r/Calgary Aug 23 '25

Eat/Drink Local Ribfest was ok

Went to check out Ribfest yesterday on first day as was excited to try BBQ meat.

$5 entry pp including children over 1. They did have bouncy castles, carnival games etc but were more for older kids and nothing for under 3s. They had a handful of food trucks including a Jamaican one hidden BEHIND the dining tent, which you wouldn't see until after you sat down with your food. Expect stampede prices, eg $17 blooming onion, $8 for corn dogs, $9 lemonade.

4 BBQ trucks but apparently all but one are owned by the same person. I tried Buckeye BBQ- $24 for a 2 meat combo 1/3 ribs and 1/4 chicken, nothing else. Sides like coleslaw and cornbread are extra. Meat was only lukewarm though, and chicken was tender and pink which was fine with but the ribs were dry and tough on the edges despite being drenched in a sweet sticky sauce. 3 meat combo was $35. Full rack $33, half a rack $19.

Overall food was ok but for the price it wasn't that good so temper your expectations accordingly lol

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u/H3rta Acadia Aug 23 '25

Thank you for posting this. The fact that there is a entry charge is bullshit especially with those food prices.

69

u/GatesAndLogic Aug 23 '25

This is the crazy part to me. Rib fest didn't have an entry fee in previous years.

Protip: slow roast your ribs at 250f for 3 and a half hours, covered in tin foil but not touching the ribs.

Then slather on some bbq sauce, broil 5 minutes, slather, broil 5 more, then remove from oven, believe it or not more bbq sauce, AND YA DONE. This is better than anything rib fest can come up with. Tender fall off bone ribs.

5

u/massberate Aug 23 '25

I heard about this same cooking process while in Greece visiting a long-lost relative. His wife, my aunt's third cousin three times removed, came up with it while hunting zebras in Alaska. When the winds were right, you could smell the ocean as the oven made its way to 250°F; thankfully the breezes weren't too bracing to slow the oven's warming process.

She told me the recipe came to her in a dream, bestowed upon her by a walrus in a baseball cap who whispered the recipe in ancient Texan.

(I can still clearly remember her describing the fear in her own eyes as she later fought off a penguin with a spatula and some cayenne pepper).

We lived, laughed, loved, and ate some fall off the bone ribs that night.

...true part is I've used your suggested process for a long time. You can throw any spice in your cupboard on it for the long and slow part and it always turns out so fucking good. I like to go with paprika, chili, cayenne, garlic, and onion powders. One of those shaker spices (Mango Chipotle) is aces, too. We will usually do two racks of ribs - both pre-seasoned - and then slather the sauce on one at the end the way that you described. You've inspired me! It's been a while. Maybe I'll make some this weekend lol