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Posted
While I know there are probably many very good beef rubs around, I want to try my hand at coming up with my own.

Is there any particular ingredient that you would suggest using, or any particular ingredient that you would suggest staying away from?? And why....

Just my curiosity....
 
Posts: 11 | Location: NC | Registered: August 21, 2005Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Smokin Okie Competition Team.
Posted Hide Post
Good original question.

I like the idea, how about this:

Let's call it the CS Forum Beef Rub. Everyone contributes everyone gets credit.

I'll think about it and get back later.
 
Posts: 8526 | Location: Oklahoma City, OK, USA | Registered: January 25, 2001Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Tom
Posted Hide Post
Salt,black pepper,granulated garlic& onion.
 
Posts: 6758 | Location: Satellite Beach,fl,usa | Registered: March 02, 2001Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Posted Hide Post
ok count me in
here is the rub i am currently using;
1 c light brown sugar
4 T garlic salt
1 T celery salt
1 T onion powder
6 T paprika
1 T ground red pepper
1 T dry mustard
2 T black pepper ground
1 tsp allspice
1 tsp thyme
mix and store in a air tight jar.

myself i would never use sage with beef. taste is as weird as trager pellets which are made with alder. fine for fish but really upset my taste buds on beef Razzer
past that the sky is the limit.
if you live where there is a penzey's spice place nearby an equal mix of old english prime rib rub and northwest fire works good too
hope this helps some
jack
 
Posts: 1533 | Location: st augustine florida | Registered: March 28, 2004Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Posted Hide Post
Here's what I use...can't remember where I found it on the Internet.

I use this on my brisket
Inject brisket with beef broth�a lot
5- tablespoons dark brown sugar
4- tablespoons paprika
1- tablespoon rosemary
4- teaspoons onion powder
4- teaspoons garlic powder
4- teaspoons dry mustard
3- teaspoons dried sweet basil
2- teaspoons ground bay leaves (If you can't find ground use whole)
1�- teaspoons ground coriander
1�- teaspoons ground savory
1�- teaspoons dried thyme
1�- teaspoons ground black pepper
1�- teaspoons white pepper
�- teaspoon ground cumin
Salt, to taste
Directions:

Place all ingredients into a food processor and blend. If you use whole bay leaves blend until leaves are pulverized.
Rub meat and cover with saran wrap.
Marinade over night in fridge. Allow meat come to room temperature and place in smoker.

I want to experiment with low-soduim beef broth and add Lipton Onion Soup mix and see what flavor I get for Au Jus for serving. Wink
 
Posts: 305 | Location: Maryland Eastern Shore | Registered: March 14, 2005Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Smokin Okie Competition Team.
Posted Hide Post
For me, I don't want to take someone else's recipe to call our own, I think Ol Barn was asking for ingredients we like to use and why, not recipes for other rubs (that we've posted before).

Let's talk the best ingredients of other rubs you like and build something.

I like the concept of discussing the ingredients, let's talk about why we add a particular flavor to the rub as a way of building our range of rub ingredients.

The point I think is to discuss what ingredients make a good beef rub. Like Ground Savory, why? or 1/4 t of cumin, how can that help in such small quantities?

So, I go with Tom's start. It's a quick answer, I have to head out the door. More later.

Salt. Kosher salt, opens up the flavor taste buds on the tongue.

Black pepper. For some bite

Granulated garlic. Have to consider this one.

Onion. Granulated, minced, sauted?

Russ
 
Posts: 8526 | Location: Oklahoma City, OK, USA | Registered: January 25, 2001Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Smmmmoooookin'!
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Smokin -- Make that "Fresh Ground" black pepper. Once you've tried the fresh stuff, what you buy in a box off the grocer's shelf has no taste at all.
 
Posts: 1818 | Location: Searcy, Arkansas - Gateway to the Ozarks! | Registered: August 11, 2003Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Posted Hide Post
This will be a lot of fun to read.

Honestly many times I have asked myself why that spice [I am sure you have too]

As Smokin said:

why? or 1/4 t of cumin, how can that help in such small quantities?

Wow this will be neat to hear why people like a certain flavor of a certain spice.

Or I don't know just always did it that way.


Me I wish I could use cilantro in more things, the freshness of it, the alive feeling it gives cooked foods, fragrant.

Rosemary fresh, It makes your nose just want to draw in the aroma of the food you are eating.

I look for fragrant more than "spicy hot� I look for taste more than a burning feeling. Spicy hot is fun if it is not the major sensation but a subtle aftertaste the last thing going down that draws everything to a culmination. I also prefer a burn once philosophy I really do.

