<BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-title">quote:</div><div class="ip-ubbcode-quote-content">Originally posted by Larry Wolfe:
Jacob I have a couple recommendations..
If you are cooking the same size racks of ribs for the same amount of time and they're now coming out dry without water I would suggest checking your thermometers off the bat. That leads to more problems than people realize.
If they end up calibrating correct (212* in boiling water) then it's time to look at the meat you're buying... Were the "Perfect" ribs you cooked purchased at the same place you are currently buying them? (which by the videos looked fantastic
) Are they the same brand? Were they enhanced etc.? <----HUGE DIFFERENCE IF THEY WERE!
If both of the above are the same, then it's time to look further into the cause.......when did you rub the ribs? Was the rub the same or a different recipe? BBQ needs salt in my opinion but too much salt or a salty rub put on too soon can and will cause dramatic differences in the outcome of the product. If that is still on par with the previous ribs then........... I dunno..... Because I agree with the consensus......"cooking with water in the pan will NOT produce moister ribs than cooking with sand in the pan will".
If it helps, here is how I like to cook spares and the results are the same everytime.
Cook St. Louis trimmed spares in the smoke with a dome temp in the 245-260* range for 3.5-4 hrs (less if the meat starts to pull back early). Then foil with NO liquid for 45 minutes, then back on the grill meat side down and saucing the bone side for 30 minutes, flip and sauce the meat side for another 30 minutes or until ribs are tender (lift from the center of the rack and the rack should bend easily but not break).
I too like a "bite" to my ribs and do not like "fall of the bone" ribs. This method consistently produces these results. </div></BLOCKQUOTE>
man,my head is starting to hurt.
i did EVERYTHING EXACTLY THE SAME.
and your method sounds good but again,foiling,then unfoiling sounds like just as much work as adding water to the pan.which basically defeats the purpose of going waterless.
the only thing i can think of is maybe the foil being on top of the pan is radiating more heat back on the ribs with the waterless method,therefore cooking them faster.but then again the ribs were not mushy,and the texture was great.the only problem was they were dry.and b.t.w. it wasnt like they were bone dry,they still had some moister,they were just not as moist as i like them.usually i can give a rib a little squeeze and juices will drip out.with these,it was not happening.
heck i remember when i first started on my original offset id cook them for 7 hours.all the meat would slide off the bone if you even picked the rib up.(a.k.a. overcooked)but even those were more juicy than these waterless wsm ones were.
plus if i like the way the ribs come out with water then whats the big deal?maybe ill try going with the water again and seeing if it really makes that much difference.AND ILL DO EVERYTHING EXACTLY THE SAME.