So far, I have only cooked baby back ribs on the PBC. I am interested in trying St. Louis Cut style ribs, but have noticed a discrepancy in cooking times in different areas of the website. The PBC Cooking Times thread and the PBC website videos recommend 3.5 to 4.5 hours, however Meathead's Last Meal Ribs says 5 to 6 hours. I would love to hear from some of the PBC alumns what the proper cooking time and temperature is for SLC's?
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SLC ribs cooking time?
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Club Member
- Jul 2014
- 108
- Signal Mountain, TN
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Pit Barrel Cooker
Weber Kettle Silver 18.5
Maverick ET-733
weber digital thermometer
make my own rubs
favorite beer: the one in my hand
I find it is directly related to how many pounds of ribs you're cooking. The first rack is anywhere from an 1.5 to 2.5 hours and I add approx 1 hour for each additional rack. Ambient temps, humidity, pre burn of your charcoal, et... all too many variables for a set-in-stone cooking time guideline.
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Founding Member
- Jul 2014
- 1597
- Lake Charles, LA
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Started Low-N-Slow BBQ in 2012. Obviously, it's taken hold (in chronological order:
1.) A pair of Weber Smokey Mountain 22.5's
2.) #LilTex, a 22" Expensive Offset Smoker (looks like a Yoder Witicha)
3.) #WhoDat1, a HUGE Gravity Fed Insulated Cabinet Smoker (cooking chamber 3'x2'x6')
4.) A Full Size Commercial Dryer/converted to Vertical Smoker.
5.) Jambo Backyard stickburner (my FAVORITE Pit so far)
6.) GrillMeister, a huge 24"x48" Adjustable, Charcoal Grill from Pitmaker.com
7.) 22" Weber Kettle with Slow-N-Sear
8.) Vault insulated reverse-flow cabinet smoker from Pitmaker
9.) BarbecueFiretruck...under development
10.) 26 foot BBQ Vending Trailer equipped with HUGE Myron Mixon 72xc smoker is HERE, Oct 2016!
11.) Opened www.PaulsRibShackBarbecue.com Food Trailer officially in March 2017
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I'm loving using BBQ to make friends and build connections.
I have #theRibList where I keep a list of new and old friends and whenever I'm cooking, I make 1 to 20 extra and share the joy.
Not sure about the PBC, but on my WDMs at 225-240, it's about 6 hours.
In my big gravity feed, I find I need to cook at 250 to get the bark I want and they are done in about 5 hours.
I don't cook a lot of baby backs, but I think they are 60-90 minutes less on average.
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I cooked 2 racks of St Louis cut this past weekend. The cooker stabilized around 240. After 2.5 hours, I had one rack fall off the hook. Luckily it draped over the basket handle and not into the coals. I'm at sea level. I just don't see how anyone can go over 2-3 hours at sea level.Last edited by jub jub; October 21, 2015, 12:43 PM.
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I'm also at sea level but my SLC's (6 racks, which is about how many I *like* to do at once), usually take around 4 hours. I've typically seen thinner ones start getting ready at about 3.5 hours... but finishing all six takes mine between 4 and 4.5 hours. I usually make an effort to keep the minimum temperature above 240 and *usually* manage to do that... sometime it's not easy with the wind and all. If I just do two racks (min cryovac'ed number from BJ's) it's usually closer to 3.5 hours as the barrel tends to run hotter with less cold meat.
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