Smoked St Louis Ribs with Cherry Cola Glaze
St. Louis–style pork ribs smoked low and slow until tender, then finished with a glossy cherry-cola glaze that adds bright, nostalgic sweetness and a sticky lacquer. The smoke, sweet cherries and a touch of molasses create a balanced BBQ finish that's both familiar and a little playful.
Ingredient Spotlight
St. Louis–style pork sparerib racks
St. Louis–style spareribs are pork spare ribs trimmed into a neat rectangular rack by removing the sternum bone, cartilage and rib tips; the cut is a staple of American barbecue. They come from the belly side of the pig and are meatier with more connective tissue and fat than baby back ribs, which makes them flavorful and ideal for low‑and‑slow smoking. Find them at butcher counters, large supermarkets, or ask your butcher to trim spare ribs into St. Louis style; substitute trimmed spare ribs or baby back ribs if unavailable.
Ingredient Spotlight
Wood chips or chunks (hickory or apple)
Wood chips or chunks are pieces of hardwood used to create smoke for grilling or smoking meats; different woods impart distinct flavors—hickory gives a strong, bacon‑like smoke while apple provides a milder, sweet, fruity smoke. They are common in American barbecue and sold at hardware stores, BBQ retailers, supermarkets and online; use chips with gas grills and chunks with charcoal smokers for longer smoke. Good substitutes include other fruit woods (cherry, maple) or, if necessary, a few drops of liquid smoke to mimic the effect.
Ingredient Spotlight
Molasses (or dark honey)
Molasses is the thick, dark syrup left after sugarcane or sugar‑beet juice is crystallized; it's used in Southern U.S. baking and barbecue for a deep, bittersweet, slightly smoky sweetness—dark (or blackstrap) molasses is particularly robust. You can find it in the baking aisle of most supermarkets; common substitutes are dark brown sugar dissolved in a little water, treacle, or a mix of maple syrup with a bit of brown sugar, while dark honey provides a milder, floral alternative.
Jake's note
"I love serving these at summer cookouts — they deliver classic smoked-rib comfort with a fun cherry-cola twist that always gets compliments. Home cooks will appreciate the straightforward low-and-slow method and the quick glaze that brings everything together."
Smoked St Louis Ribs with Cherry Cola Glaze
These St. Louis–style spare ribs take the familiar comforts of low-and-slow barbecue and give them a bright, slightly nostalgic twist: a cherry cola glaze that balances sticky sweetness with a flash of acidity and fruit. The ribs build classic BBQ texture — a smoky, caramelized bark outside with meat that pulls back from the bone and yields easily to the probe — while the cola-cherry reduction lifts the flavor so every bite feels lively instead of cloying. Using a mustard binder and a brown-sugar forward rub creates the mahogany crust that holds the glaze, and finishing unwrapped at a slightly higher temperature tacks that glaze into a glossy sheen.
What makes this version work is the layering: fruit-wood or mild hickory smoke early, a foil wrap to accelerate tenderizing, then a short, higher-temperature finish that concentrates cherry notes without losing the smoke. Fresh or frozen dark cherries bring a tannic backbone that keeps the cola from tasting one-dimensional, and a touch of molasses adds savory depth. It’s a great project for a Fourth of July cookout or any time you want reliably tender ribs with a seasonal, celebratory glaze that’s easy to scale and tweak.
Plan your timing
Ingredients
Instructions
Trim and season the ribs
Preheat smoker and add wood
Smoke unwrapped (first stage)
Wrap and continue cooking (Texas crutch)
Make the cherry-cola glaze and finish the ribs
Rest, slice and serve
Tips from the kitchen
Don’t skip membrane removal
Peeling the silver skin from the bone side lets smoke and rub penetrate and prevents a tough bite; use a paper towel for grip and pull firmly but gently.
Use mustard as a binder
Yellow mustard won’t flavor the meat much but gives the dry rub something to grip so you build a consistent bark across the rack.
Wrap at the right time
Wrap after about three hours when the bark has set — too early and you’ll wash away bark development, too late and the ribs take forever to tenderize.
Reduce glaze properly
Simmer the cherry cola mixture until it’s shiny and coats the back of a spoon; over-reducing will be too thick once sticky on the ribs while under-reducing will run off.
Finish hot to set
Bring the smoker to 250°F for the final 25–30 minutes after glazing so sugars caramelize and the glaze becomes tacky without burning.
Variations & substitutions
Bourbon-cherry glaze
Add 2 tablespoons of bourbon to the glaze during the last few minutes of simmering for warm oak and vanilla notes; reduce a touch less to retain liquid.
Root beer swap
Replace cherry cola with root beer for a spicier, autumnal sweetness; keep the cherries to maintain fruit brightness and reduce to the same glossy thickness.
Vegan/vegetarian option
For a plant-based alternative, use thick, smoked tempeh slabs or seitan, apply the same rub, smoke briefly to pick up color, and finish with the cherry cola glaze.
Oven-finished method
If you don’t have a smoker, roast ribs at 275°F wrapped in foil for 2.5–3 hours, then glaze and broil briefly to set the sauce and develop color.
Storage & make-ahead
Cool ribs completely, then wrap tightly in foil or place in an airtight container and refrigerate for up to 3–4 days. To reheat, warm gently in a 275°F oven still wrapped in foil for 20–30 minutes, then unwrap and brush with reserved glaze and broil or return to the smoker for 5–10 minutes to refresh the bark and tack the glaze.
What to serve with it
Serve these ribs with high-acid sides to cut the richness — think a crisp cabbage slaw with apple cider dressing, grilled corn with cotija, and a bright cucumber salad. For drinks, a citrus-forward lager, a rye whiskey smash, or an iced tea with lemon complement the cherry-cola notes and smoky meat; present the ribs on a wooden board with extra glaze in a small ramekin for dunking.
Frequently asked questions
Can I use diet cola instead of regular?
No — diet colas lack sugar and won’t caramelize or reduce into a sticky glaze; they can also leave an off flavor when concentrated.
How do I know when the ribs are done?
You’re aiming for a probe to slide in with slight resistance and about 1/4–1/2 inch of bone showing; a gentle bend test or a toothpick sliding between bones is also a good indicator rather than targeting an exact temperature.
Should I use fresh or frozen cherries?
Both work: fresh cherries give brighter fruit aromatics, while frozen are convenient and will break down faster — just thaw and drain excess liquid before simmering to control reduction time.
Why wrap the ribs in foil?
Wrapping (the Texas crutch) traps moisture and speeds collagen breakdown so you hit tenderness in less time while preserving the smoky bark developed in the first stage.
My glaze tastes too sweet — how can I fix it?
Balance sweetness with a splash more apple cider vinegar, a pinch of flaky salt, or a small grind of black pepper or cayenne; briefly simmer again to meld adjustments before glazing.
Ratings & Reviews
Made this recipe?
Share your thoughts and a photo — be the first to review this recipe.
Ingredients
- St. Louis–style pork sparerib racks2 rack
- Yellow mustard (as binder)2 tbsp
- Dry rub (brown sugar, kosher salt, smoked paprika, black pepper, garlic powder, onion powder, cayenne)0.75 cup
- Wood chips or chunks (hickory or apple)2 cup
- Cherry cola (regular, not diet)1 cup
- Fresh or frozen dark cherries, pitted1 cup
- Ketchup0.5 cup
- Apple cider vinegar0.25 cup
- Molasses (or dark honey)2 tbsp
Nutrition Facts
Per serving (about 1 cup)
More from Smoking
View all Smoking recipes →Ask me anything about this recipe — substitutions, scaling, techniques, timing.
Powered by AI · Answers may not always be perfect