I must try fresh cracked pepper I am guilty of using the �box�

Ps if this is not quite what you were looking for I will re-word or withdraw any statment.

looking forward to this thread
 
Posts: 103 | Location: Hawaii | Registered: April 16, 2005Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Posted Hide Post
This is a great idea Smokin Smiler

It goes without saying that taste is a personal thing. I'm with Mango, I look for fragrance and taste on the palate, not necessarily burn. I look for a balance of complimentary flavors, i.e. apple juice and/or apple cider vinegar on pork, its like that is the way it is meant to be.

Personally, I prefer Hungarian paprika rather than the plain paprika because it has flavor. I am likely to use Hungarian paprika and cut back on cayenne pepper.

Also, I love rosemary on beef both for the aromatics and the flavor. Garlic is a must and I usually use powdered garlic. Depending on quantity, garlic can enhance the natural flavor of something without influencing it with a garlicky taste, but then on beef I like a garlicky taste.

Black pepper - fresh ground is a given. My table is always set with a pepper grinder and a salt grinder (sea salt). Although for cooking I use kosher salt.

Why so little cumin - IMO a little cumin goes a long way.

A lot of the ingredients listed in the above posts are contained in commercially prepared chili powder, so if you have a chili powder you like, use it.

I can go on with this, like brown sugar, if you want some sweetness and/or a bark from your rub then brown sugar is the way to go.

I'll give some else a shot at this while I consider some other ideas. Razzer
 
Posts: 222 | Location: Michigan | Registered: July 06, 2005Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Smmmmoooookin'!
Posted Hide Post
Personally I like a hint of sweetness so I am thinking sugar. Which sugar would be best; white refined, brown sugar or turbinado? Do they all burn/scorch at the same temp or does one havve a higher scorch temp?
 
Posts: 1818 | Location: Searcy, Arkansas - Gateway to the Ozarks! | Registered: August 11, 2003Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Posted Hide Post
Try this on your brisket...rub the brisket with butter, then apply your spices.

I prefer rosemary, thyme, small touch of basil, and a small touch of sage...I guess I also prefer the fragrant spices like Mango.

Try it you might like it!

Preston D
 
Posts: 436 | Location: Port Orange Florida | Registered: July 07, 2001Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Posted Hide Post
Wow... This is great!

You folks are giving me some great ideas!!

Keep them coming!!

Ol' Barn in NC
 
Posts: 11 | Location: NC | Registered: August 21, 2005Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Smokin Okie Competition Team.
Posted Hide Post
Guess it might be hard to some up with some spices:

Prisonchef:
quote:
myself i would never use sage with beef
Preston:
quote:
and a small touch of sage...
Okay you two, you convince us one way or the other.

Oh, and Mango:

quote:
Ps if this is not quite what you were looking for I will re-word or withdraw any statment.
Man you make me sound like a hard moderator. For that you're banned...nah, just kidding. Just trying to give a little direction, hope Jack and Bayside didn't mind Wink
 
Posts: 8526 | Location: Oklahoma City, OK, USA | Registered: January 25, 2001Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
savannah
"best bbq in town"!
Posted Hide Post
i like to make a paste of dry rub by adding a little vinegar, coke, a-1, or worst. any combo depending on the meat and the day. with pork, the dry rub tends to need a little help penetrating the outer layer, so injection is a good idea. so water down the dry rub combo a shoot it up...heehe
 
Posts: 497 | Location: savannah, ga | Registered: May 21, 2003Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Posted Hide Post
I'm sure this tip isn't new to most of you good folks out there. But I'm glad I remebered it the other day when my rub recipe called for 1/4 cup fresh ground pepper.

After grinding 2 or 3 tbs with my hand pepper mill, I recalled some chef (might even have been Prisonchef himself) mentioned using a coffe grinder. Kind of like a food processor for spices. Presto, 1/4 cup ,minus 2 or 3 tbs, ground in less than one minute.

My grinder cost me $19.00 but I'll bet you can find them less expensive. Another tip: to clean it, grind a couple chunks of bread. The moisture in the bread grabs the residue and the spinning action gets it into the crevices.

Hook
 
Posts: 394 | Location: Salt Lake City, UT | Registered: April 14, 2004Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Is this Heaven.... no... it's Iowa.
Posted Hide Post
Very interesting thread we have running here. I like some of the ideas posted but got to wondering. HAs anyone tried CS's NEW Brisket Rub? I was going to add it to my collection of other CS rubs & sauces but was looking for anyone that has tried it.

Bob
 
Posts: 664 | Location: Iowa | Registered: April 04, 2004Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Posted Hide Post
I am with Tom. I like to avoid sugar on my beef rubs and lately have been just using Montreal Steak on my briskets. Keep it simple. I think that most rub flavors are going to cook out anyway and be secondary to whatever BBQ sauce you serve with it.
 
Posts: 62 | Location: northern california | Registered: August 20, 2004Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Tom
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Cookshack's new brisket rub,is already scarey good.

The cookteams ,already know it.

