Membrane

S

smokinrack

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Was watching a show the other day, probably pitmasters and they were doing ribs. One of the guys left the membrane on the back of them when he cooked them.Years ago when I had no idea what I was doing I used to leave it on but didnt realize there were people who cooked competitions or professionaly who leave it on.Anyone in here do that and if so why?
 
I leave if it gets too hard to remove it. Some come off easier than others. I've heard it said that it keeps the meat moister.
 
Thats what the guy on tv said as well but when I used to it always seemed to make the ribs tougher and kind of chewy, but as I said back then I had no idea what I was doing so this just made me curious if I was totally backwards on the subject:mrgreen:
 
I always remove it. Removing it allows the rub to penetrate the meat. Also results in a more tender finished product. I recently decided to leave it on to see if I could REALLY tell the difference... The answer is yes, I could clearly.
 
I know most (probably not all) restaurants leave it on because they don't have time to remove it from every rack they do.

There's times when I can tell it's there and times you can't. I remove it to allow the rub to soak in from the bottom side.
 
I remember that episode, but what I don't remember is if he removed it after the ribs cook. I have read about folks leaving it on while cooking and then taking it off before slicing the ribs.
 
I remember that episode, but what I don't remember is if he removed it after the ribs cook. I have read about folks leaving it on while cooking and then taking it off before slicing the ribs.

I dont think they showed him removing it but I know they dont show a lot of the prep work on that show either before they box the meat so he may have.
 
I think no-membrane ribs are way over-rated. I used to take it off (and I thought "dang, these are some awesome ribs!")... then I realized that it was the smoking that made them so good. I don't worry about it much anymore.
 
I always leave it on, tried taking it off before and the wife got mad, she likes that little pull it creates. I've also seen and read that it helps to keep the ribs more moist. I know my ribs are always moist. FYI, I do not wrap my ribs ever so that may play into if they get chewy or not if you leave it on as well.
 
I leave it on IMO your ribs a juicer. 30 yrs ago I would leave it on, then it became the thing to pull it, and I went down that trail ( and tried all the Snakeoil too) this is when I started to chase MY BBQ looking for nirvana. Now I stopped pulling it again, Ditched all the Snake oil, and once again cranknig out some awesome "Q". K. I. S. S. my bothers!
 
I remove mine. I've tried leaving it on several times as an experiment, but I prefer to remove it. Doesn't take but five seconds to yank it off of there, anyway.
 
Remove. I heard of a well known BBQ restaurant that leaves the membrane on while smoking, then moves the ribs over a char-broiler to burn off the remaining membrane. Never tried it at home.
 
I judge BBQ joints by whether they leave it on or take it off. My experience, yes at first it takes time to take the membrane off. Heck, used to take me 30 minutes just to do 3 freaking ribs. Now though I can strip membranes off of 6 ribs in 3 minutes .

Sure restaurants use the excuse that they don't have the time to but those joints that do - WORLD OF DIFFERENCE. If they take the time to do that they take the time on the rest of their product and usually (not always) but usually that means a step of in quality, taste, and moisture.

Personally - I remove it every time. Doesn't matter if I'm cooking 2 racks or 20 racks.

Have had good ribs with it left on but that is when the Pitmaster knows their stuff and takes the time to keep the meat smoked well.
 
When I first started cooking ribs I had a hard time cutting the membrane off, so I left most of them on. Then the interweb showed me that they can be removed easily just by using my fingers and starting in the middle. Now I attempt to take them all off.

I remove as much as I can, but don't spend too much time on them. I normally get most, if not all of it off. If I spend more than a minute removing the membrane I stop.
 
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