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I like to use a WSM without a water pan. This is almost the same method. I live in the Mississippi delta and direct heat is the most common method that you will find here.
One method I don't see anyone talk about for ribs is rotisserie. I have a Weber kettle with the extension ring and rotisserie kit, as well as a basket for the rotisserie. I'm able to use my coals off to the side so the heat is a bit more indirect and they seem to come out great. I also use a wireless thermometer to watch temperature without having to keep opening it.
I thought he was gonna be standing in front of a 55gal drum grill with a brew in his hand cooking them ribs over direct heat/fire like everybody's daddy used to do it. Straight charcoal, no wood, and no foil, just tongs or a big ass fork. LOL
Sweet vid. The first thing I cooked up on my new TMG Dumpster....Spare Ribs. To me, wrapping is going to subdue the amazing texture (bits of a crisp bark) you get with direct heat ribs. I cooked my ribs around 300F for 3 hours total time, totally nekkid - no wrap - until they had the right flop I was looking for. Cooked with SPG on two racks, and Kinders BBQ Rub on two others, directly over a bed of coals with a small kiln dried white oak split thrown in about every 40 minutes or so. No baffle plates. No diffusers. Didn't score the membrane - they cooked right over the fire and coal bed**** The texture and flavor, the oaky smokiness, the fat-burn smokiness, the smoke ring itself - everything was on point with that cook. If I could dream up the perfect rib, THAT direct heat rib cook was it. ...Which rub was better? Didn't matter. They were both outstanding. Direct heat ribs just hit different... Next time you do a rib cook - get rid of all the fussiness, and try it without the wrap, no baffle plates. Just over coals and a small oak split every 40-45 minutes. Let the temps wax and wane between 275F and 350F as you stoke up the fire when needed. ****note! when I do a brisket, that's when I'll add a couple of water pans on the lower pullout rack as a baffle for a long low and slow indirect smoke cook. Waiting for the cold Wisconsin temps to stabilize around 60F for the entire day before I give it a whirl. :)
I normally use my offset do my ribs. Several years ago we were at my sister's house, she wanted ribs & all she has is a basic Weber so I gave it a shot. My wife had her doubts on the Weber but I carried on my mission. I had to manage the cook pretty close but they turned out delicious; smokey & tender. On the way home, a few days later, my wife said "I didn't think you would pull that off...the ribs weren't as good as what you cook at home but they were so good & everyone loved them." Enjoyed the video! Cheers
@@afinecupofcoffee8476 are you serious? Buy a slab of ribs and experiment! This is not rocket science and this dude is not the greatest when it comes to smoking/grilling. He just copies others. Take your chances and experiment. You'll love the challenge and you'll have a blast. Just my two cents.
I have the larger 32x40 Smokeslinger, I love using it! I haven't fired up my LSG offset since I got the smokeslinger. I was surprised when I learned I could use full wood splits to run it and get a clean burning fire. A few other things I love is how quickly it gets up to temp. I have even hung ribs in it like I would in my Pit Barrel cooker. Im loving the process of learning & mastering all the different things you can do with the Smokeslinger. Hopefully, we will get more videos of you using the smokeslinger, I'm sure a brisket cook is in the works.
It’s hard to beat the flavor of anything when it’s cooked over coals like that. Thats why drums are ever so popular now in comps. Hot n fast and great flavor. Great video Jeremy.
But do you put the charcoal directly under the meat, or use the minion or slow and sear method? I use the 26" kettle and use the minion method for 2 racks of st.louis cut or 3 racks of baby backs. The coals are a lot further away on that pit that Jeremy was using than a weber kettle.
@@t-reyh5937Get a 22 and the onlyfire rotisserie ring. I also have a kettledial to help protect the meat. I get these same results with ribs with that setup.
Out camping one time we dug a pit and used the dead wood laying around, got a good bed of coals then wrapped the ribs in foil and buried them in the coals, don't remember for how long but they were the best ribs I've ever had.
I'm a Kettle guy. SnS insert to keep things tidy. A chunk of cherry, a chunk of pecan on a bed of lump charcoal. 275-300 on the dome. Don't matter on the rub. From SPG to whatever your heart desires... same with the sauce. Dry, mopped, slathered... it don't matter. They just taste damn good.
@@GrizzAxxemann Nice. My Weber doesn't turn any heads, but with the slow-n-sear I can pull off some wicked food and everyone is like "what is this seasoned with?!" and I'm always like "salt, pepper, garlic powder, and the magical Weber"
Cuban Monte Cristo #2. Yes, scoring the membrane is the way to go! And seasoning the backside is my method as well. While I like salt/pepper as a go to spice blend for ribs, I usually go with a slightly sweet rub. When I foil wrap them near the end, I usually spritz them with some apple cider vinegar / water. And I always top the meat side with some BBQ sauce thinned with apple cider vinegar and a pinch of cayenne. Jeremy, are you trying to steal my method?! LOL! Looks great, and while at this moment you haven't done the taste test, I'm predicting it will be epic. Nice work!
First of all, I WISH I had a Cuban montecristo no 2. Second, I’m glad you like the method! I didn’t steal it from you but I think if we ended in about the same place, it’s probably a good sign we are on the right track
I just did Weber Kettle "snake method" ribs with B and B briquettes, mesquite wood chunks, water pan and an upright rib rack. 3.5 hour cook, 1.5 in foil, and they were perfect.
