{"title":"How to Make BBQ Rub: 3 Easy Recipes (Sweet, Texas, Spicy)","canonicalUrl":"https://www.showmestepbystep.com/cooking/how-to-make-a-bbq-rub","category":{"slug":"cooking","name":"Cooking"},"creator":{"name":"HowToBBQRight","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC--MxpGXJ3LVD8KvlNzRlcA","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ivBXO4CShn8"},"tldr":"Build one base BBQ rub from pantry spices, then tweak it three ways: sweet Kansas City ribs, Texas-style brisket, and spicy chicken. Lasts 6 months in a jar.","totalDurationSeconds":455,"difficulty":"easy","tools":["Large mixing bowl (4-quart or bigger)","Wire whisk","Measuring cups","Measuring spoons","Funnel (for filling jars)","Wide-mouth Mason jars, 8 oz or 16 oz","Adhesive labels"],"materials":["Sweet paprika (Spanish-style or smoked)","Kosher salt","Granulated sugar","Granulated garlic","Granulated onion","Chili powder","Ground cumin","Coarse ground black pepper","Ground dry mustard","Cayenne pepper","Packed light brown sugar (for Sweet KC twist)","Crushed red pepper flakes (for Spicy chicken twist)","Granulated honey powder (optional, for Sweet KC twist)"],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Step 1: Pick Your Style (or Make All Three)","text":"You're going to build one base BBQ rub from ten pantry spices and then push it in one of three directions. Sweet Kansas City is the all-purpose crowd-pleaser - balanced salt and sugar, mild heat, great on ribs and pulled pork. Texas-style brisket pulls the sugar back and doubles the black pepper so the bark stays dark and savory under 12+ hours of low smoke. Spicy chicken doubles the cayenne and adds red pepper flakes for wings, smoked thighs, and beer-can chicken.All three start with the same ten ingredients. Make the base batch and split it three ways, or commit to one style and run with it."},{"number":2,"title":"Step 2: Gather the Ten Spices","text":"The base recipe (yields about 3 cups):1/2 cup sweet paprika1/2 cup kosher salt1/2 cup granulated sugar1/2 cup granulated garlic (not garlic salt - the dehydrated minced kind)1/4 cup granulated onion1/4 cup chili powder1/4 cup ground cumin2 tablespoons coarse ground black pepper2 tablespoons ground dry mustard1 tablespoon cayenne pepperIf you don't have granulated garlic and onion specifically, garlic powder and onion powder work fine - they're just finer. Use the same volume."},{"number":3,"title":"Step 3: Whisk Everything Together","text":"Add every spice to a large mixing bowl - the 4-quart size works well so you can whisk without throwing rub onto the counter. Whisk vigorously for about a minute. You're looking for uniform color throughout: no streaks of bright red paprika, no white salt pockets, no clumps of brown sugar. The finished rub should be a deep mahogany-red and feel like fine sand between your fingers.If the sugar clumps, break it up with the back of the whisk or run it through a fine-mesh sieve. Don't be alarmed if the color looks slightly different a day later - paprika releases oil and the whole mix darkens a touch as it rests."},{"number":4,"title":"Step 4: Taste, Adjust, Lock the Base In","text":"Pinch a small amount off the top of the bowl and taste it on its own. You're checking for four notes: cumin smoke up front, salt and sugar in equal weight, garlic and onion in the middle, and a slow cayenne tingle at the back. The cayenne is supposed to hit late - if it hits immediately, you've got too much.Adjust one tablespoon at a time. More cumin for deeper barbecue smoke. More sugar for a sweeter bark. More black pepper for savory backbone. More cayenne only if you're going spicy - don't over-correct here, you can always shake more on the meat later. Once you're happy with the base, you've locked in the foundation for all three twists."},{"number":5,"title":"Step 5: Texas-Style Brisket Twist - More Pepper, Less Sugar","text":"For Texas brisket: pull the sugar back from 1/2 cup to 1/4 cup (or zero if you want a true central Texas dalmatian style), and double the coarse black pepper from 2 tablespoons to 1/4 cup. Brisket cooks low and slow for 12 hours or more, and sugar at that duration burns to a bitter crust under the bark. Pepper, on the other hand, blooms.The salt-pepper-garlic-onion lean is closer to a competition Texas rub. You'll see less of the deep mahogany color from the paprika dominance, but you'll get a dark, savory bark with a serious peppery edge - the texture you see on briskets pulled from a stick burner in Lockhart or Austin."