I was reading this post about reheating ribs and noticed I have a similar experience with mine.
My speculation is that the foiled ribs reheated in the oven are slightly steamed. There may also be something happening to the fats when the ribs are chilled in the fridge and then reheated that is not present when they are first off the smoker.
Anyone else know? If I prefer this super-soft texture, would it be sensible for me to try an hour or so of foiling on the smoker?
I've been finding myself cooking ribs longer and longer to try to get that "can barely pick it up without the meat falling off" texture, since that's what I like. This amount of time is often well-exceeding the times posted in the rib recipes here, which is making me thinking it simply isn't possible to get the texture I want with conventional methods (either that, or I'm making a mistake somewhere).
I use a probe digital thermo and stick it through a vent hole in the top of the smoker lid. It sticks in at a slight angle about 6" and I maintain 220-240F there.
Any ideas?
( Here is a post about ribs being "overcooked" by KCBS when they fall off the bone. I like mine overcooked.)
My speculation is that the foiled ribs reheated in the oven are slightly steamed. There may also be something happening to the fats when the ribs are chilled in the fridge and then reheated that is not present when they are first off the smoker.
Anyone else know? If I prefer this super-soft texture, would it be sensible for me to try an hour or so of foiling on the smoker?
I've been finding myself cooking ribs longer and longer to try to get that "can barely pick it up without the meat falling off" texture, since that's what I like. This amount of time is often well-exceeding the times posted in the rib recipes here, which is making me thinking it simply isn't possible to get the texture I want with conventional methods (either that, or I'm making a mistake somewhere).
I use a probe digital thermo and stick it through a vent hole in the top of the smoker lid. It sticks in at a slight angle about 6" and I maintain 220-240F there.
Any ideas?
( Here is a post about ribs being "overcooked" by KCBS when they fall off the bone. I like mine overcooked.)