I just got the Pitts and Spitts direct fire grill and did a low and slow 3 lbs picanha direct heat and it was amazing. Going to try your ribs on it this weekend. The Pitts and Spitts is great cause you can raise and lower the charcoal grate as needed to change temp. Love it.
These videos are interesting but I do wish more videos would be done on more readily available and affordable cookers. I was excited to see your take on direct heat ribs, but when I saw it was on a cooker that is close to $3000 and works extremely different compared to most standard direct heat cookers I became less interested. The stick burning feature with the full flame is great, but not something the average back yard cook can easily replicate. I would love to see a similar test done on something like a pit barrel or a weber smoky mountain without the water pan.
Get a 22" weber kettle and the onlyfire rotisserie ring. I also have a kettledial to help protect the meat. I get these same results with ribs with that setup.
My favorite way to cook ribs... if you are rolling the foil down to glaze, I guess it's a raft... I do it for less mess and ease of handling. Great job.
I did these ribs yesterday on my XL Green Egg. Wow!! This is definitely the new way for me. Wayyyyy more fat rendered out. Used the Plate setter Indirect method dome temp approximately 315 degs. Outstanding!!!
I have a char griller charcoal grill. I season a rack of baby backs and cook them over direct heat on the upper rack. Grill for 30 minutes uncovered (flip every 10 minutes) then wrap in foil and repeat the process for another 30 minutes. They’re absolutely awesome and you have ribs in an hour
I was going to ask that question,But you answered it.I have the char griller grandchamp xd.So how long in time do you cook your ribs.I wish the grandchamp had a middle rack to.
@@fishindoc6025 I never keep track of temps when cooking over direct heat. I just keep a fairly thin layer of lit charcoal and the ribs are on a grate about a foot above them
It seems like you're always trying new things and these happen to be your "very favorite ribs in the entire world." I think that's absolutely fantastic and I love learning new ways to make food better. Would you be willing to do a video or otherwise share what it is that you've done/tried in the past which ended up being a failure? As a scientist myself I find that we sometimes learn better by our failures than successes. Thanks for all the great videos. Been watching them for years now.
Those ribs look Absolutely Delicious! I Love using Sweet Baby Ray’s original BBQ sauce! I like to thin it with Peach Brandy or any kind of Peach alcohol! If I ever get my mobility back and I can get out of the nursing home, I wanna try this hot and fast method! My wood preference when smoking ribs is apple, cherry, or sassafras for smoke and oak for heat! Love your videos! God Bless!
Excellent job with this cook! I just made ribs like this with my pellet smoker, Cuisinart Woodcreek, bc it allows you to burn a woodfire on the right. So I was at about 300 for awhile and got the char. I did 6 racks at once and then glazed top down in foil wraps. So only slightly different to yours, with very similar results. They were such a hit at my grandchild's b-day and with my chef/restauranteur boss!
I turned keto carnivore last july (lost 70 lbs so far) i Cook st Louis ribs salt only direct on my Komado Joe. Dome heat at 300 grill temp 325 for two hours. No wrap, super juicy. Family prefers offset with wrap and sauce.
@@MadScientistBBQaren't we all 😅. Currently at 310ish and not really trying, I'd love to go down 80lb but if I try to go to sleep hungry, I can't sleep, and my GERD acts up if I don't eat as many calories as I need to maintain my weight. It's great lol (/s), trying to be more active but I've had chronic pain issues since 100lb ago and it's tough. Currently have a rib out from a bout of pneumonia had me coughing hard enough to dislocate it, and its still healing. Didn't stop me from smoking meat the last two weeks so I can eat for the next week without too much work, but that shit still hurts like hell. Love the content though man, you've motivated me to cook all my food at home again and that's a huge step towards being healthier
I’ve been smoking meats for close to 30 years and honestly, I’m over the super long smokey cooks. I have a direct heat cooker ordered. Looking forward to some grilling low and slow or turning and burning.
Open coals is that authentic flavor that is true Bbq. Offsets have made their name in the last twenty years and taken over, and are great, but open coals is the true, old school technique used by the early Americans! Notice I said Americans, I didn't distinguish which race like democrats always do. MAGA 2024!
The Gateway smokers have that authentic grill flavor as well since the fat drips on the coals. It's absolutely my rib machine - and they're used quite a bit in the comp circuit.
Awesome video man. I’ve been grilling ribs similar to this for years. I wanted a way to grill ribs after work without smoking them for 5 hours. They always come out amazing!
I’ve had a Smokeslinger for over a year now and can honestly say it produces the best bbq I’ve ever had. Ribs and pork steaks are my favorite thing to cook on it but it makes great brisket and pork butt too.
Thank you for this video. I hope you will do more on this cooker. You are great! What kind of charcoal and how did you build your fire under the non-wood side?
I tried these direct heat ribs after watching a Swine and Bovine video. I use my Weber Smokey Mountain without the water pan per his suggestion because I don’t have a Chud Box. They were amazing, the flavor of cooking directly reminded me of old school BBQ. I love your ad lib voices at the end. Your Trump is spot on!!
