Hi all,
I live in Oslo, Norway and just bought a WSM, something of which I've dreamt a long, long time. Norway is not a barbecueing nation, and my knowledge of real barbecue has mostly been theoretical. My only encounters with the stuff have been at Bodeans in London, which I thought was heavenly, but I have had nothing to compare it with.
Because I’ve lived in an apartment with no grilling allowed on the balcony, my dream of owning a WSM was long put on hold. Until this autumn that is, when we got access to a nice little place in the country, one hour’s drive from the city.
Last week I ordered and received a 22,5” WSM in a great big box. With great apprehension I fired up my new-bought love for the first time yesterday, having read nearly every word on this forum over the last couple of weeks.
I decided to start off with spareribs. As another Norwegian on this forum has mentioned before, spareribs are not easy to get hold of in Norway. On Tuesday, therefore, with plenty of time before the weekend, I decided to call the only remaining butcher's shop in Oslo, Strøm-Larsen (founded in 1906), to inquire.
I'd seen baby back ribs there before, but I wanted to try to cook real spare ribs.
I attempted to explain what I was after.
"I want the ribs that you get when you remove most of the meat from the belly."
"Oh - do you mean tiger ribs?"
"Tiger ribs?"
"Yeah, tiger ribs!"
I'd never heard of tiger ribs, but decided to trust him. He sounded both convinced and convincing. I ordered four racks.
On Friday I went to pick them up.
“Okay, 13,2 kilos (29,1 lbs). That'll be 1,980 kroners, please,” said the young blonde in the butcher’s apron, struggling to lift a huge see-through plastic bag chock-full of meat over to my side of the counter.
1,980 kroners. That’s $341.20. Norway is an expensive country in which to barbecue. An expensive country in which to do anything at all.
"Eh, OK. There seems to be a lot of meat on those".
“Yes”.
I had been given what were basically whole pork bellies with the skin and a bit of the fat removed. Oh well. I trimmed most of the meat off, and ended up with what looked like decent spareribs, if a bit on the triangular side. The rest of the meat went in the freezer, I’ll find use for it in my pending sausage project.
I rubbed the ribs with a modified version of Mike Mills’ Magic Dust and put them in the fridge overnight. I could hardly sleep that night. The big moment was at last drawing near!
We were planning to eat at about eight o’clock. I was unsure about how to time the cook, but decided to set up the bullet and ready it for smoking at about one o’clock. I had two 3kg bags of Weber briquettes. I used the minion method, ¾ of a chimney lit coals and the rest unlit.
I filled the water pan, assembled the beautiful shiny black piece of American engineering and waited for the needle on the lid to move clockwise. After about twenty minutes the temperature was where I wanted it to be (225F).
Chunks of smoking wood are hard to come by here, but I had managed to get hold of a bag of Weber hickory chips. I made three small foil packages of unsoaked chips and carefully put one of them on top of the glowing coals.
The ribs went on.
The lid went on.
I was barbecueing!
The next couple of hours were spent tweaking the air vents. The temperature was very steady, mostly between 210F and 230F with one little jump up to 240F.
I was smoking!
After about an hour, I put in a new wood chip envelope and removed the spent one. I repeated the process an hour later. And again after another hour.
I resisted lifting the lid and poking around for about another hour, at which time I admired the ribs for a little while before spraying them with apple juice, grabbing a photo and putting the lid back on.
At about a quarter past six, I did the tear test. The meat behaved just like I’d seen it should on Youtube. And the flavour! Perfectly smoky, sweet, deeply savory, juicy.
With nearly two hours to go until serving, I decided to foil the ribs and put them in the cooler. I left the WSM chugging along at idle. Half an hour before we were to eat I sauced the ribs and put them back on. I’d made a variation on the Apple City sauce in “Peace, Love and Barbecue”, the only barbecue book so far in my library of 200 cookbooks.
And here’s the result:
I served the ribs with a simple cole slaw with apples and onions, and beans cooked from scratch. My recipe includes onions, garlic, big chunks of bacon, tomatos, chipotle, molasses, a dash of coffee, Spanish smoked paprika, and a teaspoon or two of my dry rub.
And the smoke ring!
It sure tasted good, but the funny thing is that the whole process - putting the rub together, cooking the sauce, trimming the ribs, rubbing them, waiting, lighting the coals, smelling the smoke, waiting again, fine-tuning the temperature, mopping the ribs, logging the temperatures, waiting some more - in ever-increasing trepidation, trembling in fear and hope - the whole process is so fulfilling that you hardly need to eat the meat at all when it’s done.
But then again, it sure tastes good.
My name is Magnus Thorvik and I’m a que-a-holic.
