Smoked Texas-Style Beef Short Ribs Recipe (2024)

Texas has bred in me a true appreciation for beef barbecue—it is my favorite type, but also the hardest for me to get right. While I love a great brisket, a perfect beef rib is even better with its super beefy flavor, luscious soft fat, and blackened peppery crust. Stick me in Louie Mueller and tell me I can only order one item, and I'm going for that damn beef rib, it's just so good. I've been in a constant state of trying to find a path to transcendent beef ribs like that using my Weber bullet, which looks like a cute little play thing compared to those giant Texas tanks. I can't say these ribs are there yet, but this represents a big step up from past attempts.

Smoked Texas-Style Beef Short Ribs Recipe (1)

Everything might be bigger in Texas, but it sure is smaller in New York. Starting out with that fundamental requirement of giant bones top-loaded with beef wasn't so easy in my home locale of Astoria, Queens.

When I went looking, I can across two common variety of beef ribs—back ribs and short ribs. Back ribs are what you get when a rib roast is divorced from its bones. That rib roast meat fetches top dollar, so it makes sense that most of the meat stays with the roast or steaks, and very little is left on the ribs, but they do have some great stuff between the bones. Back ribs make fine barbecue, but they weren't the giant hunks of meat I was after.

That leaves the short ribs, which are cut from the lower portion of the rib cage and often have a nice layer of fat-laced meat sitting on top. The challenge here was finding ones that would live up to the Texas name. More often than not, the short ribs I came across were cut into small, individual bone portions with wildly varying amounts of meat on them. Fortunately, my local butcher had a few nice racks that had four bones each—around 10-inches squared—with approximately 1 1/4-inches of meat sitting on top. They may not have been quite as large as some ribs I've gotten in Texas, but were close enough to do the job well.

Smoked Texas-Style Beef Short Ribs Recipe (2)

After I had ribs in hand, the prep was pretty minimal. As I do with my pork ribs, I started by peeling the membrane off the backside. This was probably more out of reflex than necessity, but that membrane becomes plasticky and leathery during cooking, and if you're going to gnaw on all sides of the bone, it doesn't make for great eats.

From there, I trimmed down any excessively large areas of hard fat. Fat on the ribs is your friend—and delicious—but big, thick blocks of it will be overly chewy in the end, so I shoot for a layer of fat on top that's about 1/8-inch thick on top.

Smoked Texas-Style Beef Short Ribs Recipe (3)

Finally came the seasoning. When it comes to Texas barbecue, a beef rub doesn't need to go any further than salt and pepper. I did a fifty-fifty mix of kosher salt and coarsely ground black pepper, with a little garlic powder thrown in for my own taste. I liberally covered each of the racks with the rub and they were ready to get smoking.

Smoked Texas-Style Beef Short Ribs Recipe (4)

The concept of cooking barbecue is to take tougher pieces of meat and make them tender and delicious. Cuts like pork shoulder, brisket, and short ribs all have a lot of intramuscular fat and connective tissue that needs to time break down and render, which is why these cuts are all preferably cooked low and slow.

Smoked Texas-Style Beef Short Ribs Recipe (5)

Since short ribs aren't quite as giant of a chunk of meat as brisket—which can take upwards of 12-18 hours to slow cook—the time commitment isn't as demanding. I started my two racks cooking at 225°F, using a mix of charcoal and oak wood chunks, and let them go until I was able to insert an instant read thermometer into the meat with no resistance, which clocked in at six hours. Starting out, I wasn't sure what the right temperature was for tender short ribs, but both racks got there at around the 185° mark.

Smoked Texas-Style Beef Short Ribs Recipe (6)

If you're taking a barbecue trip around Texas, you'll likely encounter butcher paper-wrapped barbecue. While foil-wrapping meat during the cooking process is super prevalent in competition-style barbecue—it's also used by some great Texas pitmasters—swapping foil for butcher paper serves a slightly different purpose.

