
If you’re all about deep bark, tender meat, and smoky-sweet nostalgia—these Foil Boat Ribs with an Old School Mop Sauce are calling your name. We’re taking a page out of the pitmaster playbook and putting a twist on a modern technique. No wrapping. No sauce. Just a homemade mop, a solid rub combo, and the patience to let that flavor layer up over time.
We’re talking about ribs that are bathed in a vinegar-based mop every 30 minutes, smoked to tender perfection on a Recteq 1100 Pellet Grill, and cradled in a foil boat that lets the bark develop and the juices stay right where you want them. This cook takes it back to where barbecue started—with instinct, repetition, and flavor that sticks to your fingers.
Foil Boat Ribs with Old School BBQ Mop Sauce | Heath Riles BBQ
You’ve heard of the foil boat technique for brisket—now we’re using it for ribs. This method allows you to preserve bark while managing moisture. It’s not about steaming. It’s about soaking the meat in flavor while keeping that outer layer firm and flavorful.
We’re going all-in with Heath Riles BBQ seasonings and sauces, a hickory-blend charcoal pellet fire, and a mop that brings brightness, heat, and depth to every bite.
The Ingredients
Heath Riles BBQ Garlic Jalapeño Rub
This is your base layer—the bold kick of garlic with a jalapeño edge that wakes up the meat and cuts through the fat. It’s sharp, savory, and just spicy enough to lay the groundwork for everything that follows.
Heath Riles BBQ Competition BBQ Rub
A true all-star. Sweet, savory, and with a hint of heat at the end, this rub gives the ribs that championship BBQ profile we’re known for. It also plays beautifully with the vinegar-based mop.
Heath Riles Tangy Vinegar BBQ Sauce
This is the soul of the mop sauce. It’s got that old-school bite and a subtle sweetness that rounds it out. We use it as a base and build the mop from there.
Mop Sauce Recipe
This mop is simple, punchy, and full of classic BBQ character:
- 1 bottle Tangy Vinegar BBQ Sauce
- Equal parts apple cider vinegar (use the empty bottle to measure)
- ½ bottle of water
- Juice of 2 lemons
- ¼ cup Sweet BBQ Rub
- ½ tablespoon ground cayenne pepper
Whisk everything together in a pitcher. That’s it. You’ve got a spicy, tangy mop that keeps moisture in and flavor building every step of the cook.
Pick the Right Ribs
We used two slabs of Prairie Fresh St. Louis-style ribs, trimmed and cleaned up for even cooking. Look for racks with straight bones, solid marbling, and a consistent thickness. Remove the membrane, square up the ends, and trim away any hard fat. That’s all you need.
Fire Up the Grill: Pellet Cooking at 275°F
For this cook, we ran our Recteq 1100 Pellet Grill at a steady 275°F with Royal Oak Hickory-blend charcoal pellets. It’s the perfect setup for cooking low and slow while keeping consistent heat and infusing that wood-fired flavor.
Let your grill come up to temp while you season and rest your ribs.
Step-by-Step: Foil Boat Rib Process
1. Season the Ribs
Apply a light coat of yellow mustard as a binder (totally optional). Then layer your rubs:
- First: Garlic Jalapeño Rub for that savory base
- Second: Competition BBQ Rub for color, balance, and sweet-savory heat
Let the ribs sit and sweat while the grill comes up to temp.
2. Smoke & Build Bark (First 2 Hours)
Place the ribs bone-side down directly on the grill. Let them smoke for 1 hour, untouched. After that, mop them generously every 30 minutes.
Each baste builds flavor and helps the bark develop without drying out the meat. Repeat until you’ve hit 2 hours total of unwrapped smoke time.
3. Into the Foil Boat
Now it’s time to transfer them into the foil boat. Use heavy-duty aluminum foil, folded over and pinched up around the sides to cradle the ribs without fully enclosing them.
Lay the ribs meat-side down in the boat, mop the underside, then flip them over and mop the top. Return them to the grill, uncovered, and let them go.
Every 30 minutes, repeat the mop and add a light sprinkle of dry rub. This layering process adds bark, keeps moisture, and lets flavor soak deep into the meat.
4. Final Stretch (30–45 More Minutes)
After a total cook time of around 3 hours, your ribs should be probing around 200–205°F. Check with a Thermapen ONE—look for that soft resistance between the bones, not a total fall-apart texture.
Give them one last mop, tighten the bark with 15–20 more minutes of heat, then pull them off to rest.
Rest Like a Pro
Don’t skip this step. Let your ribs rest on a sheet pan, covered loosely with foil, at room temperature for 30 minutes. The residual heat settles in, juices redistribute, and the bark firms up just right.
The Final Bite
These ribs are everything you love about old-school BBQ—smoky, tender, with just the right chew and packed with flavor. The mop leaves a vinegar tang and cayenne kick that hangs on the palate without overpowering it. The bark is rich and caramelized. And the ribs? They’re pull-apart tender without falling to pieces.
Serving Suggestions
Want to turn this into a full backyard meal? Pair these ribs with classic sides that balance heat, texture, and comfort. These are our go-to recipes straight from the Heath Riles kitchen:
- Heath’s Potato Salad - Creamy, tangy, and a must-have contrast to smoky ribs.
- Pit-Style BBQ Baked Beans - Rich, smoky beans cooked down until thick and bold.
- Creamy Coleslaw - Cool and crunchy—perfect for taming the vinegar heat.
- Honey Hot Jalapeño Cornbread - Spicy, sweet, and just right for soaking up mop sauce drippings.
Storage & Reheating
- Refrigerate: Wrap tightly or use airtight containers for up to 4 days.
- Reheat: Warm in the oven at 275°F, wrapped in foil.
- Freeze: Double wrap or vacuum seal for up to 3 months. Thaw overnight.
Wrap-Up
These Foil Boat Ribs with Old School Mop Sauce are a throwback in the best way. They’re low-and-slow, packed with mop-basted flavor, and finished with bark that’ll make your mouth water. It’s a no-wrap method that delivers juicy meat, deep color, and that satisfying rib bite you can only get with patience and repetition.
So fire up the grill, grab a mop, and get to cooking. And when you post your rib shots, don’t forget to tag us with #HeathRilesBBQ so we can see your pitmaster progress.
We’ll see you at the next cook.
Equipment & Tools
Here’s what you’ll need to pull off this cook:
Recteq 1100 Pellet Grill, Royal Oak Hickory-blend charcoal pellets, Heavy-duty aluminum foil, Sheet pan, Mop brush, Pitcher, Thermapen ONE, Tongs, Heat-resistant gloves