Watching again! Wanted to point out, direct heat is a wonderful cooking method to put it mildly. As Al Frugoni and Francis Mallmann could attest! You already have the best RUclips channel in the world to bring all these glorious possibilities into the mix via Kentucky! Pass the bourbon!!!
I occasionally like savory ribs, but I lean towards a good balance of sweet and savory, so the glazed are my go-to. I also like to occasionally slice up the ribs pre-cook and put them in a char siu marinade, then grill them direct and finish with a glaze.
This is how my dad did back ribs when I was a kid in the 60s-70s. He would season them, brush them with pineapple juice and direct grill them over coals. I think the famous Rendezvous in Memphis chargrills them as well. Although no one wrapped ribs back then. It was 100% directly over coals, maybe up 8-10 inches at most. I would say these you are making are more somewhat direct, but using a smoker method with wrapping.
I did a rack last summer over direct heat using my budget Char griller smoker and they came out great. I did just salt and pepper, the last 15 mins I basted with Famous Dave's Devil's spit BBQ sauce
Awesome again jeremy. Thing is, we dont get these cuts here in australia. Sure st louis ribs, but you have the belly meat on them as well. I would love to get my hands on "just costco ribs". Slim pickings here bro. Love your channel. You and chud. 👍🇦🇺
When I started bbq I use to always do direct heat on a Weber kettle I would Q them until they had the color I wanted then I would slice them and put them into a Dutch oven with canned pineapple and the juice.
Argentina has been cooking direct heat since gaucho days. And they have one of the best meats in the world. I’m loving direct heat everything. Still has smoke flavor but you can’t get that grease charcoal back to the meat flavor in the offset . So in a nutshell Santa Maria Grill has many positives
Direct heat beef ribs are awesome too. I do them and pork ribs on the Kamado, keep the meat high where I can hold my hand for around 8 seconds over the heat
I use a Komodo Kamado with with 2 Weber perforated pans that serve not only as heat deflectors but alllows the drippings to reach the open flame which, as Jeremy states, an incredible flavor profile. I use Harry Soo's fire box method where I put chunks of wood chunks on the bottom of the charcoal basket and cover with charcoal. The charcoal filters the smoke and gives a nice smoke profile. I’ve tried low and slow and the fast method with excellent results.
Im wanting to try a hot cook, 300° on the offset, but this like how they do at Salt Lick. But i gotta give props to those drink choices beside the miller lite. The kentucky bourbon barrel ale has been one of my favorite beers since i had it in Louisville. I have bottle of Woodford reserve double oak on the bar right now.
I have a 30+ year old Holland grill that my family still says makes the best ribs they have ever had. I have tried charcoal, pellet grill (often and a lot), offset ---- they still like the Holland.
Was there a video on the ribgate? My wife used to cook them in the pressure cooker and i thought they were delicious until i tried some smoked ribs and then now make my own. Had the pressure cooked ones again when my mother in law cooked them and i was shocked with how bad they were!
I need a Chud Box. I have a WSM, which gives the height separation I would need, but it gets too hot when you close the lid without the baffle plate in there. And my grill doesn't have enough separation distance. Man those ribs look good! I was impressed with the results from a direct heat cook!
You "want" a chudbox. You can just learn to manage the temps better on the wsm without the baffle, plenty do it all the time. You can buy a lot of coal and meat for the cost of a chudbox.
Good point about the WSM.....I could probably just use less lump charcoal to begin with so it doesn't get too hot with the lid on. Thanks for the responses.
Love your work. Ran into you at Buc-ees one night in Temple, Tx. I was wondering, if you have used the new Old Country Gen II offset. I was checking them out the other day.
I get ribs done in about 4 hours on my offset and the Santa Maria grill the time will vary but I do like them cooked over an open flame but not being enclosed it's hard to get a big smoke flavor but still very good.
Hey Jeremy! Great video….could you review the smokeslinger pit? Looks like it would be a pit to invest, but haven’t seen a lot of RUclips vids or reviews on it. Thanks!
would be really cool if you had did this with a cooker that more than % .01 of your followers have ........ it's cool to see different cookers , but i like something i can easily copy . maybe in a future video you could do it on a kettle or drum smoker ? take care , jeff
You can do it on a weber. You just have to flip them often so that they don't burn or dry out. Also, use less fuel since the distance between the grate and fuel source is pretty close. Thats the fun thing about BBQ is testing it out and see what works. It isnt the pit, it's the person working the pit that determines how good a cook is
I do all of my smoking with Char griller akorn that has a ceramic deflector plate, sadly my damper o-ring busted so my fire control is not great right now. I use lump charcoal and my mystery oak firewood (didn't think to ask my uncle what kind it was) for the smoke.
It’s all about your goal. Choosing the cooking method appropriate for your time, taste, weather, guests, and other circumstances. Oven, gas grill, offset smoker, charcoal grill, crock pot even! For instance, direct charcoal heat will not give you the smokey flavor an offset will but it will give you that grilled flavor and be done quicker.
Sweet Baby Ray's BBQ sauce is great. I pour it in a pan (16 to 20 0zs.). Ad a half can or more of beer. Bring to simmer. Thins the BBQ sauce a bit and makes it stick better to the meat. Cooks all the alcohol out of the beer. Brush on just before taking it off the grill or simply let the diner apply it at the table.
