I thought you WFO guys might like a twist.
We finally tried cooking with diesel this week. Slow cooked ribs done right on the diesel engine!
We started by dry rubbing a rack of ribs and letting it sit in the fridge for 24 hours.
Next the ribs were wrapped in foil and placed in an oven bag. (if no oven bag, use two wraps of foil.)
The ribs were then placed on the coolant reservoir for our 3208 CAT engine on our boat. I added a towel cover later to hold in the heat on the ribs.
I checked on them hourly turning them over each time. The reservoir was 150 degrees. (good excuse to check the engine room too!)
We ran about 6 hours from West End in the Bahamas to Great Sale Cay. The ribs continued to rest for another 2 hours at anchor.
They were then finished on the BBQ for about 20 minutes and topped with some BBQ sauce.
They were awesome! Next time I'll try a chicken!
We finally tried cooking with diesel this week. Slow cooked ribs done right on the diesel engine!
We started by dry rubbing a rack of ribs and letting it sit in the fridge for 24 hours.
Next the ribs were wrapped in foil and placed in an oven bag. (if no oven bag, use two wraps of foil.)
The ribs were then placed on the coolant reservoir for our 3208 CAT engine on our boat. I added a towel cover later to hold in the heat on the ribs.
I checked on them hourly turning them over each time. The reservoir was 150 degrees. (good excuse to check the engine room too!)
We ran about 6 hours from West End in the Bahamas to Great Sale Cay. The ribs continued to rest for another 2 hours at anchor.
They were then finished on the BBQ for about 20 minutes and topped with some BBQ sauce.
They were awesome! Next time I'll try a chicken!
Comment