Dayton Daily News

6 steps to the best barbecued ribs

- By Steven Raichlen

Even if you’re staying home, here’s a way to enjoy it by cooking up the ultimate test of a grill master’s mettle.

Let Texans brag about brisket and Carolinian­s extol pulled pork shoulder. For the rest of us, the ultimate emblem of barbecue — and test of a grill master’s mettle — is ribs.

Picture meaty slabs stung with spice, bronzed with smoke and slathered with sticky sweet barbecue sauce. The meat is tender, but not too tender, with a profound pork flavor enhanced by the pit master’s art.

You may have thought such alchemy possible only at the best barbecue joints. But great ribs are surprising­ly easy to make at home, which is good news at a time when eating out can be fraught.

1. Choose the right ribs

The pig supplies four types of ribs: baby backs (sometimes called top loin ribs), spareribs, rib tips and country-style ribs. You want to use the baby backs, which are cut from high on the hog (quite literally, as they abut the backbone). Baby backs have the most generous marbling and the tenderest meat, which makes them relatively quick to cook — and a natural for newcomers. When possible, buy ribs from a heritage pork breed, like Berkshire (sometimes called Kurobuta) or Mangalitsa. They cost more, but their intense porky flavor justifies the price.

2. Layer the flavors

One of the secrets of great ribs — indeed, great barbecue in general — is a process that creates layers of flavors. I start with a slather, like Dijon mustard, that I brush on both sides of each rack

of ribs. Next, I apply a rub — in the recipe below, a fragrant amalgam of chile powder, brown sugar, salt and pepper, with celery seed added for spice. The third layer comes from apple cider, which you spritz on halfway through cooking. (This also helps keep the ribs moist.) The fourth layer — the varnish, as it were — takes the form of a chipotle bourbon barbecue sauce, which you sear into the meat over a hot fire, creating a glossy finish. The crowning touch is a light, fresh sprinkle of rub added right before serving the ribs to bring attention back to the spice.

3. Grill over indirect heat

Most profession­al pit masters cook ribs low and slow in a smoker. You’re going to use a hotter and faster method called indirect grilling. In short, you cook the ribs next to, not directly over, the fire, with the grill lid closed and hardwood added to produce wood smoke.

To set up a charcoal grill for indirect grilling, light the coals, then pour or rake them into two mounds at opposite sides of the grill. Place a foil pan in the center to catch the dripping rib fat. The ribs go onto the grate over this drip pan, away from the heat.

To set up a two-burner gas grill for indirect grilling, light one side and cook the ribs on the unlit side. On a three-burner gas grill, light the outside or front and rear burners, and cook the ribs over the unlit burner in the center. On a four- to six-burner gas grill, light the outside burners and, again, cook the ribs in the center.

On a kamado-style grill, insert the heat diffuser, a ceramic plate that separates the food from the fire. Pellet grills, by their very design, grill indirectly, so no special setup is needed. Note that with all these types of grills, the lid must be closed.

If cooking four or more racks of ribs, you may want to invest in a rib rack, which holds the slabs vertically, allowing you to fit four racks of ribs in the space two slabs would take lying flat.

4. Apply the smoke

Wood smoke has been called the umami of barbecue. It is certainly barbecue’s soul. While you can make delectable baby back ribs without wood smoke, as the French and Brazilians do, they won’t taste like American barbecue. So which wood to use? Debate rages in barbecue circles over the superiorit­y of apple versus cherry, hickory versus mesquite, or whether to employ a combinatio­n of several woods. Mesquite lends the strongest flavor, but any hardwood chunk or chip will deliver the requisite smokiness. I smoked the ribs in my recipe with cherry wood, simply because I had it on hand.

To smoke ribs on a charcoal grill, add hardwood chunks or soaked, drained hardwood chips to the embers. (Soaking helps slow the rate of combustion, so the chips smolder and smoke before they catch fire.) In a kamado, interspers­e the chunks or chips with the charcoal. A pellet grill has the wood, and smoke, built into the pellets. (Note: On a pellet grill you get more smoke flavor at lower temperatur­es, so lengthen the cooking time accordingl­y.)

It’s harder, but not impossible, to smoke on a gas grill. If your grill has a smoker box with a dedicated burner, add chunks or chips there. If not, place a few hardwood chunks under the grate, directly over the burners. Or make smoking pouches: Wrap soaked, drained wood chips in heavyduty foil to form a flat pillow shape. Poke holes at 1-inch intervals in the top with the tip of a meat thermomete­r to release the smoke. Position the resulting pouches under the grate, directly over the burners. Run the grill on high until you see smoke, then dial the temperatur­e back to 300 degrees.

What about smoking ribs indoors? Desperate times like these call for desperate measures. I know it smacks of heresy, but you can achieve a reasonable approximat­ion of barbecued ribs in the oven. Cook them on a rack in a roasting pan at 300 degrees. To add a smoke flavor, mix one-half teaspoon liquid smoke with 4 tablespoon­s melted butter, and brush this mixture on both sides of the ribs a few times during the last hour of cooking.

5. Sizzle the sauce

While barbecue sauce isn’t mandatory, for most Americans, ribs just don’t taste complete without it. This version calls for one of my favorites — a sweet, smoky blend of molasses, brown sugar and ketchup, with bourbon for kick and chipotle chiles to crank up the heat. Here, too, the sauce goes on in layers — first brushed on and roasted into the ribs during the last 20 minutes of cooking, then applied again and seared into the meat over high heat, and finally served with the ribs for spooning or dipping.

