This is my second weekend with the bullet so I figured I'd try some ribs out.
Saturday I got everything together and proceeded to make my own rub consisting of salt, pepper, onion powder, garlic powder, cumin, paprika, cayenne and chili powder. Got the ribs all prepped up and lit the chimney with a full load then added some unlit ones to the grate. Wood was mesquite and cherry soaked overnight.
The WSM ran at a constant 250* with 25% on all three vents. The ribs passed the tear test in 4.5 hours.
Verdict: Too salty which I couldn't overlook so while they are still edible I was looking for something more.
Come Sunday I'm a bit disappointed in myself so I give it another go. The ribs came in a cryo bag with two full racks so it looks like a pork heavy week for our hero.
This time I make the same rub as before only using much less salt for one of the racks and the same rub but with some light brown sugar as well. Wood was the same as before but only soaked for an hour or so.
It was a nice day, about 70* and no wind to speak of but for the life of me I couldn't get the WSM above 225*. This is with full open vents and the same lighting method as the day before. After 6 hours the ribs still weren't at the tear test stage but they were close so I took them off, wrapped in foil, stuck in a cooler for a half hour.
Verdict: While I would have prefered them to come off the bone cleaner the taste was much better than Saturday's attempt. I don't think I used enough sugar to make a huge impact but did notice that I preferred the slight sweetness.
I'm still trying to figure out the temperature bit though. The only difference I can come up with is that I lit the chimney with the same bag of charcoal on day 2 that I used on day 1 but the extra unlit that I added was the new Kingsford. Hmmmm.
Also, although the ashes aren't covering any of the vents I do have some build up from the previous cooks. Does this affect performance and should I empty these out before each session?
Oh yeah, I've now got three racks to eat, whew.
Any suggestions would be appreciated.
Saturday I got everything together and proceeded to make my own rub consisting of salt, pepper, onion powder, garlic powder, cumin, paprika, cayenne and chili powder. Got the ribs all prepped up and lit the chimney with a full load then added some unlit ones to the grate. Wood was mesquite and cherry soaked overnight.
The WSM ran at a constant 250* with 25% on all three vents. The ribs passed the tear test in 4.5 hours.
Verdict: Too salty which I couldn't overlook so while they are still edible I was looking for something more.
Come Sunday I'm a bit disappointed in myself so I give it another go. The ribs came in a cryo bag with two full racks so it looks like a pork heavy week for our hero.
This time I make the same rub as before only using much less salt for one of the racks and the same rub but with some light brown sugar as well. Wood was the same as before but only soaked for an hour or so.
It was a nice day, about 70* and no wind to speak of but for the life of me I couldn't get the WSM above 225*. This is with full open vents and the same lighting method as the day before. After 6 hours the ribs still weren't at the tear test stage but they were close so I took them off, wrapped in foil, stuck in a cooler for a half hour.
Verdict: While I would have prefered them to come off the bone cleaner the taste was much better than Saturday's attempt. I don't think I used enough sugar to make a huge impact but did notice that I preferred the slight sweetness.
I'm still trying to figure out the temperature bit though. The only difference I can come up with is that I lit the chimney with the same bag of charcoal on day 2 that I used on day 1 but the extra unlit that I added was the new Kingsford. Hmmmm.
Also, although the ashes aren't covering any of the vents I do have some build up from the previous cooks. Does this affect performance and should I empty these out before each session?
Oh yeah, I've now got three racks to eat, whew.

Any suggestions would be appreciated.