Always direct on a kettle. Briquettes and apple wood chips, Scored bone side, my own rub. Start meat side down, flip often. When I have good color I wrap in foil, bone side down on a bed of chopped granny smith apples. About an hour, no probe, no thermometer; just my nose.
My favorite way to make ribs is to sous vide the whole rack in the cryopack for 24 hrs at 140F. Chill in an ice water bath (ice chest) then refrigerate for a day. Pull from fridge, remove from cryo wrap and apply favorite rub. Back in fridge for 12-24 hrs. Next day into the smoker at conventional low and slow temps. Ribs finish in 2-2.5 hrs, stay more moist but still get good smoke flavor. More steps for sure but the “day of” tasks are much shorter/easier.
This is way more in line with what i want to actually do, and actually do. Please do more of this style. Take it to extremes like a generic grill and generic meats (and more lean cuts), and let's get wild and use those pellet tube things. Just see how little you can do with as little as possible and still get what most people would consider a relatively good outcome.
Jeremy, I’ve seen your last videos and seems that your fence is brand new and was installed sometime in 2023, this summer (2024) get some exterior stain and spray it on so it’s going to last looking good and not get grey and ugly, in case you have some grey areas; a quick pressure wash should remove it before you stain it( but use water based stain)
Always love your content, Jeremy. Remember that time when Harry Soo threw shade at the Franklin offset for not producing a Smokey enough flavor? Maybe you oughtta try cooking a brisket this way!
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Maybe you could try this method on a grill bought at home depot?
I like to use a WSM without a water pan. This is almost the same method. I live in the Mississippi delta and direct heat is the most common method that you will find here.
I am originally from Mississippi. You remind me of my brother friend, Carden.
With you on using the WSM without a water pan. I like the direct heat/flame methods, texture and flavor.
Same. The WSM without the water pan means fat smoke. I’m planning to do a brisket and some ribs on the WSM 22” weekend after next.
South Carolina bbq is mostly just like this….. just with a lot of vinegar lol
The pit barrel cooker is my favorite way to cook ribs.
Bingo!! A PBC or any UDS would work in this direct heat method
One method I don't see anyone talk about for ribs is rotisserie. I have a Weber kettle with the extension ring and rotisserie kit, as well as a basket for the rotisserie. I'm able to use my coals off to the side so the heat is a bit more indirect and they seem to come out great. I also use a wireless thermometer to watch temperature without having to keep opening it.
I thought he was gonna be standing in front of a 55gal drum grill with a brew in his hand cooking them ribs over direct heat/fire like everybody's daddy used to do it. Straight charcoal, no wood, and no foil, just tongs or a big ass fork. LOL
Nice tough ribs with burnt on sauce, those were the days lmao
Me too homie. Exactly the reason why I clicked this.
Same 😂
If he don’t have on leather sandals while grilling, I don’t want em.
That was my thought as well.
I use my pit barrel for ribs. I find it gives the best combo of smoke and that fat over coals taste. It’s really all I use that thing for.
Lol, your little dig at Brad with the foil "raft" was hilarious 👍
😂
That wasn't a message to Brad. That was a message to Goldee's BBQ. They gave Brad a hard time for using it on his channel. It's like a drama series.
Just like Jirby said " no you don't need to get the sides"
Sweet vid. The first thing I cooked up on my new TMG Dumpster....Spare Ribs. To me, wrapping is going to subdue the amazing texture (bits of a crisp bark) you get with direct heat ribs.
I cooked my ribs around 300F for 3 hours total time, totally nekkid - no wrap - until they had the right flop I was looking for. Cooked with SPG on two racks, and Kinders BBQ Rub on two others, directly over a bed of coals with a small kiln dried white oak split thrown in about every 40 minutes or so. No baffle plates. No diffusers. Didn't score the membrane - they cooked right over the fire and coal bed****
The texture and flavor, the oaky smokiness, the fat-burn smokiness, the smoke ring itself - everything was on point with that cook. If I could dream up the perfect rib, THAT direct heat rib cook was it. ...Which rub was better? Didn't matter. They were both outstanding.
Direct heat ribs just hit different...
Next time you do a rib cook - get rid of all the fussiness, and try it without the wrap, no baffle plates. Just over coals and a small oak split every 40-45 minutes. Let the temps wax and wane between 275F and 350F as you stoke up the fire when needed.
****note! when I do a brisket, that's when I'll add a couple of water pans on the lower pullout rack as a baffle for a long low and slow indirect smoke cook. Waiting for the cold Wisconsin temps to stabilize around 60F for the entire day before I give it a whirl. :)
I've been a Sweet Baby Rays fan for a long time, but this last summer I tried some Blues Hog and I was hooked. For me it was and is the best!
Blues Hog Smokey Mountain 💯
Man, i forgot all about BH! They're really good.
Love their dry rub. Can’t find their sauce locally.
I normally use my offset do my ribs. Several years ago we were at my sister's house, she wanted ribs & all she has is a basic Weber so I gave it a shot. My wife had her doubts on the Weber but I carried on my mission. I had to manage the cook pretty close but they turned out delicious; smokey & tender. On the way home, a few days later, my wife said "I didn't think you would pull that off...the ribs weren't as good as what you cook at home but they were so good & everyone loved them." Enjoyed the video! Cheers
Nice work!!! Shows that knowing principles of bbq allowed you to adapt. 👍🏻👍🏻
wow you are a hero
Was literally wondering if I could do this on my kettle. I know they won't be AS good but if I can save 3+ hours, I'll take it.