A crucial factor is the sizzle, which involves directly grilling the ribs (move them right over the fire or lit burners) for the final four minutes or so — long enough to caramelize the brown sugar and molasses, and sear the sauce into the meat.

Take care to avoid the cardinal sin of applying the sauce too early, when the ribs first go on the grill. That’s what grown-ups did when I was young, and the sugar in the sauce invariably burned long before the meat was cooked. For many years, I thought barbecue was supposed to taste burned. 6. Know when your ribs are done

Pork ribs come with their own version of the pop-up thermomete­r that signals that a turkey is done: The meat shrinks back from the ends of the bones. When you see a quarter- to a half-inch of clean bone at the end of each rib, it is ready. You should be able to pull the individual ribs apart with your fingers. The meat should resist, but just a little.

SPICE-RUBBED BABY BACK RIBS WITH CHIPOTLE-BOURBON BARBECUE SAUCE

Total time: 21/2to31/2hours Yield: 2 racks (2 to 4 servings) FOR THE RIBS:

2 racks baby back ribs (2 to

2 1/2 pounds each) 2 tablespoon­s Dijon

mustard

For the rub:

1 tablespoon chile powder 1 tablespoon dark brown

sugar

2 teaspoons kosher salt 2 teaspoons black pepper 1/4 teaspoon celery seeds FOR GRILLING:

2 large or 4 small hardwood chunks or 3 cups hardwood chips (if using the latter, soak in water to cover for 30 minutes, then drain)

1/2 cup apple cider in a spray

bottle (optional)

FOR THE CHIPOTLEBO­URBON BARBECUE SAUCE:

1 1/4 cups ketchup

⅓ cup Thai sweet chile

sauce

1/4 cup bourbon 3 tablespoon­s dark brown

sugar

3 tablespoon­s molasses 1 tablespoon Dijon mustard 1 tablespoon

Worcesters­hire sauce 1 to 2 canned chipotle chiles en adobo, minced, plus 1 to 2 teaspoons sauce

1 teaspoon finely grated lemon zest, plus 1 tablespoon lemon juice 1/2 teaspoon liquid smoke Sea salt and freshly ground

black pepper 1. Place the ribs on a rimmed baking sheet. If the concave side of your ribs still has its papery membrane intact, remove it: Pry it up at the end of the bones using the tip of a meat thermomete­r or butter knife, then pull it off with a paper towel. Lightly brush the ribs on both sides with the mustard.

2. Prepare the rub: In a small bowl, combine the chile powder, brown sugar, salt, pepper and celery seeds. Reserve 1 1/2 teaspoons rub for serving, then sprinkle the remaining rub on the ribs, coating both sides.

3. Set up your charcoal grill for indirect grilling and heat to 300 degrees.

4. Once the grill comes to temperatur­e, add half the wood chunks or chips to the coals. Arrange the ribs meat (rounded) side up on the grate away from the heat, then cover the grill. Grill the ribs over indirect heat for 1 hour.

5. After the ribs have grilled for 1 hour, spray on both sides with apple cider (if using), turning the ribs with tongs. Add the remaining wood chunks or chips to the fire and close the grill again.

6. While the ribs grill, prepare the barbecue sauce: Place all the sauce ingredient­s, along with

1/4 teaspoon salt and 1/2 teaspoon pepper, in a heavy saucepan and whisk to mix. Bring to a boil over medium-high heat, whisking often. Reduce the heat and gently simmer the sauce, uncovered, until thick and richly flavored, 6 to 8 minutes. Correct the seasoning, adding more salt and pepper to taste; set aside. (Makes about 2 cups.)

7. Continue grilling the ribs over indirect heat, rounded side up, until sizzling, browned, tender, and the meat has shrunk back from the ends of the bones by

1/4 to 1/2 inch. This normally takes 2 to 2 1/2 hours in all, but sometimes you’ll need a full 3 hours. The last 20 minutes, brush the ribs on both sides with some of the barbecue sauce. When ready, the meat should be tender enough so you can pull the individual ribs apart with your fingers.

8. Brush each rack on both sides with more barbecue sauce. Move each rack directly over the fire and direct grill to sizzle the sauce into the meat, 2 to 4 minutes per side.

9. Transfer the ribs to a platter for serving. Brush once more with barbecue sauce and sprinkle the ribs with the remaining rub. Serve the remaining sauce in a bowl on the side.

 ?? CHRIS LANIER; PHOTOS BY TARA DONNE/FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES
FOOD STYLIST: ?? Spice-rubbed baby back ribs with chipotle-bourbon barbecue sauce in New York on June 18. A backyard grill can easily produce the spicy, smoky slabs that for many are barbecue’s ultimate prize.
CHRIS LANIER; PHOTOS BY TARA DONNE/FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES FOOD STYLIST: Spice-rubbed baby back ribs with chipotle-bourbon barbecue sauce in New York on June 18. A backyard grill can easily produce the spicy, smoky slabs that for many are barbecue’s ultimate prize.
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 ?? LANIER; PHOTOS BY TARA DONNE/FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES
FOOD STYLIST: CHRIS ?? Spice-rubbed baby back ribs with chipotle-bourbon barbecue sauce.
LANIER; PHOTOS BY TARA DONNE/FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES FOOD STYLIST: CHRIS Spice-rubbed baby back ribs with chipotle-bourbon barbecue sauce.

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