Smoked Beef Short Ribs, also known as Dino Ribs, are slow-smoked low and slow until unbelievably tender with a deep bark and rich beef flavor. This Texas-style smoked beef ribs recipe delivers massive, juicy ribs that are perfect for BBQ enthusiasts, special occasions, and serious meat lovers.
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Smoker (offset, pellet, or charcoal)
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Wood chunks or pellets (oak preferred; hickory works well)
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Meat thermometer or probe
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Pink butcher paper
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Spray bottle (optional)
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Remove ribs from packaging and pat dry.
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Trim excess surface fat or silver skin if needed (leave most fat intact).
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Season generously on all sides with salt, pepper, and garlic powder.
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Optional: refrigerate uncovered overnight for a dry brine.
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Heat smoker to 250°F (121°C).
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Use oak for classic Central Texas flavor.
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Place ribs bone-side down.
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Smoke uncovered for 4–5 hours, until:
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Bark is dark and set
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Internal temp reaches ~165–170°F
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Spritz lightly every 60–90 minutes if surface looks dry.
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Wrap ribs tightly in butcher paper.
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Optional: add a spoonful of beef tallow inside the wrap.
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Return to smoker.
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Continue smoking until internal temp reaches 200–205°F.
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Probe should slide in with little to no resistance (like warm butter).
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Rest ribs wrapped for 45–60 minutes in a cooler or warm oven.
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Do NOT skip this step—juiciness depends on it.
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Slice between bones.
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Serve as-is or with minimal sauce (these ribs don’t need much).
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Smoked mac & cheese
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BBQ baked beans
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Grilled corn with BBQ butter
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Creamy or vinegar slaw
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Pickles & white bread
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Beer: Stout, porter, or Texas-style amber ale
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Wine: Cabernet Sauvignon, Syrah, or Malbec
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Non-alcoholic: Cola, sweet tea, or sparkling water
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Plate ribs ≠ chuck ribs—plate ribs are bigger and meatier.
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Cook by feel, not time—probe tenderness is king.
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Don’t sauce early; sugars ruin bark.
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If bark softens after wrapping, unwrap for final 20–30 minutes.
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Leftovers are phenomenal for tacos, sandwiches, or beef rib chili.