Topic: Do you dry rub your meat?
no photo
Mon 08/07/17 06:02 AM
Before you toss it on the grill.biggrin

Spleggie's photo
Mon 08/07/17 07:03 AM
I prefer a nice marinade

no photo
Mon 08/07/17 07:58 AM
Mostly marinade max, sometimes a dry rub. Thanks for asking. bigsmile

Tom4Uhere's photo
Mon 08/07/17 08:18 AM
Usually when grilling/smoking I do. A Dry Rub.

Most of the time I marinade then pat dry and add rub just before baking/roasting. A Moist Rub.

When using a slow cooker, I like to "sear season" the meat before adding it to crock pot stews.

I also sometimes use injection marinade with a dry rub. Roasting or smoking large cuts.

no photo
Mon 08/07/17 02:02 PM
I use dry rubs on pork and chicken. I'm not big on grilling, though. I bake or broil much more often.

NeonMidnight's photo
Thu 08/24/17 04:31 PM
yes i do

no1phD's photo
Thu 08/24/17 08:14 PM
Never dry rub ((ouch ))always well lubed..lol..

mac19981980's photo
Thu 08/24/17 08:19 PM
damn girl love to hear that. ..

no photo
Thu 08/24/17 09:33 PM
A double entendre of a post if ever I saw one.

Lube is overrated.

Midcoast_Guy's photo
Mon 08/28/17 01:48 PM
Edited by Midcoast_Guy on Mon 08/28/17 01:50 PM
On the serious side, a lot of barbecue sauces are full of sugar, so last year when some family members were talking about going to a certain restaurant where I've never been before (name sounds like a certain South American country, but ends in i [and 's] instead of e), I was pleased to see that they offered dry rubs as an alternative. We didn't go there (it's about 50 miles away), but it sounded good.

And on the wise@$$ side, sometimes aloe is a necessity. No chemicals, if you get the right brand. (Name and URL by request.)

In before the lock! bigsmile

Taurusman54's photo
Sun 05/26/19 08:21 PM
Edited by Taurusman54 on Sun 05/26/19 08:23 PM
No, I marinade it in barbecue sauce, puncturing the meat with a fork, and let it set over night.

notbeold's photo
Mon 05/27/19 05:25 AM
No marinade, salt, or anything, slow cooked, and then seasoned after cooking while hot, before resting wrapped in foil a while (the meat not you). Then the heat doesn't destroy the goodness and original flavours in the rub / seasoning, so you need to use less.

Rock's photo
Tue 05/28/19 02:30 AM
Topic: Do you dry rub your meat?



Not often.
Maybe, if it's a long weekend,
and the gf is out of town.


Kirsty's photo
Thu 06/20/19 12:44 AM
Edited by Kirsty on Thu 06/20/19 12:47 AM
Dry rub on a fatty cut of meat is fantastic. Take a nice slab of pork belly and score it on both sides then add your rub. Slow roast it and the flavours will be absorbed into the meat.