Bill Hall
TVWBB Fan
I trimmed my first set of spareribs today and cooked them up on the WSM 18.5. It was a lot easier than I thought it would be. Smoked the rib tips along with the rack and both turned out pretty good. I also cooked the flap and scraps for the dog. I used the modified 3-2-1 method by Chris Allingham off the VWB site. Used KBB and chunks of cherry and apple wood for the cook. Smoked for 2.5 hours at 275 with a spritz of water every 30 minutes after the bark set. Wrapped with brown sugar, honey, a little bit of dry rub, and some Dr. Pepper for the liquid. Cooked for another 1.5 hours at 275 and then sauced them up. The ribs were delicious but almost a little too done and pretty much falling off the bone. I would probably only wrap for an hour next time. The ribs also got a little darker than I would have liked but I think that was mostly from the sauce at the end. Thanks Chris for all the info on the VWB site, it made it easy to knock out the first set of spares.
Cooker Setup: Modified Minion Method (Soo Donut) with 40 lit coals to start in the middle.

Forgot to mention that I tried something new with the water bowl as well. I lined a layer of ceramic briquettes along the bottom and place some foil over it to catch the drippings. I know there are mixed opinions about lining the pan with foil and running it empty vs. other types of thermal mass. I have to say the cooker ran great. Once I dialed it in, it ran between 271 and 279 the entire time with 10-20 mph wind gusts. My cooker has never been that stable. I don't know if the cooker is just finally breaking in or the ceramic briquettes helped out a little. It did seem to be more stable though.

Trimmed and seasoned ribs ready for smoke:

Ribs about an hour into the cook before I started spritzing with water:

Finally the finished product. I forgot to get a photo of a sliced rib. It did have a nice smoke ring and was still juicy inside.

Cooker Setup: Modified Minion Method (Soo Donut) with 40 lit coals to start in the middle.

Forgot to mention that I tried something new with the water bowl as well. I lined a layer of ceramic briquettes along the bottom and place some foil over it to catch the drippings. I know there are mixed opinions about lining the pan with foil and running it empty vs. other types of thermal mass. I have to say the cooker ran great. Once I dialed it in, it ran between 271 and 279 the entire time with 10-20 mph wind gusts. My cooker has never been that stable. I don't know if the cooker is just finally breaking in or the ceramic briquettes helped out a little. It did seem to be more stable though.

Trimmed and seasoned ribs ready for smoke:

Ribs about an hour into the cook before I started spritzing with water:

Finally the finished product. I forgot to get a photo of a sliced rib. It did have a nice smoke ring and was still juicy inside.