@@afinecupofcoffee8476 are you serious? Buy a slab of ribs and experiment! This is not rocket science and this dude is not the greatest when it comes to smoking/grilling. He just copies others. Take your chances and experiment. You'll love the challenge and you'll have a blast. Just my two cents.
Purchased an OKJ Bronco last summer and now the family prefers the direct heat ribs to the offset ribs. The time savings is amazing.
Do you prefer to hang them in the bronco?
@@mdvols9875 if I’m doing more than two racks yes. I don’t use the deflector plate if they are on the grate
I have the larger 32x40 Smokeslinger, I love using it! I haven't fired up my LSG offset since I got the smokeslinger. I was surprised when I learned I could use full wood splits to run it and get a clean burning fire. A few other things I love is how quickly it gets up to temp. I have even hung ribs in it like I would in my Pit Barrel cooker. Im loving the process of learning & mastering all the different things you can do with the Smokeslinger. Hopefully, we will get more videos of you using the smokeslinger, I'm sure a brisket cook is in the works.
Definitely more cooks with it in the future
How would you do this style of ribs with the Burch Barrel? Could you do it without raising the grill up on the pulley?
It’s hard to beat the flavor of anything when it’s cooked over coals like that. Thats why drums are ever so popular now in comps. Hot n fast and great flavor. Great video Jeremy.
I do my ribs similar to that on the Weber kettle. They turn out so good.
But do you put the charcoal directly under the meat, or use the minion or slow and sear method? I use the 26" kettle and use the minion method for 2 racks of st.louis cut or 3 racks of baby backs. The coals are a lot further away on that pit that Jeremy was using than a weber kettle.
@@t-reyh5937Get a 22 and the onlyfire rotisserie ring. I also have a kettledial to help protect the meat. I get these same results with ribs with that setup.
Out camping one time we dug a pit and used the dead wood laying around, got a good bed of coals then wrapped the ribs in foil and buried them in the coals, don't remember for how long but they were the best ribs I've ever had.
Hey hey! Smokeslinger gaining street cred. I have a Smokeslinger offset. Built like a tank and runs like a dream. A lot of fun. 😊
Used a Masterbuilt 1050 for some St Louis style ribs this past weekend. Technique was almost identical to yours (time and temp). Best ribs to date.
I'm a Kettle guy. SnS insert to keep things tidy. A chunk of cherry, a chunk of pecan on a bed of lump charcoal. 275-300 on the dome. Don't matter on the rub. From SPG to whatever your heart desires... same with the sauce. Dry, mopped, slathered... it don't matter. They just taste damn good.
Weber Kettle?
@@missinbrain Napoleon for me. Canadian designed for a Canadian guy. TBH, if I had a re-do, I'd go Weber.
@@GrizzAxxemann Nice. My Weber doesn't turn any heads, but with the slow-n-sear I can pull off some wicked food and everyone is like "what is this seasoned with?!" and I'm always like "salt, pepper, garlic powder, and the magical Weber"
Cuban Monte Cristo #2. Yes, scoring the membrane is the way to go! And seasoning the backside is my method as well. While I like salt/pepper as a go to spice blend for ribs, I usually go with a slightly sweet rub. When I foil wrap them near the end, I usually spritz them with some apple cider vinegar / water. And I always top the meat side with some BBQ sauce thinned with apple cider vinegar and a pinch of cayenne. Jeremy, are you trying to steal my method?! LOL! Looks great, and while at this moment you haven't done the taste test, I'm predicting it will be epic. Nice work!
First of all, I WISH I had a Cuban montecristo no 2. Second, I’m glad you like the method! I didn’t steal it from you but I think if we ended in about the same place, it’s probably a good sign we are on the right track
I just did Weber Kettle "snake method" ribs with B and B briquettes, mesquite wood chunks, water pan and an upright rib rack. 3.5 hour cook, 1.5 in foil, and they were perfect.
This was what was so awesome when I was using an 85gal ugly drum. You have the smoke from the wood chunks and the fat dripping in. It was fabulous.
I just got the Pitts and Spitts direct fire grill and did a low and slow 3 lbs picanha direct heat and it was amazing. Going to try your ribs on it this weekend. The Pitts and Spitts is great cause you can raise and lower the charcoal grate as needed to change temp. Love it.
These videos are interesting but I do wish more videos would be done on more readily available and affordable cookers. I was excited to see your take on direct heat ribs, but when I saw it was on a cooker that is close to $3000 and works extremely different compared to most standard direct heat cookers I became less interested. The stick burning feature with the full flame is great, but not something the average back yard cook can easily replicate. I would love to see a similar test done on something like a pit barrel or a weber smoky mountain without the water pan.
You can use a weber kettle and get exact same results. I've been doing it for over 20 years on a kettle. I like lump charcoal over brickets
Get a 22" weber kettle and the onlyfire rotisserie ring. I also have a kettledial to help protect the meat. I get these same results with ribs with that setup.
My favorite way to cook ribs... if you are rolling the foil down to glaze, I guess it's a raft... I do it for less mess and ease of handling. Great job.
