I get asked a lot if we use Yardbird on other categories besides chicken. The answer is, “Everything but brisket.” IMHO, Yardbird is by far best on Pork Butt/Shoulder. We admit that the product was named too early. It was our initial chicken rub. It wasn’t until we started selling it that we tried it on anything else. DUH!!!
Here’s a picture of our first place ribs this weekend with Yardird Rub and Blues Hog sauce. Ignoring the black spot, I’d kill for ribs that look this good each week.
My ribs are rubbed the night before I plan to cook them for a contest. They usually get rubbed down before I go to bed. Mostly around 11p-12a. My ribs go on at 8a. They NEVER turn out “hammy” or taste cured with that length of time. However, I got my ribs prepped at 10am at a contest once. Two of the three ribs definitely tasted cured. Learned my lesson not to depart from my process. The cause of “hammy” or cured tasting ribs is the presence of salt in the rub. Don’t be afraid of salt in rubs. It can be your best friend just as sugar can be. I’m convinced that judges taste salt as “flavor”. But if you don’t respect the salt and either watch your amounts or rub times, it can be your enemy. For ribs, our rub seems to be fine overnight, but I wouldn’t push it past 10-12 hours.
Hope this helps those of you using our product and trying to find your own signature flavor profile. Don’t be afraid to mix rubs or sauces as well. Another rub can change your color and definitely change your flavor. The same is true with sauces.

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3 users responded in this post
Those rib look fantastic! Thanks for the insite. We need all the halp we can get. Going to try the Yardbird Rub. Thanks again.
Thanks. You guys do great. I’m sure you don’t need our help. Best of luck.
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