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Dave’s Ribs

March 14th, 2010

A Friend sent this recipe in for ribs. I’ve adapted it a bit for the Egg….

Ingredients
2 slabs baby back ribs (about 3 pounds)
Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper … See More
Extra-virgin olive oil
2 bacon slices
4 sprigs fresh thyme
1/2 onion
3 smashed garlic cloves
2 cups ketchup
1 cup peach preserves
2 tablespoons Dijon mustard or 1 tablespoon dry mustard
2 tablespoons brown sugar
1/4 cup molasses
2 tablespoons red or white wine vinegar
1 teaspoon ground cumin
1 teaspoon ground paprika
Directions
Special equipment: Kitchen twine

Preheat the egg to 250 degrees F. Put the ribs on a baking sheet, season with salt and pepper and drizzle with olive oil. Place ribs in rib rack and cook low and slow for 1 1/2 hours.

For the sauce:  In a cast iron pot, wrap the bacon around the middle of the thyme sprigs and tie with kitchen twine so you have a nice bundle. Heat a 2-count of oil in a large saucepan over medium heat on the kitchen stove. Add the thyme bundle and cook slowly for 3 to 4 minutes to render the bacon fat and give the sauce a nice smoky taste. Add the onion and garlic and cook slowly, without coloring, for 5 minutes. Add all of the rest of the sauce ingredients, give the sauce a stir, and move it to the Egg to cook alongside the ribs. (if you don’t have room, cook slowly for 20 minutes on the stove). Put some sauce in a separate bowl for basting, reserving the remaining sauce for serving.

Baste the ribs with the sauce and let them continue cooking, basting twice more, for 30 more minutes. When the ribs are cooked, take them out of the egg. You can let them hang out like this until you’re ready to eat.

When ready to eat, heat the Egg to 350 (direct) or 400 (indirect) and grill the ribs, basting with the sauce. They should become crisp and charred, about 5 minutes on each side. Pick the onion and garlic out of the sauce and serve with ribs.

Pat Big Green Egg, Other, Recipes

Recent Snow

January 9th, 2010

This is what my egg looked like a few days before Christmas…and right before I fired it up for my evening meal!

Pat Big Green Egg

Smoked Prime Rib

December 30th, 2009

Prime Rib is a personal favorite. Wait, all beef is a personal favorite. But Prime Rib is one of my favorite cuts. It isn’t as bold as a grilled rib-eye, and often served just a bit cooler than a traditional steak, the standing rib roast has a different flavor than a pure rib-eye.

Today my parent came to visit, and we decided to make this our big Christmas/New Year’s meal. And it was a hit. Of course, anything on the Egg works, but this was especially fine.

Picked up a nice prime rib roast from Sams. I’ve got enough beef to last a while now…

For a 6-7 lb standing Prime Rib (boneless). For a bone-in, compensate — I wish I had found a bone in one!!!!

Blue Ridge Prime Rib

Meat:

  • 6-7 lb prime rib (with bones, better. prime quality, better) I plan on 1 pound per person, but we are heavy eaters. This 6 pounder fed 4 adults and one child, with enough left over for another sensible meal. We were stuffed!

Rub:

  • 1/2 c fresh cracked peppercorn
  • 1 T fresh ground cardamom

Mix these two items together well; and rub it deeply into the meat on all sides.

Marinade:

  • 1 c soy sauce
  • 1 c red wine vinegar
  • 2 T ketchup
  • 1 t paprika
  • 1 t garlic powder

Mix all ingredients. Place rubbed Prime Rib in a stock pot, pour marinade over meat. Turn every 2-3 hours so all sides are soaked well, allowing the most time to sit on a broad side of the meat. I let mine marinate for 15 hours or so.

Cooking:

  1. Heat the Egg to 220, using indirect heat. Add several chunks of hickory wood for added flavor.
  2. Place drip pan on foil balls under the wire rack (prevents the liquid from completely boiling off). Add about 1/2 cup of marinade to the foil pan.
  3. Place beef in a roast rack (the bones would have been better!) and place on Egg until it reaches 115-120 (2.5 hours for me today).
  4. Take off the Egg and wrap in foil for 30 minutes or so. (This is an excellent time to put your 2x Taters on the Egg to heat up at 300!)
  5. Remove taters and platesetter. Raise temp to 350-400.
  6. Grill the Prime Rib on all sides for a few minutes each time, mildly searing each side.
  7. Wrap in foil again for 5-10 minutes
  8. Slice and Enjoy!

Pat Big Green Egg, Equipment, Recipes, Smoking

Spicy Chicken Dip

June 14th, 2009

There are times when you can’t host the party, and carrying your Big Green Egg with you is a bit patronizing. Well, this great recipe will make sure everyone knows you are still the top cooker!

This is easy to prepare and an instant hit. While you can cook the chicken in the slow cooker, I prefer to grill the chicken a bit on the egg coated with my favorite rub before adding it to the mix.
Read more…

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BGE Creamy Mac & Cheese

June 14th, 2009

This has become a family favorite. Adapted from a Paula Dean crock-pot  recipe, this one can cook on the Egg very easily in a clay roasting pan while you smoke some other meat! The smoke flavor adds another dimension to the meal. Read more…

Pat Big Green Egg, Ice Cream, Recipes, Rubs, Chips, and Lumps ,

Lump…some like it hot!

March 6th, 2009
This entry is part 4 of 4 in the series bge

There are several ways to get your lump fired up. For my first few cooks I took a paper towel and dropped some vegetable oil on it, lit it, and covered it with new lump. This got old, though.

Read more…

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My Big Green Egg Equipment

March 3rd, 2009
This entry is part 3 of 4 in the series bge

Chips added and food on the EggAs regular followers will know, I have recently jumped into the BGE world. The food tastes better cooked on the Egg (though some may argue it tastes better because of the price you’ve paid!!!), but there is no doubt that the Egg does a better job than any gas or charcoal grill I’ve ever owned.

My current equipment consists of: Read more…

Pat Big Green Egg, Equipment , , , ,

Another BGE Cook

March 1st, 2009
This entry is part 2 of 4 in the series bge

Tonight’s menu, our second on the Big Green Egg, was some wonderful salmon grilled on a cedar plank.

Read more…

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First Big Green Egg cook

February 28th, 2009
This entry is part 1 of 4 in the series bge

For years BBQ chicken has been a favorite. In my single days, I would make many a meal of chicken thighs and a box a macaroni. A little fun on the gas grill and some boiling water would feed me for a couple days. Unfortunately, I found that the gas grill was turning tasteless and the effort involved was simply not worth it. I moved to the Alton Brown smoker and enjoyed my outdoor meals flavored by long smoke sessions.

That changed today. Read more…

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