Tossing in my favorite dry rib rub recipe, specifically for St. Louis cut racks. I lightly coat ribs with a thin coating of yellow mustard, then apply the rub moderately, let sit for no more than one hour (because of the salt), toss the racks on the WSM and smoke for about 3 hours @ 225. I then foil them for 1.25 hours and use the Trigg method by basting with a mixture of butter and honey, with a 1/4 cup of apple juice tossed in before foiling. After 1.25 hours foiled, take them out and put back on the smoker for at least 1 hour, sometimes 1.5 depending on how fast their cooking. I never used to foil, and initially had issues with the 3-2-1 method (i.e. 3 hours smoked, 2 hours foiled, 1 hour smoked) making them overdone, so I modified it as mentioned above. Have never found a need to slather on sauce and toss on grill to setup as some others do. Higher temps = less time, and vice versa. Very good, and this rub is a common rub, only modified:
The Rib Dry Rub:
½ cup light brown sugar
¼ cup sweet paprika
1 tbsp. chili powder
1 tbsp. onion powder
1½ tbsp. garlic powder
1½ tbsp. cayenne
2 tbsp. kosher salt or sea salt crystals
1½ tbsp. FRESH ground black pepper
½ tbsp. white pepper
Typcially if I get a good bark on the ribs and the rub sets good, I don't slather in sauce as they are just too damn good naked. If I DO add a sauce, I use a small bit of Stubb's Spicy.
The Rib Dry Rub:
½ cup light brown sugar
¼ cup sweet paprika
1 tbsp. chili powder
1 tbsp. onion powder
1½ tbsp. garlic powder
1½ tbsp. cayenne
2 tbsp. kosher salt or sea salt crystals
1½ tbsp. FRESH ground black pepper
½ tbsp. white pepper
Typcially if I get a good bark on the ribs and the rub sets good, I don't slather in sauce as they are just too damn good naked. If I DO add a sauce, I use a small bit of Stubb's Spicy.