That's the method I use when I am in a rush. It never disappoints.👍🏾
Right on
I did these ribs yesterday on my XL Green Egg. Wow!! This is definitely the new way for me. Wayyyyy more fat rendered out. Used the Plate setter Indirect method dome temp approximately 315 degs. Outstanding!!!
I have a char griller charcoal grill. I season a rack of baby backs and cook them over direct heat on the upper rack. Grill for 30 minutes uncovered (flip every 10 minutes) then wrap in foil and repeat the process for another 30 minutes. They’re absolutely awesome and you have ribs in an hour
I was going to ask that question,But you answered it.I have the char griller grandchamp xd.So how long in time do you cook your ribs.I wish the grandchamp had a middle rack to.
@@charliezicolillo I cook them uncovered for 30 minutes and wrapped in foil another 30 minutes. Flip them every 10 minutes
What temp would you say it's at?
@@fishindoc6025 I never keep track of temps when cooking over direct heat. I just keep a fairly thin layer of lit charcoal and the ribs are on a grate about a foot above them
This method is exactly what the hasty bake line of grills manufactured in Tulsa were made to do!
Will we get a full review of the smokeslinger? It’s on my list
It seems like you're always trying new things and these happen to be your "very favorite ribs in the entire world." I think that's absolutely fantastic and I love learning new ways to make food better. Would you be willing to do a video or otherwise share what it is that you've done/tried in the past which ended up being a failure? As a scientist myself I find that we sometimes learn better by our failures than successes. Thanks for all the great videos. Been watching them for years now.
I have a pit barrel cooker, hard to beat the flavor from the meat dripping on the coals.
Those ribs look Absolutely Delicious! I Love using Sweet Baby Ray’s original BBQ sauce! I like to thin it with Peach Brandy or any kind of Peach alcohol! If I ever get my mobility back and I can get out of the nursing home, I wanna try this hot and fast method! My wood preference when smoking ribs is apple, cherry, or sassafras for smoke and oak for heat! Love your videos! God Bless!
Excellent job with this cook! I just made ribs like this with my pellet smoker, Cuisinart Woodcreek, bc it allows you to burn a woodfire on the right. So I was at about 300 for awhile and got the char. I did 6 racks at once and then glazed top down in foil wraps. So only slightly different to yours, with very similar results. They were such a hit at my grandchild's b-day and with my chef/restauranteur boss!
I need to look into that. I’m not familiar with that cooker.
I turned keto carnivore last july (lost 70 lbs so far) i Cook st Louis ribs salt only direct on my Komado Joe. Dome heat at 300 grill temp 325 for two hours. No wrap, super juicy. Family prefers offset with wrap and sauce.
Congratulations on the weight loss! Currently looking to lose some weight myself
Nice! I follow Keto, IM also.
@@MadScientistBBQaren't we all 😅. Currently at 310ish and not really trying, I'd love to go down 80lb but if I try to go to sleep hungry, I can't sleep, and my GERD acts up if I don't eat as many calories as I need to maintain my weight. It's great lol (/s), trying to be more active but I've had chronic pain issues since 100lb ago and it's tough. Currently have a rib out from a bout of pneumonia had me coughing hard enough to dislocate it, and its still healing. Didn't stop me from smoking meat the last two weeks so I can eat for the next week without too much work, but that shit still hurts like hell. Love the content though man, you've motivated me to cook all my food at home again and that's a huge step towards being healthier
It doesn’t matter what diet you follow in order to lose weight. Just need to be in a caloric deficit
@@MadScientistBBQgo carnivore diet. You can eat lots of meat, and the results are amazing!
I’ve been smoking meats for close to 30 years and honestly, I’m over the super long smokey cooks. I have a direct heat cooker ordered. Looking forward to some grilling low and slow or turning and burning.
Open coals is that authentic flavor that is true Bbq. Offsets have made their name in the last twenty years and taken over, and are great, but open coals is the true, old school technique used by the early Americans! Notice I said Americans, I didn't distinguish which race like democrats always do. MAGA 2024!
The Gateway smokers have that authentic grill flavor as well since the fat drips on the coals. It's absolutely my rib machine - and they're used quite a bit in the comp circuit.
You would like a Gateway drum smoker. I miss mine sometimes when I cook ribs. Like you said, fat dripping and cooking off on the fire!
glad to see the smokeslinger starting to get the recognition it deserves
Yep. It’s great! Was totally surprised by it
Awesome video man. I’ve been grilling ribs similar to this for years. I wanted a way to grill ribs after work without smoking them for 5 hours. They always come out amazing!
I’ve had a Smokeslinger for over a year now and can honestly say it produces the best bbq I’ve ever had. Ribs and pork steaks are my favorite thing to cook on it but it makes great brisket and pork butt too.
Great video as always. Wish you would have shown how the coal side looked where you had the ribs.
It was just 1.5 chimneys of Fogo lump. The other half chimney went on the opposite side of the pit. Definitely an oversight not to include that shot.
Direct heat ribs is amazing. have a pit barrel cooker who I love. and also done them on my Josper grill! Its as you say, Amazingly good!
We have been doing this method on Gateways for the past 5 years... Love it!
