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Excerpt
The following is an excerpt from the book Peace, Love, and
Barbecue
by Mike Mills and Amy Mills Tunnicliffe
Published by Rodale; June 2005;$19.95US/$28.95CAN;
1-59486-109-9
Copyright © 2005 Mike Mills and Amy Mills Tunnicliffe
Apple City Barbecue Grand World Champion Ribs
People are mystified about how to cook ribs properly. I'm
going to walk you through every step using a basic charcoal
grill. Obviously if you have different or more high-tech
equipment, you'll need to modify these procedures. If you're
setting up your backyard charcoal grill for indirect cooking,
you'll want to use a disposable aluminum pan to capture the
grease as the fat renders while cooking. Some people add water
to this pan to add moisture to the cooking environment.
Let me caution you right up front to mop the ribs with sauce
no more than 10 minutes before you take them off the grill.
Saucing the meat too early is a mistake many people make when
smoking or grilling. Virtually all barbecue sauce contains
sugar, and your meat will have a burned crust around the
outside if you use sauce too soon in the process.
Ribs are readily available in most grocery stores. When
selecting ribs, try not to buy ones that weigh less than 2
pounds. A true baby back rib weighs about 11/4 to 1 1/2
pounds; they are very fragile and dry out quickly. This recipe
calls for a meatier rib. A loin back rib is preferable;
they're easier to cook, less fragile, and have more meat.
Once you start smoking ribs, you can't leave the smoker
unattended for any more than about 20 minutes. You'll need to
continually check that the temperature in the grill remains
between 200 and 210 degrees at all times. If it gets too hot,
open the lid and allow some of the heat to escape. Coals that
appear to be glowing red will cause a hot spot. Don't cook the
ribs directly over the hot spot; move the ribs to a different,
cooler part of the grill. If the temperature dips below 200
degrees, move the ribs to a hot spot for a while. If the
temperature gets too low, add some more coals.
You'll need about 4 cups of apple wood chips to be authentic;
you can use hickory, pecan, sweet maple, or cherry, but the
ribs won't taste as sweet. You'll also need a chimney starter
or another small covered grill or bucket to keep extra hot
coals.
4 racks of ribs (about 2 pounds each)
Magic Dust (recipe below)
4 cups apple juice in a spray bottle
Apple City Barbecue Sauce (recipe below)
Sprinkle the ribs liberally with Magic Dust, coating both
sides. Put them in a shallow pan or on a cookie sheet and
cover them with clear plastic wrap or a lid. Refrigerate them
until you're ready to use them. I recommend letting them
marinate for at least an hour. At the restaurant, we dust the
ribs up to a day in advance.
Soak the apple wood chips in water for half an hour. Drain.
Remove the grate and arrange the medium-hot coals in a grill
or smoker. If you are using a grill, it must have a lid. Set
an aluminum pan next to the coals as a drip pan. Spread out
the wet wood chips on the coals. Replace the rack, close the
grill, and check the temperature. It should be between 200 and
210 degrees. If the temperature is too high, open the lid to
allow some heat to escape.
Notice that the meat on a rack of ribs is on the top. The
bottom, where you remove the membrane, is called the "bone
side." Once the temperature is steady, place the ribs on the
rack, bone side down. You want to cook them bone side down as
much as possible. Turning them dries out the meat. If
necessary, you can cut the racks of ribs in half to
comfortably fit your grill.
Cover and smoke the ribs for about 1 1/2 hours or until the
ribs are done and tender.
You'll want to check the ribs every 20 minutes or so. Examine
them to see if the surface of the meat looks dry or moist.
Ribs "sweat" about three times during the smoking process. The
pores of the meat open, and this allows moisture to escape.
This is when the seasoning from the dry rub and the smoke
itself are reabsorbed into the meat. When they're sweating,
mop or mist them with some apple juice and sprinkle them with
a little more Magic Dust. Opening the lid will lower the
temperature; add more coals and wood chips as needed to
maintain the temperature.
About 10 minutes before you remove the ribs from the pit, mop
them with the sauce. When you take them off the pit, mop again
with sauce and sprinkle some more Magic Dust on them. Serve
immediately.
SERVES 4, OR YOU CAN CUT THE RACKS IN HALF TO SERVE 8
"Life is too short for a half-rack."
-MIKE MILLS
The Gospel on Sauce
When I bought 17th Street Bar & Grill in 1985, Mama Faye was
82 years old and in excellent health. For several years, she
made gallons of our family's barbecue sauce each week, but
once the place got going, the amount I needed for the
restaurant and for competition quickly got to be overwhelming.
I had to cook hundreds of batches myself.
To Mama Faye's dismay, I did alter our recipe ever so
slightly. I only added some apple juice and a few different
spices, but she never let me forget it. "This isn't the
original sauce," she'd tell anyone who'd listen. "Mike veered
off the recipe."
She was awfully proud, however, when the sauce won the Grand
Sauce Award at the Jack Daniel's World Championship
International Barbecue Cook-Off in 1992.
Apple City Barbecue Sauce
This award-winning sauce enhances just about any barbecue.
Some barbecue sauce is very thick and just sits on top of the
meat. This sauce is smooth and on the thin side, and it seeps
down into the meat.
1 cup ketchup (I use Hunt's)
2/3 cup seasoned rice vinegar
1/2 cup apple juice or cider
1/4 cup apple cider vinegar
1/2 cup packed brown sugar
1/4 cup soy sauce or Worcestershire sauce
2 teaspoons prepared yellow mustard
3/4 teaspoon garlic powder
1/4 teaspoon ground white pepper
1/4 teaspoon cayenne
1/3 cup bacon bits, ground in a spice grinder
1/3 cup peeled and grated apple
1/3 cup grated onion
2 teaspoons grated green bell pepper
Combine the ketchup, rice vinegar, apple juice or cider, cider
vinegar, brown sugar, soy sauce or Worcestershire sauce,
mustard, garlic powder, white pepper, cayenne, and bacon bits
in a large saucepan. Bring to a boil over medium-high heat.
Stir in the apple, onion, and bell pepper. Reduce the heat and
simmer, uncovered, 10 to 15 minutes or until it thickens
slightly. Stir it often. Allow to cool, then pour into
sterilized glass bottles. A glass jar that used to contain
mayonnaise or juice works real well. Refrigerate for up to 2
weeks.
MAKES 3 CUPS
VARIATION: To make this sauce a little hotter, add more
cayenne pepper to taste, approximately another 1/4 to 1/2
teaspoon. Be careful; a little cayenne goes a long way.
Magic Dust
There's a big shaker of Magic Dust next to the salt and pepper
in my own kitchen and at all my restaurants. I wish I could
figure out a way to attach the bottle to the restaurant tables
because, at my restaurants, it's the most frequently stolen
item!
To make it a little more hot and spicy, increase the mustard
powder and black pepper to 1/4 cup each.
1/2 cup paprika
1/4 cup kosher salt, finely ground
1/4 cup sugar
2 tablespoons mustard powder
1/4 cup chili powder
1/4 cup ground cumin
2 tablespoons ground black pepper
1/4 cup granulated garlic
2 tablespoons cayenne
Mix all ingredients and store in a tightly covered container.
You'll want to keep some in a shaker next to the grill or
stove. Keeps indefinitely but won't last long.
MAKES ABOUT 2 1/2 CUPS
***Write a review of this recipe!***
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♥
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