Foil is not porous, so when you wrap meat in it, moisture is trapped inside and humidity jumps to nearly 100%. This counters typical surface evaporation on the meat, drastically speeding up the cooking process. Butcher paper, on the other hand, allows moisture to escape, so it's not very effective in speeding things up. That said, it does retain some moisture and, most importantly, butcher paper helps with the development of the bark—the dark outside layer that forms on slow-cooked meats.

Smoked Texas-Style Beef Short Ribs Recipe (7)

Since butcher paper "breathes," just enough steam is retained to soften the bark, but not enough to make it lose its thick, slightly crunchy character altogether. Plus, butcher paper becomes saturated in the rendered fat of the meat, and a little extra fat sitting on the surface of the beef only seems to make things better.

Smoked Texas-Style Beef Short Ribs Recipe (8)

Just to test things out, I wrapped one rack of ribs in butcher paper in the last hour of cooking, and left the other unwrapped. With the short cooking process and holding times—I let the ribs rest about one hour in a Cambro before digging in—the butcher paper didn't make a huge difference, but the bark of the wrapped ribs was slightly superior. I assume if cooking and holding times were longer, the moisture retained by the butcher paper would make more of a difference.

Smoked Texas-Style Beef Short Ribs Recipe (9)

Salt, pepper, smoke, and meat are all I started with; what we ate were some ribs that were incredibly moist, tender, peppery, and insanely beefy that I think would make a Texan proud (they passed muster with my Texan wife, but she's from Houston, so take that for what it's worth). Did they match the quality of the best beef ribs I've ever had at Louie Mueller's? No. But they were inching up towards the some of the really excellent bones I've enjoyed at Black's, in Lockhart.

Smoked Texas-Style Beef Short Ribs Recipe (10)

The only way I'm going to improve these is by cooking giant beef short ribs over and over again until I can spot the perfect cut of meet, hit the right temperatures in my smoker, discover the ideal time to wrap, and the best amount of time to hold. None of these can fully be translated into a recipe, since they'll vary from cook to cook. At the end of the day, its the intuition that results from repetition that's this recipe's "secret" ingredient, but I'm sure this post will, at the very least, give you a good start toward making some truly excellent beef ribs.

Published on Tue Aug 26, 2014 by Joshua Bousel

Print Recipe

Texas-Style Beef Short Ribs

  • Yield 6 to 8 servings
  • Prep 10 Minutes
  • Inactive 1 Hour
  • Cook 6 Hours
  • Total 7 Hours 10 Minutes

Ingredients

  • 1/4 cup coarsely ground black pepper
  • 1/4 cup Kosher salt
  • 1 tablespoon garlic powder (optional)
  • 2 racks beef short ribs, 4-bones each, 10- to 12-inches square, membrane removed and hard fat cap trimmed to 1/8 inch
  • 3 to 4 chunks of a medium smoking wood, such as oak or hickory (see shopping link above)
  • 2 large pieces of butcher paper

Procedure

  1. In a small bowl combine pepper, salt, and garlic powder (if using) to make the rub. Season ribs all over liberally with the rub.
  2. Fire up smoker or grill to 225°F, adding chunks of smoking wood chunks (see shopping link above) when at temperature. When the wood is ignited and producing smoke, place the ribs in the smoker or grill, meat side up, and smoke until an instant read thermometer registers 165°F when inserted into the thickest part of the ribs.
  3. Wrap each rack of ribs tightly in butcher paper and return to smoker. Continue cooking until an instant read thermometer registers 185°F when inserted into the thickest part of the ribs. There should be no resistance when inserting the thermometer into the meat.
  4. Transfer ribs to an empty cooler and let rest for a minimum of 60 minutes, up to 3 hours. Slice ribs into individual bones and serve.

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Comments

  1. Mike Baylus "At the end of the day, its the intuition that results from repetition that's this recipe's "secret" ingredient.."

