texas blues said:In the beginning.
There was a rub.
And ribs.
An oven.
And then....
Nothing.
Oops
texas blues said:In the beginning.
There was a rub.
And ribs.
An oven.
And then....
Nothing.
Should we be surprised that Jay goes full Brazilian? Probably a hit a sausage camp.JayT said:My one contribution for this thread is that I am totally in love with McCormick's (yeah I know huh?) Brazilian steakhouse seasoning. In fact I am out at the moment and need to go get another bottle. For a really good ribeye, I don't need anything but salt and pepper, but for any other beef its that Brazilian rub. There are so many out there try them all I say!
I love the Spice House but they don't appear to have either of those products. These guys do though: https://www.americanspice.com/flavored-powders/?sort=featured&page=1SmokenFire said:
My tastes vary at any given time, so I'm often adding stuff to the base rub on whim. The spicehouse has honey powder and powdered worcestershire and other hard to find ingredients if you're looking.
SmokenFire said:I started out using Arthur Bryant's Rub and Charlie Vergos Rendezvous Rub.
Have used Corky's and Meatchurch rubs before with success as well.
Then I bought a bunch of books on BBQ and started messing around with my own rubs. Now my DruBQ rub is the go to for ribs, and if I am making other meats I'll add a touch of other spices to highlight ~ a bit more pepper/heat for pork shoulder, a touch of thyme and sage for chicken, etc.
My tastes vary at any given time, so I'm often adding stuff to the base rub on whim. The spicehouse has honey powder and powdered worcestershire and other hard to find ingredients if you're looking.
Kinda hard to make a dry rub with wet ingredients.texas blues said:
Why would you use powdered honey or worcestershire over the real 'thang?
I had no idea those things even existed.
texas blues said:
Why would you use powdered honey or worcestershire over the real 'thang?
I had no idea those things even existed.
HopsNBarley said:Kinda hard to make a dry rub with wet ingredients.
Don't ya reckon?
texas blues said:Why would you dehydrate a wet ingredient like honey or worster whatever to make a dry rub?
texas blues said:
Why would you dehydrate a wet ingredient like honey or worster whatever to make a dry rub?
Why not use dehydrated eggs instead of real eggs?
SmokenFire said:I started out using Arthur Bryant's Rub and Charlie Vergos Rendezvous Rub.
Have used Corky's and Meatchurch rubs before with success as well.
Then I bought a bunch of books on BBQ and started messing around with my own rubs. Now my DruBQ rub is the go to for ribs, and if I am making other meats I'll add a touch of other spices to highlight ~ a bit more pepper/heat for pork shoulder, a touch of thyme and sage for chicken, etc.
My tastes vary at any given time, so I'm often adding stuff to the base rub on whim. The spicehouse has honey powder and powdered worcestershire and other hard to find ingredients if you're looking.