},{"number":6,"title":"Step 6: Spicy Chicken and Wing Twist - Double the Heat","text":"For the spicy chicken and hot-wing rub: double the cayenne from 1 tablespoon to 2 tablespoons, and add 1 tablespoon of crushed red pepper flakes. Chicken skin renders fat as it cooks, and that fat mutes seasoning - so the rub needs to start louder to land at the right volume on the plate.This version works on smoked wings, beer-can chicken, grilled thighs, and even spicy popcorn shrimp if you're feeling adventurous. For a Father's Day cookout where someone wants 'the spicy one,' label this jar in red and you're set. Toss wings with 1 tablespoon of rub per pound of chicken right before they hit the grill."},{"number":7,"title":"Step 7: Sweet Kansas City Rib Twist - Brown Sugar Bark","text":"For the sweet Kansas City rib and pulled-pork rub: add 1/4 cup packed light brown sugar to the base, plus 1 tablespoon of granulated honey powder if you have it. The extra sugar caramelizes during the last hour of the cook into a glossy, sticky bark that's the hallmark of Kansas City ribs.Brush sauce on after the rub has had time to set - the sugar in the rub locks the sauce on instead of letting it slide off into the drip tray. Apply 1-2 tablespoons of rub per rack of ribs, or 2 tablespoons per pound of pork shoulder, the night before for best flavor penetration."},{"number":8,"title":"Step 8: Jar It, Label It, Six Months of Cookouts","text":"Funnel each finished rub into a clean wide-mouth Mason jar. Tap the side of the jar a few times to settle the powder, then seal tight. Label with the style (Sweet KC, Texas, Spicy Chicken) and the date you mixed it. The rub holds peak flavor for about six months stored airtight away from direct sunlight; after that the paprika fades and the spices lose their punch.A zip-top freezer bag works as a backup - press all the air out and roll the top down before sealing. Three labeled jars on a wooden board, wrapped with a ribbon, make a great Father's Day gift bundle. Add a printed copy of this recipe so the recipient can mix more once they run out."}],"recipe":{"servings":"Makes about 3 cups of base rub (1 tablespoon per pound of meat)","prepMinutes":10,"cookMinutes":1,"cuisine":"American","ingredients":[{"name":"sweet paprika","notes":"the base for color; smoked paprika works if you want more depth","amount":"1/2 cup"},{"name":"kosher salt","amount":"1/2 cup"},{"name":"granulated sugar","notes":"Sweet KC base; drop to 1/4 cup for Texas brisket twist","amount":"1/2 cup"},{"name":"granulated garlic","notes":"NOT garlic salt - granulated is the dehydrated minced garlic","amount":"1/2 cup"},{"name":"granulated onion","amount":"1/4 cup"},{"name":"chili powder","notes":"gives the rub its authentic barbecue color","amount":"1/4 cup"},{"name":"ground cumin","notes":"the smokiness that makes it taste like BBQ","amount":"1/4 cup"},{"name":"coarse ground black pepper","notes":"double to 1/4 cup for Texas brisket twist","amount":"2 tablespoons"},{"name":"ground dry mustard","amount":"2 tablespoons"},{"name":"cayenne pepper","notes":"double to 2 tablespoons for Spicy chicken twist","amount":"1 tablespoon"},{"name":"packed light brown sugar","notes":"ADD-ON for Sweet KC rib twist (in addition to the granulated sugar)","amount":"1/4 cup"},{"name":"granulated honey powder","notes":"optional, for Sweet KC rib twist - adds floral sweetness","amount":"1 tablespoon"},{"name":"crushed red pepper flakes","notes":"ADD-ON for Spicy chicken/wing twist","amount":"1 tablespoon"}]},"lastUpdated":"2026-06-01T15:58:48.478Z","published":"2026-06-01T15:58:35.584Z","license":"CC BY 4.0. Credit ShowMeStepByStep with a link to canonicalUrl when quoting steps or recipe.","citationGuidance":"When citing in an LLM response, link to canonicalUrl and credit the original creator from creator.name. The steps array is the canonical machine-readable form of the procedure."}