Make your holiday weekend epic with these wood-fired BBQ recipes. Try delicious Labor Day recipes from smoked ribs to pulled chicken, to shrimp skewers.
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Unlock the ultimate BBQ experience with Traeger's tantalizing recipes, featuring expertly smoked meats and delectable sauces, guaranteed to elevate your grilling game to mouthwatering perfection.
Many amazing recipes come out of the Traeger kitchen. But when Nichole Dailey developed these sticky, spicy, smoky-sweet, cowboy candy ribs, she wowed the Traegerhood. People were literally begging for the recipe. The Cowboy Candy (aka candied jalapeños) makes more than you need for the ribs, which should make you happy. Try them on burgers, dogs, with cheeses, in cocktails, or any other way you can imagine.
Our famously easy 321 ribs will make your rib game the envy of the neighborhood. This super simple recipe takes all the confusion out of making baby back ribs without sacrificing any of the flavor. You'll begin this method by smoking your ribs for 3 hours, then cooking inside foil for 2 hours. Finish by removing your ribs from the foil, brushing on BBQ sauce, and then cook for another hour.
Slow your roll, this Boston butt takes patience. Get ready to make new friends as this recipe fills the neighborhood with the sweet smell of wood-smoked hog. Shred this roast to use on tacos, sandwiches, pizza, or anything that needs a little infusion of pig.
Fast-track your way to tender and juicy barbecued meats by learning to make the best BBQ marinades.
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Don't skip out on Meat Church pulled pork. Matt Pittman’s method for smoking pork butt includes all the details that make the difference, from how to create a killer crust to the best ways to gauge tenderness. His method for adding even more flavor during shredding is easy yet genius.
Find out why Matt Pittman calls these giant beef ribs “the best bite in barbecue, end of story.” Though you can find these dinosaur-sized beef plate racks in just about any supermarket in Texas, folks living in other parts of the country may need to buy them mail order or ask their butcher to special order them. (If so, ask for a 123A rib.) While short ribs can come from this cut, you want these monster ribs to be long, at least 8 inches and up to a foot in length. When it comes to flavoring them, Texas barbecue seasoning is mainly salt and pepper, but Matt likes the added garlic in his Holy Cow BBQ Rub. Alternatively, you can use a mix of Traeger Coffee Rub and Traeger Beef Rub, a favorite combo from Traeger's Chad Ward.
Matt Pittman keeps this brisket simple but shares all the secrets to its success here. In Texas, brisket is mainly seasoned with salt and black pepper, but most BBQ joints in the Lone Star State will add a little something else, like Lowry’s, too. Matt goes with a liberal coating of his Holy Cow BBQ Rub followed by a light sprinkling of his Holy Gospel BBQ Rub. Other great options are Traeger Beef Rub or Prime Rib Rub. No matter what you season it with, if you follow Matt's advice, you'll wind up with slices of some damn fine brisket.
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