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Smoked Baby Back Ribs (3-2-1 Method)

Fall-off-the-bone ribs using the 3-2-1 method — 3 hours smoke, 2 hours wrapped, 1 hour sauced. A full-day project that teaches low-and-slow smoking.

★★★ Advanced$$6 hrServes 4
Smoked Baby Back Ribs (3-2-1 Method) — Chapters — american — recipe plated and ready to serve

Nutrition (per serving)

580

Calories

36g

Protein

18g

Carbs

40g

Fat

1g

Fiber

Fall-off-the-bone ribs using the 3-2-1 method — 3 hours smoke, 2 hours wrapped, 1 hour sauced. A full-day project that teaches low-and-slow smoking.

Ingredients

  • 2 racks baby back ribs (about 2 lbs each)
  • 1/4 cup yellow mustard (as a binder)
  • For the dry rub: 1/4 cup brown sugar, 2 tbsp paprika, 1 tbsp garlic powder, 1 tbsp onion powder, 1 tbsp chili powder, 1 tsp cayenne, 1 tsp black pepper, 1 tbsp salt, 1 tsp cumin
  • 2 cups wood chips (hickory or apple), soaked 30 minutes
  • 1/4 cup apple cider vinegar (for spritzing)
  • 4 tbsp butter
  • 1/4 cup honey
  • 1 cup BBQ sauce of your choice

Method

  1. Prep the ribs: Remove the membrane from the bone side (slide a butter knife under it at one end, grip with a paper towel, and pull). This allows smoke and seasoning to penetrate. Slather both sides with mustard (this is just a binder — you won't taste it). Apply dry rub generously on all sides. Let sit at room temperature for 30 minutes.

  2. Set up the grill for indirect smoking at 225°F. For charcoal: use a snake method (coals arranged in a C-shape with wood chunks on top). For gas: one burner on low, smoker box with chips on the lit side. Place a water pan in the center.

  3. Phase 1 — Smoke (3 hours): Place ribs bone-side down on the cool side of the grill. Close the lid. Maintain 225°F. Add wood chips every 45 minutes. Spritz with apple cider vinegar every hour to keep the surface moist.

  4. Phase 2 — Wrap (2 hours): Lay out two large sheets of heavy-duty foil. Place each rack meat-side down on the foil. Add 2 tbsp butter and 2 tbsp honey to each rack. Wrap tightly. Return to the grill at 225°F for 2 hours. The foil traps steam and braising liquid, tenderizing the meat.

  5. Phase 3 — Sauce (1 hour): Unwrap the ribs carefully (save the braising liquid for basting). Place ribs back on the grill bone-side down. Brush with BBQ sauce. Close the lid and cook 45-60 minutes, brushing with more sauce every 15 minutes. The sauce should caramelize and become tacky.

  6. The ribs are done when the meat has pulled back from the bones about 1/4 inch and a toothpick slides into the meat between the bones with no resistance. Let rest 10 minutes, then slice between the bones.

What You're Practicing

What You're Practicing

Low-and-slow smoking: Maintaining 225°F for 6 hours is the fundamental skill of barbecue. Temperature control is everything — too hot and the meat dries out, too cool and the collagen doesn't break down. Check the temperature every 30 minutes and adjust vents (charcoal) or burner knobs (gas).

The 3-2-1 method: This is the most reliable rib method for beginners. The 3 hours of smoke builds flavor and bark (the dark, flavorful crust). The 2 hours wrapped breaks down collagen into gelatin (making the meat tender). The 1 hour unwrapped firms up the bark and caramelizes the sauce. Adjust timing based on your preference — 3-2-0.5 for ribs with more bite, 3-2.5-1 for fall-off-the-bone.

The stall: Around 150-160°F internal, the meat temperature will plateau for an hour or more. This is called "the stall" — evaporative cooling from the meat's surface moisture counteracts the heat. The foil wrap (called the "Texas crutch") pushes through the stall by trapping moisture and preventing evaporation.

Smoke ring: If you see a pink ring just below the surface of the meat, that's the smoke ring — a chemical reaction between nitrogen dioxide in the smoke and myoglobin in the meat. It's a sign of good smoke penetration and is prized in competition barbecue.

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