Being new to the world of smoking my first few attempts have been "by the book" - the Traeger cook book that came with the grill. Last Friday I did baby back ribs and they were great. On Saturday we went for beef ribs and again great and on both occasions the meat fell of the bone.
Last night I tried two racks of Costco's St Louis ribs (I know a lot of ribs but family insisted on it!!!!) and followed the 3-2-1 method. I also removed as much of the membrane as I could. Although the meat was very tasty it certainly did not fall off the bone and had to be bitten off. Even cutting the ribs up required a bit of effort. Could anyone help why the meat was so different in texture? The cook timing was per the 3-2-1, I'm pretty certain the foil boat was tight and didn't loose liquid and then I used some sauce for the final part. I also let the ribs rest in foil after cooking. Could it be that I had two racks instead of one and needed more cooking or is it simply St Louis ribs are different to baby backs? Thanks guys,
Last night I tried two racks of Costco's St Louis ribs (I know a lot of ribs but family insisted on it!!!!) and followed the 3-2-1 method. I also removed as much of the membrane as I could. Although the meat was very tasty it certainly did not fall off the bone and had to be bitten off. Even cutting the ribs up required a bit of effort. Could anyone help why the meat was so different in texture? The cook timing was per the 3-2-1, I'm pretty certain the foil boat was tight and didn't loose liquid and then I used some sauce for the final part. I also let the ribs rest in foil after cooking. Could it be that I had two racks instead of one and needed more cooking or is it simply St Louis ribs are different to baby backs? Thanks guys,