Thank you for this video. I hope you will do more on this cooker. You are great! What kind of charcoal and how did you build your fire under the non-wood side?
I tried these direct heat ribs after watching a Swine and Bovine video. I use my Weber Smokey Mountain without the water pan per his suggestion because I don’t have a Chud Box. They were amazing, the flavor of cooking directly reminded me of old school BBQ. I love your ad lib voices at the end. Your Trump is spot on!!
I use a 22 inch WSM. Weber smokey mountain. Ribs on top rack no water pan no wrap. Done in 3 hours over lump charcoal. Easiest and best way.
I use my WSM the same way, the top rack gives you a good amount of distance between the meat and the fire
@@dorianboone9757 I've never even used the bottom rack. Maybe someday
Watching again! Wanted to point out, direct heat is a wonderful cooking method to put it mildly. As Al Frugoni and Francis Mallmann could attest! You already have the best RUclips channel in the world to bring all these glorious possibilities into the mix via Kentucky! Pass the bourbon!!!
I'm waiting on my smokeslinger to get delivered in about two weeks, can't wait
I occasionally like savory ribs, but I lean towards a good balance of sweet and savory, so the glazed are my go-to. I also like to occasionally slice up the ribs pre-cook and put them in a char siu marinade, then grill them direct and finish with a glaze.
Just got my first direct heat smoker; can’t wait to try ribs on it. 🔥🔥🔥
Rock on!
This is how my dad did back ribs when I was a kid in the 60s-70s. He would season them, brush them with pineapple juice and direct grill them over coals.
I think the famous Rendezvous in Memphis chargrills them as well. Although no one wrapped ribs back then. It was 100% directly over coals, maybe up 8-10 inches at most. I would say these you are making are more somewhat direct, but using a smoker method with wrapping.
Quick question, Jeremy, why foil and not butcher paper on ribs? Love the video!
I did a rack last summer over direct heat using my budget Char griller smoker and they came out great.
I did just salt and pepper, the last 15 mins I basted with Famous Dave's Devil's spit BBQ sauce
I love learning from you ,but my problem is I'm always hungry after I watch your show. Thanks so much.
Awesome again jeremy. Thing is, we dont get these cuts here in australia. Sure st louis ribs, but you have the belly meat on them as well. I would love to get my hands on "just costco ribs". Slim pickings here bro. Love your channel. You and chud. 👍🇦🇺
When I started bbq I use to always do direct heat on a Weber kettle I would Q them until they had the color I wanted then I would slice them and put them into a Dutch oven with canned pineapple and the juice.
One of the world's best rib places: "Rendezvous" in Memphis, TN does direct heat ribs, cooked fast. Some of the best I have ever had.
Need to see a barrel cooker comparison video!
Argentina has been cooking direct heat since gaucho days. And they have one of the best meats in the world. I’m loving direct heat everything. Still has smoke flavor but you can’t get that grease charcoal back to the meat flavor in the offset . So in a nutshell Santa Maria Grill has many positives
I have a Weber smokey mountain without a water pan and have a Hunsaker vortex plate in it. Man ribs with the fat dripping on the coals are just great.
Agreed!
Direct heat beef ribs are awesome too. I do them and pork ribs on the Kamado, keep the meat high where I can hold my hand for around 8 seconds over the heat
I use a Komodo Kamado with with 2 Weber perforated pans that serve not only as heat deflectors but alllows the drippings to reach the open flame which, as Jeremy states, an incredible flavor profile. I use Harry Soo's fire box method where I put chunks of wood chunks on the bottom of the charcoal basket and cover with charcoal. The charcoal filters the smoke and gives a nice smoke profile. I’ve tried low and slow and the fast method with excellent results.
I am hoping you will add more content for smokers like those on Embers TV. Even if they are not yours. Yes, I am subscribed. Thanks for this video.
Im wanting to try a hot cook, 300° on the offset, but this like how they do at Salt Lick. But i gotta give props to those drink choices beside the miller lite. The kentucky bourbon barrel ale has been one of my favorite beers since i had it in Louisville. I have bottle of Woodford reserve double oak on the bar right now.
I have a 30+ year old Holland grill that my family still says makes the best ribs they have ever had. I have tried charcoal, pellet grill (often and a lot), offset ---- they still like the Holland.
Oh that looks amazing!!! Thanks for doing this video. Have you tried rotisserie ribs!!??
I just did my first set of direct heat ribs and they were great! Definitely cooked faster. Direct heat chicken is awesome as well!
Was there a video on the ribgate? My wife used to cook them in the pressure cooker and i thought they were delicious until i tried some smoked ribs and then now make my own. Had the pressure cooked ones again when my mother in law cooked them and i was shocked with how bad they were!
Very true. Sounds like my first trip to a Texas bbq joint. Made me realize that what I thought was good bbq was nowhere near
I have a hasty bake and it works for me for ribs and briskets in cooking this way!
Looks great. Wonder how a brisket would be direct heat smoke. I guess more care on the fire.
Turns out some great brisket
Wow, that cooker is real science. I did this on a Roesle Watersmoker (without the waterpan) and the ribs were great.
Those are some wonderful looking rib rafts right there
I need a Chud Box. I have a WSM, which gives the height separation I would need, but it gets too hot when you close the lid without the baffle plate in there. And my grill doesn't have enough separation distance. Man those ribs look good! I was impressed with the results from a direct heat cook!
