Hi Jim Bob!
I read the CI article and thought it was a little bit of overkill to brine a very fatty cut of meat. Then, my Couzan Billy in Louisiana told me he had tried brining and made the best ribs he ever cooked(he knows how to cook!). That got me to thinking......
So, I did side by side experiments last weekend at the Rib Cook-off I won. I did 6 racks of ribs...3 I prepped and cooked my normal way and 3 brined.
Let me first explain how I prepare ribs....I make a paste and coat them and then let them sit overnight. I then cook for 3 1/2 hours at 225?(grate temp) and baste them twice after the first 2 hours. After 3 1/2 hours I will wrap in foil for the next 2 hours. The last half hour I unwrap and sauce. This is a technique I learned from cooking on an MIM team that has won more trophies for ribs than any other team on the circuit.
The way I cooked the unbrined racks, I simply cooked at 225? for 6 hours, until they were tender, saucing the last half hour. I did baste after the first 2 hours and every hour after that.
The foiled ribs won this contest pretty much hands down. Much more tender and much moister than the brined.
Now, I realize there is much controversy over foiling. But, I decided long ago that I don't really care what it takes to turn out the best ribs and foiling has worked wonders for me.
The biggest risk in foiling is turning the meat mushy, but after 5 years of cooking them this way, I have never had a mushy rib and have a few ribbons and trophies in my collection. If you were to attend and observe an MIM cook-off you will see the vast majority of teams using foil in this way.
I don't think a couple hours in foil will make them too tender. You can experiment with foiling times as I did and come up with your perfect amount of time in foil.
Brining can be a bit of a hassle and I just confirmed, for me, that it is indeed overkill. Now, at this same contest I brined a pork loin and that was the best loin I ever made and I will now brine every loin I cook.
As I and others always say...in the end, whatever method YOU like, is the best one!
Experiment, experiment, experiment!
Good luck and have fun!!