Discussion
LOVE short ribs!
Have cooked them a few times with good results.
Best i've had in London were at Zelman Meats in Soho.. utterly amazing! https://www.instagram.com/zelman_meats/
Have cooked them a few times with good results.
Best i've had in London were at Zelman Meats in Soho.. utterly amazing! https://www.instagram.com/zelman_meats/
Chucklehead said:
Sounds like you made an arse of it.. I love em.
Far more forgiving than brisket on the smoker.
I wonder if I screwed them up.Far more forgiving than brisket on the smoker.
I slow cooked them in the BBQ for 7 hours. They had hickory smoke at the start.
For the last two hours, they sat in some ale with a tin foil cover. (This might be where I went wrong).
They were cooked till they reached 95C.
They came out very fatty.
3 hours? At what temp?
7 hours depending on temp sounds fine and 95 is a good place to aim for. I'm wondering if it's in the trimming? There are some nasty bits that make for terrible eating if you leave em on, same as the membrane under a pork rib if you've experience there. Maybe not leaving enough fat on top, but that'd tend to make them dry rather than tough.
7 hours depending on temp sounds fine and 95 is a good place to aim for. I'm wondering if it's in the trimming? There are some nasty bits that make for terrible eating if you leave em on, same as the membrane under a pork rib if you've experience there. Maybe not leaving enough fat on top, but that'd tend to make them dry rather than tough.
Chucklehead said:
3 hours? At what temp?
7 hours depending on temp sounds fine and 95 is a good place to aim for. I'm wondering if it's in the trimming? There are some nasty bits that make for terrible eating if you leave em on, same as the membrane under a pork rib if you've experience there. Maybe not leaving enough fat on top, but that'd tend to make them dry rather than tough.
I had pork ribs on my mind. 6 to 8 hours would be the norm. But a crispy membrane on pork ribs 7 hours depending on temp sounds fine and 95 is a good place to aim for. I'm wondering if it's in the trimming? There are some nasty bits that make for terrible eating if you leave em on, same as the membrane under a pork rib if you've experience there. Maybe not leaving enough fat on top, but that'd tend to make them dry rather than tough.

don4l said:
I wonder if I screwed them up.
I slow cooked them in the BBQ for 7 hours. They had hickory smoke at the start.
For the last two hours, they sat in some ale with a tin foil cover. (This might be where I went wrong).
They were cooked till they reached 95C.
They came out very fatty.
That's because they are a very fatty and rich cut. A bit like ordering a ribeye at a restaurant and then complaining because it's too fatty.I slow cooked them in the BBQ for 7 hours. They had hickory smoke at the start.
For the last two hours, they sat in some ale with a tin foil cover. (This might be where I went wrong).
They were cooked till they reached 95C.
They came out very fatty.
I love short rib, much cheaper and more forgiving than brisket, but so fatty and rich i only rarely eat them.
Scantily said:
don4l said:
I wonder if I screwed them up.
I slow cooked them in the BBQ for 7 hours. They had hickory smoke at the start.
For the last two hours, they sat in some ale with a tin foil cover. (This might be where I went wrong).
They were cooked till they reached 95C.
They came out very fatty.
That's because they are a very fatty and rich cut. A bit like ordering a ribeye at a restaurant and then complaining because it's too fatty.I slow cooked them in the BBQ for 7 hours. They had hickory smoke at the start.
For the last two hours, they sat in some ale with a tin foil cover. (This might be where I went wrong).
They were cooked till they reached 95C.
They came out very fatty.
I love short rib, much cheaper and more forgiving than brisket, but so fatty and rich i only rarely eat them.
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