I live in Oslo, Norway and just bought a WSM, something of which I've dreamt a long, long time. Norway is not a barbecueing nation, and my knowledge of real barbecue has mostly been theoretical. My only encounters with the stuff have been at Bodeans in London, which I thought was heavenly, but I have had nothing to compare it with.
Because I’ve lived in an apartment with no grilling allowed on the balcony, my dream of owning a WSM was long put on hold. Until this autumn that is, when we got access to a nice little place in the country, one hour’s drive from the city.
Last week I ordered and received a 22,5” WSM in a great big box. With great apprehension I fired up my new-bought love for the first time yesterday, having read nearly every word on this forum over the last couple of weeks.
I decided to start off with spareribs. As another Norwegian on this forum has mentioned before, spareribs are not easy to get hold of in Norway. On Tuesday, therefore, with plenty of time before the weekend, I decided to call the only remaining butcher's shop in Oslo, Strøm-Larsen (founded in 1906), to inquire.
I'd seen baby back ribs there before, but I wanted to try to cook real spare ribs.
I attempted to explain what I was after.
"I want the ribs that you get when you remove most of the meat from the belly."
"Oh - do you mean tiger ribs?"
"Tiger ribs?"
"Yeah, tiger ribs!"
I'd never heard of tiger ribs, but decided to trust him. He sounded both convinced and convincing. I ordered four racks.
On Friday I went to pick them up.
“Okay, 13,2 kilos (29,1 lbs). That'll be 1,980 kroners, please,” said the young blonde in the butcher’s apron, struggling to lift a huge see-through plastic bag chock-full of meat over to my side of the counter.
1,980 kroners. That’s $341.20. Norway is an expensive country in which to barbecue. An expensive country in which to do anything at all.
"Eh, OK. There seems to be a lot of meat on those".
“Yes”.
I had been given what were basically whole pork bellies with the skin and a bit of the fat removed. Oh well. I trimmed most of the meat off, and ended up with what looked like decent spareribs, if a bit on the triangular side. The rest of the meat went in the freezer, I’ll find use for it in my pending sausage project.
I rubbed the ribs with a modified version of Mike Mills’ Magic Dust and put them in the fridge overnight. I could hardly sleep that night. The big moment was at last drawing near!
We were planning to eat at about eight o’clock. I was unsure about how to time the cook, but decided to set up the bullet and ready it for smoking at about one o’clock. I had two 3kg bags of Weber briquettes. I used the minion method, ¾ of a chimney lit coals and the rest unlit.
I filled the water pan, assembled the beautiful shiny black piece of American engineering and waited for the needle on the lid to move clockwise. After about twenty minutes the temperature was where I wanted it to be (225F).
Chunks of smoking wood are hard to come by here, but I had managed to get hold of a bag of Weber hickory chips. I made three small foil packages of unsoaked chips and carefully put one of them on top of the glowing coals.
The ribs went on.
The lid went on.
I was barbecueing!
The next couple of hours were spent tweaking the air vents. The temperature was very steady, mostly between 210F and 230F with one little jump up to 240F.
I was smoking!
After about an hour, I put in a new wood chip envelope and removed the spent one. I repeated the process an hour later. And again after another hour.
I resisted lifting the lid and poking around for about another hour, at which time I admired the ribs for a little while before spraying them with apple juice, grabbing a photo and putting the lid back on.
At about a quarter past six, I did the tear test. The meat behaved just like I’d seen it should on Youtube. And the flavour! Perfectly smoky, sweet, deeply savory, juicy.
With nearly two hours to go until serving, I decided to foil the ribs and put them in the cooler. I left the WSM chugging along at idle. Half an hour before we were to eat I sauced the ribs and put them back on. I’d made a variation on the Apple City sauce in “Peace, Love and Barbecue”, the only barbecue book so far in my library of 200 cookbooks.
And here’s the result:
I served the ribs with a simple cole slaw with apples and onions, and beans cooked from scratch. My recipe includes onions, garlic, big chunks of bacon, tomatos, chipotle, molasses, a dash of coffee, Spanish smoked paprika, and a teaspoon or two of my dry rub.
And the smoke ring!
It sure tasted good, but the funny thing is that the whole process - putting the rub together, cooking the sauce, trimming the ribs, rubbing them, waiting, lighting the coals, smelling the smoke, waiting again, fine-tuning the temperature, mopping the ribs, logging the temperatures, waiting some more - in ever-increasing trepidation, trembling in fear and hope - the whole process is so fulfilling that you hardly need to eat the meat at all when it’s done.
But then again, it sure tastes good.
My name is Magnus Thorvik and I’m a que-a-holic.