That is not an ingredient. Wink

The Montreal rubs are favored,if run through a grinder,but they are not an ingredient.

My "coonass" relatives think that the taste buds have three receptors.

Red, black,white peppers stimulate each receptor differently.

Just a thought?
 
Posts: 6758 | Location: Satellite Beach,fl,usa | Registered: March 02, 2001Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Smokin Okie Competition Team.
Posted Hide Post
quote:
Originally posted by cadillac:
[qb] ...Has anyone tried CS's NEW Brisket Rub? I was going to add it to my collection of other CS rubs & sauces but was looking for anyone that has tried it.

Bob [/qb]
Not to threadjack this thread, but I've got some and I'm trying it in the next few weeks and the contest in Ponca City on the 16th, I'll post my thoughts after that.
 
Posts: 8526 | Location: Oklahoma City, OK, USA | Registered: January 25, 2001Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Posted Hide Post
In the same realm

What two three or four spices do you like to merge when cooking beef.

edited to stay the coarse Big Grin get stay the coarse Big Grin


If you could only use up to four or less than
 
Posts: 103 | Location: Hawaii | Registered: April 16, 2005Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Tom
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salt,pepper,granulated garlic & onion.
 
Posts: 6758 | Location: Satellite Beach,fl,usa | Registered: March 02, 2001Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Posted Hide Post
Tried my first attempt at my own rub today. Actually put the rub on it last Saturday, then circumstances prevented me from cooking it then. So I put in a ziploc bag, it was already wrapped in plastic wrap, and froze it. Started thawing it yesterday and it was thawed by the time I started it. I don't guess that changed anything???

Anyway for the rub I used:
1 tsp Lite Salt (because of a blood pressure concern)

1 tbs black pepper

1/4 tsp garlic powder

1 tbs dehydrated onion (crushed)

1/2 tbs Hungarian paprika
The reasons for those amounts were absolutely scientific. A pure guess coupled with what I felt would taste good.

Anyway, I rubbed the outside with some extra virgin olive oil then with the rub and wrapped it in plastic wrap.

Cooked it today on my Weber kettle with Kingsford and hickory chips to an internal temperature of 150 degrees. I had a drip pan with water underneath the meat.

Tasted pretty good to me. The boss said it had a little too much pepper and smoke taste for her so I guess I'll cut down on the wood chips next time as well as the pepper.

Any comments good or bad are welcomed.

This stuff can get habit forming can't it???
 
Posts: 11 | Location: NC | Registered: August 21, 2005Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Posted Hide Post
Ol Barn Hi,
How can we make a comment when we didn't get to Taste It ?? Haha..However, if your wife thinks it had too much pepper and smoke, I would take her suggestion; assuming she does most of the other cooking around your place. What did someone on here say?
"If Mama ain't happy, nobody's happy"? Kathy
I think it was RaiderBill or one of the other Bills, suggested Penzey's prime rib rub too.
 
Posts: 677 | Location: Oklahoma City OK/FL | Registered: May 03, 2003Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Posted Hide Post
I find that sage doesn't work as well with beef as it does with fish or chicken. The reason being that sage is more floral or lighter and it blends better with a lighter meat. Beef seems to respond to more definate flavors although the taster is the ultimate decider.

Sometimes you can stir it up a little, try curry & cumin. give it an indian flair.

personally i think cumin works in rubs, but it is so definate in flavor that a lot can over power a rub. It is better in a dish or rub that is intended to be used in parallel to the area it is used more. India, mexico. this also seems to be the effect of chili powder, tho it is lighter so more can be used to balance.

fresh herb crushed always seem to taste better than preground due to the fact that the inner "fresh" flavor is released as you grind it. if it is allowed to sit it stales as the aroma and flavors dry out of it.

*The above are opinions of the author and do not neccessarily reflect those of the powers that be
 
Posts: 29 | Location: Post Falls, ID | Registered: January 10, 2005Reply With QuoteEdit or Delete MessageReport This Post
Posted Hide Post
quote:
Originally posted by KathyE:
[qb] However, if your wife thinks it had too much pepper and smoke, I would take her suggestion; assuming she does most of the other cooking around your place. What did someone on here say?
"If Mama ain't happy, nobody's happy"? Kathy
I think it was RaiderBill or one of the other Bills, suggested Penzey's prime rib rub too. [/qb]
I usually do take her suggestion. And she's usually right. It was her opinion it was a great piece of meat for the guys. That was proven out by my son who came by and when I gave him a piece, he said it was excellent. My wife is one of those people that has to have "mild" salsa, etc. Whereas my son and I will eat it until your scalp tingles.

But I know what you mean KathyE, and I try to keep mama happy!!!

Thanks!!!
 
Posts: 11 | Location: NC | Registered: August 21, 2005Reply With Quote