OK, I"m ending up with a bunch of leftover ribs. We vacume seal them in our chamber vac, but with the softer rub on the ribs, an adaptation not that far from Memphis Dust, the Rub with all that sugar gets soft on the reheat, so they take some special care to retherm well. So I'm a bit reluctant to share them with just anyone. So I've been thinking about different ways to used the spare ribs we end up with. Did you catch that funny?
Anyway, I tried Pulled Ribs on Cheesy Polenta last night. It was good, but not remarkable.
Then I remembered a prior idea, Fried Ribs. Duh! I'm in Louisiana, we deep fry everything. I had meant to do this before, but just hadn't gotten around to it.
So I brought home a frozen rack of St. Louis Cut smoked spare ribs, got out my home deep fryer, gave it a quick cleaning, and got to playing.
First up, standard Drench and Drag with Milk and Eggs for the Drench, and Flour for the Drag. Seasoned with a Cajun Seasoning, just like I did growing up and cooking lots and lots of fried shrimp.

This was a pretty good looking rack of ribs! Thick and pretty, with nice bark. That chamber vac works great, you just have to not rub on the rub to rub it off...Now to the slicing. Pretty good, I must say.

The Drench and Drag, then into the vat!

Three different tests. Left: a longer cook. Middle, a little shorter cook, and I did something different than the first, but I'm not sure what. I think I went to the drench 1st on the left rib, then flour, then drench, then back to the flower on the middle. The right rib is just straight to the oil with no coating. I did a few more like these to continue the testing. They were ok, but just not awesome. Something didn't quite match. I wanted more pop.
I thought, More Sugar, like in the rub. So I tested putting a BBQ Sauce on in the process. I tested Drench, then Sauce, then Drag, then fry. Then I put the Sauce first. Both times, the batter didn't really stick at all. But where it did stick, I liked that flavor more. Keep testing.

This one is just Sauce then Fry. It was pretty. And it was good. But no crunch. It was OK, but sticky and not remarkable. Keep testing.

Then I thought, why am I mixing seasoning flavors. Stick with my rub. So I made a new batch of Drench and Drag, both seasoned with generous helpings of our WhoDat Rib Rub. Fried it! First Rib I fried about as long and the first ribs which took about 4-5 minutes to get dark brown. That was too much for the sweeter coatings. So I cut back a minute or two. BEST RIB YET! Crunch and sweeter pop. and no competition with different seasonings.

Admittedly, it's now about 10 pm and I started this at 6:30, so I'm a bit full. But it was quite good and I'm going to pursue this more!

What success stories do you guys and gals have in deep frying your smoked meats?
Thanks!
paul
Anyway, I tried Pulled Ribs on Cheesy Polenta last night. It was good, but not remarkable.
Then I remembered a prior idea, Fried Ribs. Duh! I'm in Louisiana, we deep fry everything. I had meant to do this before, but just hadn't gotten around to it.
So I brought home a frozen rack of St. Louis Cut smoked spare ribs, got out my home deep fryer, gave it a quick cleaning, and got to playing.
First up, standard Drench and Drag with Milk and Eggs for the Drench, and Flour for the Drag. Seasoned with a Cajun Seasoning, just like I did growing up and cooking lots and lots of fried shrimp.
This was a pretty good looking rack of ribs! Thick and pretty, with nice bark. That chamber vac works great, you just have to not rub on the rub to rub it off...Now to the slicing. Pretty good, I must say.
The Drench and Drag, then into the vat!
Three different tests. Left: a longer cook. Middle, a little shorter cook, and I did something different than the first, but I'm not sure what. I think I went to the drench 1st on the left rib, then flour, then drench, then back to the flower on the middle. The right rib is just straight to the oil with no coating. I did a few more like these to continue the testing. They were ok, but just not awesome. Something didn't quite match. I wanted more pop.
I thought, More Sugar, like in the rub. So I tested putting a BBQ Sauce on in the process. I tested Drench, then Sauce, then Drag, then fry. Then I put the Sauce first. Both times, the batter didn't really stick at all. But where it did stick, I liked that flavor more. Keep testing.
This one is just Sauce then Fry. It was pretty. And it was good. But no crunch. It was OK, but sticky and not remarkable. Keep testing.
Then I thought, why am I mixing seasoning flavors. Stick with my rub. So I made a new batch of Drench and Drag, both seasoned with generous helpings of our WhoDat Rib Rub. Fried it! First Rib I fried about as long and the first ribs which took about 4-5 minutes to get dark brown. That was too much for the sweeter coatings. So I cut back a minute or two. BEST RIB YET! Crunch and sweeter pop. and no competition with different seasonings.
Admittedly, it's now about 10 pm and I started this at 6:30, so I'm a bit full. But it was quite good and I'm going to pursue this more!
What success stories do you guys and gals have in deep frying your smoked meats?
Thanks!
paul
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