Get this smokeslinger, it is awesome
You "want" a chudbox. You can just learn to manage the temps better on the wsm without the baffle, plenty do it all the time. You can buy a lot of coal and meat for the cost of a chudbox.
Good point about the WSM.....I could probably just use less lump charcoal to begin with so it doesn't get too hot with the lid on. Thanks for the responses.
I guess I wouldn't be sad with this Pit on my porch lol, it looks pretty awesome!
Love your work. Ran into you at Buc-ees one night in Temple, Tx. I was wondering, if you have used the new Old Country Gen II offset. I was checking them out the other day.
I get ribs done in about 4 hours on my offset and the Santa Maria grill the time will vary but I do like them cooked over an open flame but not being enclosed it's hard to get a big smoke flavor but still very good.
Great video. So I have a Masterbuilt 40" charcoal digital smoker. Im assuming that it would work that same way as your smoker did.
Hey Jeremy! Great video….could you review the smokeslinger pit? Looks like it would be a pit to invest, but haven’t seen a lot of RUclips vids or reviews on it. Thanks!
Your direct heat is not like my direct heat! 😃 Seriously, thanks for this demo. I've never done ribs and I need to try them.
would be really cool if you had did this with a cooker that more than % .01 of your followers have ........
it's cool to see different cookers , but i like something i can easily copy .
maybe in a future video you could do it on a kettle or drum smoker ?
take care , jeff
You can do it on a weber. You just have to flip them often so that they don't burn or dry out. Also, use less fuel since the distance between the grate and fuel source is pretty close. Thats the fun thing about BBQ is testing it out and see what works. It isnt the pit, it's the person working the pit that determines how good a cook is
I'll try this on my 22in Old Smokey, bet it will be good.
I have a 7 lb. pork butt thawing for tomorrow, but now I wanna do up some ribs. Great video!
Some great looking ribs
I do all of my smoking with Char griller akorn that has a ceramic deflector plate, sadly my damper o-ring busted so my fire control is not great right now. I use lump charcoal and my mystery oak firewood (didn't think to ask my uncle what kind it was) for the smoke.
Made my day to hear the PA Dutch words in this video. Blast from my past too.
It’s all about your goal. Choosing the cooking method appropriate for your time, taste, weather, guests, and other circumstances. Oven, gas grill, offset smoker, charcoal grill, crock pot even! For instance, direct charcoal heat will not give you the smokey flavor an offset will but it will give you that grilled flavor and be done quicker.
Well said!
That Smokeslinger is awesome.
Another GREAT Video Jeremy. Would you suggest direct heat from a Gas Grill (With a Smoke Box, or Smoke Tube) for similar results using this method?
That Smokeslinger looks badass
I’m pleasantly surprised
What temperature are you at with direct heat…or… what is “enough separation” between the ribs and the coals you mentioned???
Cigars? Woodforest Reserve? Man, no wonder I liked your videos as much as i do. We got a lot of vices in common!
Sweet baby rays and Stubbs are my go to sauces. I have made my own but only once lol.
Sweet Baby Ray's BBQ sauce is great. I pour it in a pan (16 to 20 0zs.). Ad a half can or more of beer. Bring to simmer. Thins the BBQ sauce a bit and makes it stick better to the meat. Cooks all the alcohol out of the beer. Brush on just before taking it off the grill or simply let the diner apply it at the table.
Always direct on a kettle. Briquettes and apple wood chips, Scored bone side, my own rub. Start meat side down, flip often. When I have good color I wrap in foil, bone side down on a bed of chopped granny smith apples. About an hour, no probe, no thermometer; just my nose.
What temp do you run at doing that method?
@@johnnyboyA76 I don't know.
I don't know but I guess between 300-325 F
My favorite way to make ribs is to sous vide the whole rack in the cryopack for 24 hrs at 140F. Chill in an ice water bath (ice chest) then refrigerate for a day. Pull from fridge, remove from cryo wrap and apply favorite rub. Back in fridge for 12-24 hrs. Next day into the smoker at conventional low and slow temps. Ribs finish in 2-2.5 hrs, stay more moist but still get good smoke flavor. More steps for sure but the “day of” tasks are much shorter/easier.
Love this, I want to talk to you about my St. Louis rotisserie ribs. Thai inspired glaze, they’re damn good!
This is way more in line with what i want to actually do, and actually do. Please do more of this style. Take it to extremes like a generic grill and generic meats (and more lean cuts), and let's get wild and use those pellet tube things. Just see how little you can do with as little as possible and still get what most people would consider a relatively good outcome.
Jeremy, I’ve seen your last videos and seems that your fence is brand new and was installed sometime in 2023, this summer (2024) get some exterior stain and spray it on so it’s going to last looking good and not get grey and ugly, in case you have some grey areas; a quick pressure wash should remove it before you stain it( but use water based stain)
Always love your content, Jeremy. Remember that time when Harry Soo threw shade at the Franklin offset for not producing a Smokey enough flavor? Maybe you oughtta try cooking a brisket this way!
I’m 100% gonna try to cook a brisket this way!
Jeremy, do you plan to do a review of the Smokeslinger and perhaps a comparison to the ChudBox?