    You couldn't have stated that any better, and great looking ribs!Posted Tue, Aug 26 2014 7:28PM

  2. BK All Day another variable to take into consideration is to cut the ribs into individual pieces and smoke them. i got better results when i did this and achieved a super tender and perfectly smoked rib in exactly 4 hours. when i left the beef rack in tact i didn't get the pull back on the bone nearly as much. Posted Tue, Aug 26 2014 8:59PM

  3. Chris Time to make some more dino bones, need to get me a whole short rib. I've only ever been to Texas via layovers, but beef has become my favorite BBQ too.Posted Sun, Aug 31 2014 1:38PM

Smoked Texas-Style Beef Short Ribs Recipe (2024)

FAQs

How long do you cook beef short ribs on a smoker? ›

Smoking the Beef Short Ribs

This way, I can go about what I need to do and I always know the temperature of my smoker and the meat. Let them smoke cook until they reach about 190°F. You can expect this to take about 5 hours in most cases depending on the thickness of the ribs, fat content, etc.

What is the 3 2 1 method for beef short ribs? ›

Essentially, 3 2 1 ribs go like this:
  1. 3 hours of smoking the ribs directly on the pellet grill.
  2. 2 hours wrapped in foil, still cooking on the grill.
  3. 1 hour of cooking, unwrapped and slathered in barbecue sauce.

How long to smoke boneless beef short ribs at 225? ›

Smoking boneless beef short ribs typically takes 4 to 6 hours at a temperature of 225-250°F (107-121°C).

What cut is Texas beef rib? ›

These are the King of all BBQ for me. When you are eating BBQ in Texas you are typically eating what is known as short ribs or plate ribs. AKA 123A or 3 bone beef ribs which are trimmed from the mid-section of ribs 6 through 8. This cut can sometimes be difficult to find outside of a butcher shop.

What is the best temperature to smoke beef short ribs? ›

Preheat your smoker to 225 degrees F using a good hard wood for the smoke (I like oak and cherry woods for these ribs). Prepare your short ribs by trimming off the fat cap and silver skin on the top side of the meat.

Do short ribs get more tender the longer you cook them? ›

The first five ribs of the animal are shorter (hence the term “short ribs”), and the meat around them is more muscular than that around the other ribs. Like other tough cuts of meat, when slow cooked, short ribs break down and become incredibly tender and delicious.

How do you make beef short ribs not tough? ›

I do short ribs in a slow cooker. I completely submerge them in liquid and they cook all day (8 hours minimum) and when I pick them out of the pot they quite literally fall off the bone, soft, tender and tasty. Low and slow (and long) is the way to go.

How long do you smoke beef ribs at 225? ›

Cover the container and place the ribs in the fridge for 2 hours to dry brine. After 2 hours, remove the ribs from the fridge and allow them to sit on the counter for about 30 minutes (do not rinse off the rub). Smoke at 225°F (107°C) for 4-5 hours or until they get as tender as you like them.

Can you overcook boneless beef short ribs? ›

If they aren't braised long enough, they can be super tough to eat; if they are cooked too long, the meat will just fall apart. The key to preparing short ribs is to cook them until they reach a point that is just before they would fall apart.

How long to smoke beef short ribs at 250 degrees? ›

Beef short ribs are done when the internal temperature of the ribs reaches around 200 – 205 degrees Fahrenheit using an instant read thermometer like a Thermoworks MK4 Thermapen. At 225 degrees F plan on 6 hours of total time. If smoking at 250 degrees plan on 5 hours of total time.

What temperature are Texas beef ribs done? ›

Monitor the internal temperature of the Beef Rib sparingly throughout the cooking process. The ideal finished internal temperature is 195°F-205°F.

What are Texas short ribs? ›

Short Ribs come from the rib cage of our cattle, specifically the rib plate. The meat on those ribs is desirable because it features a glorious combination of meat and fat. Cutting them down into individual portions makes them easier to eat, share, cook, devour.

Do you wrap beef ribs in foil when smoking? ›

Faster Cooking Time: Wrapping the ribs in foil helps to trap in moisture, which can result in a faster cooking time compared to smoking the ribs without foil. This is because the steam generated by the moisture helps to cook the meat more evenly and quickly.

Should I wrap beef short ribs when smoking? ›

You do not need to wrap the smoked beef ribs, this is an optional step that will speed up the cook and gently braise the meat. I've found this is a helpful step to make sure they are extra tender.

How long to smoke beef short ribs at 350? ›

Tried smoking these at 350F. Great result, done in 3,5 hours!.

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