside from the sauce and the smoky flavor, the other defining characteristic of KC ribs is their unbelievably tender texture-the meat should pull off the bone with very little resistance.

Serves 4 to 6
Buy St. Louis-style racks, which are more manageable than untrimmed pork spareribs. If you can't find them, baby back ribs will work fine; just reduce the cooking time in the oven in step 4 to 1 to 2 hours.

3 tablespoons paprika
2 tablespoons brown sugar
1 tablespoon salt
1 tablespoon pepper
1/4 teaspoon cayenne pepper
2 (2 1/2- to 3-pound) full racks pork spareribs, preferably St. Louis cut (see note above), trimmed of any large pieces of fat and membrane removed
1 recipe Kansas City Barbecue Sauce
2 cups wood chips, soaked, drained, and sealed in a foil packet
1. Combine the paprika, sugar, salt, pepper, and cayenne in a bowl. Pat the ribs dry with paper towels, and rub them evenly with the spice mixture. Wrap the meat in plastic wrap and let sit at room temperature for at least 1 hour, or refrigerate for up to 24 hours. (If refrigerated, let sit at room temperature for 1 hour before grilling.) Measure out 1 cup of the barbecue sauce for cooking; set aside the remaining sauce for serving.

2a. For a charcoal grill: Open the bottom grill vents halfway. Light a large chimney starter three-quarters full with charcoal briquettes (75 briquettes; 4 1/2 quarts). When the coals are hot, pour them into a steeply banked pile against one side of the grill. Place the wood chip packet on top of the coals. Set the cooking grate in place, cover, and open the lid vents halfway. Heat the grill until hot and the wood chips begin to smoke -heavily, about 5 minutes.

2b. For a gas grill: Place the wood chip packet directly on the primary burner. Turn all the burners to high, cover, and heat the grill until hot and the wood chips begin to smoke heavily, about 15 minutes. Turn the primary burner to medium-high and turn off the other burner(s). (Adjust the primary burner as needed to maintain the grill temperature around 325 degrees.)

3. Clean and oil the cooking grate. Place the ribs, meat side down, on the cool part of the grill, away from the coals and flames; the ribs may overlap slightly. Place a sheet of foil directly on top of the ribs. Cover (positioning the lid vents over the meat if using charcoal) and cook until the ribs are deep red and smoky, about 2 hours, flipping and rotating the racks halfway through. During the final 20 minutes of grilling, adjust an oven rack to the middle position and heat the oven to 250 degrees.

4. Remove the ribs from the grill, brush them evenly with the 1 cup sauce reserved for cooking, and wrap tightly with foil. Lay the foil-wrapped ribs on a rimmed baking sheet and continue to cook in the oven until tender and a fork inserted into the ribs meets no resistance, 1 1/2 to 2 1/2 hours.

5. Remove the ribs from the oven and let rest, still wrapped, for 30 minutes. Unwrap the ribs and brush them thickly with 1 cup of the sauce set aside for serving. Slice the ribs between the bones and serve with the remaining sauce.



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Add a Comment
by louiserossignol July 16, 2009 5:27 PM EDT
On your recipes for Texas Beef Ribs you have down 43 tablespoons of brown sugar is this right? By the way I really love you show, what a good way to wake up with a good cup of coffee. Thank You.
Reply to this comment
by CooksIllustratedandme July 23, 2009 4:35 PM EDT
I imagine it was a typo and there should be a line break.

It reads better as:
Serves 4
3 tablespoons brown sugar
by ESKCSG July 16, 2009 12:42 PM EDT
Those recipes sound amazing! One of my favorites is Baby Back Ribs with Spiced Apple-Cider Mop (http://www.weber.com/recipes/Recipe.aspx?rid=89).

Erik (Weber)
Also be sure to check out Weber?s new video series ?Weber Grill Master?. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iRN-VTuA0aw Grilling experts Jamie Purviance and Steven Raichlen compare notes on grilling techniques, what inspired these classically trained chefs to pursue the art of cooking with live fire, and find out what led to their biggest grilling mistakes.
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