Well, it’s officially grilling season here in Colorado. The weather has been just fantastic and will hopefully continue to be amazing for the next few months before it starts getting unbearably hot.
I realize that depending on where you live you might be hating me right now. It’s still very cold in large chunks of the country, but have no fear. Warm weather is on the way.
I’ve been working on a few different rubs that go really great on grilled food and I thought you might all benefit from them. These are all really good on meat, but I think most of them would work equally well on veggies or tofu.
Three Homemade Dry Rubs
Ingredients
Coffee Rub:
- 2 Tablespoons whole coffee beans
- 1 Teaspoon cardamon seeds, or pods would work
- ½ small cinnamon stick
- 1 ½ Teaspoons chili powder
- 1 Teaspoon garlic powder
- 1 Teaspoon paprika
- 1 Tablespoon kosher salt
- 2 Tablespoons sugar
- 1 Tablespoon pepper
5 C's Rub
- 1 Tablespoon coriander
- 1 Tablespoon cumin seeds
- 1 Tablespoon cardamon seeds, or pods
- 1 small cinnamon stick
- 3 cloves
- 1 Tablespoon kosher salt
- 1 Tablespoon sugar
All-Purpose Rub:
- 1 Tablespoon dried oregano
- 1 Tablespoon paprika
- 1 Tablespoon chili powder
- ½ Tablespoon garlic powder
- 1 Tablespoon kosher salt
- 1 Tablespoon fresh black pepper
Instructions
- If the rub you’re making has whole spices, it’s always a good idea to lightly toast them in a dry skillet for a few minutes to bring out the flavors. Just toast them until they are fragrant.
- Add whole spices to a grinder. Pulse them until roughly ground. You don’t want them like a dust.
- Mix in other spices.
- If you’re using rubs on meats, coat liberally. Go lighter on veggies or tofu.
Did you make this recipe?
A Salty Mix
If you’ve ever looked at the ingredients on most rubs that you can buy at the store they are mostly salt. This makes sense if you’re trying to make a profit. Salt is cheap. It mixes well. It makes food taste great.
But when you’re making your rubs at home you can cut back on the salt and replace it with real spices that pack a punch. You still want a good amount of salt in the rub, but it doesn’t need to be 50% salt or anything crazy.
Let’s make some rubs!
The Whole Spice
For all of these rubs except the all-purpose one, you’re going to need a spice grinder to really get the full flavor of the rub. Sure, you can find ground versions of all of the ingredients, but it’s so much better to use whole spices. They are more flavorful, the whole spices keep longer, and they are generally cheaper.
The Coffee Rub
For this rub I wanted a dark mix that would hold up well on flavorful meats. You wouldn’t want to use this guy on light stuff like fish or chicken.
Start with whole beans, a small piece of cinnamon and some cardamon pods. (You can also use cardamon seeds.)
Grind up these spices and then add in all your other spices to the mix. This rub has the most ingredients in it and the resulting flavors are pretty complicated.
It’s a very good rub though.
Once I had my rub mixed up, I coated a bone-in steak with it for testing and grilled it up.
The results were amazing:
The 5 C’s Rub
For some reason a lot of spices start with the letter C. Or maybe just my favorite spices start with the letter C…
In any event, I thought I’d mix them all up and see what happened.
For this rub, I lightly toasted my cumin, cardamon, and coriander in a dry skillet for a few minutes until they were fragrant.
Then I just blended them up!
The 5 C’s Rub is the lightest of the rubs I made for this post. It has an almost sweet flavor to it that would go well on chicken, pork, tofu, veggies, or maybe even a sturdy fish.
For testing purposes, I rubbed a few boneless pork chops with a heavy amount of the rub and grilled them up. DELICIOUS.
All Purpose Rub
While I was mixing up rubs, I thought I’d give you all the recipe for my favorite all-purpose rub. I use this stuff on everything. It’s great on steaks, chicken wings, asparagus, roasted tofu… you name it.
There’s also no grinding involved. Just take all the spices and stir them up. It takes maybe three minutes to mix up a batch!
Interestingly, this is my kiddo’s favorite rub also. If it lightly coat some grilled chicken in this rub, he will eat as much as I put in front of him.
Grilling Season
Guys, I’m really excited about grilling season if you can’t tell. I actually grilled all this stuff at once and had a beautiful homemade dry rub taste test.
I loved all of these, but I really liked the 5 C’s rub. It gave the pork a really bright flavor that was very unique.
These rubs will all keep for a month or two without losing much flavor. I keep mine in plastic bags, but if you had a few airtight containers, they would keep even better.
Not that there’s any chance mine will last that long…
Doug
How do you recommend using a rub on tofu? After you have dried it out?
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Nick
Yea… dry it off, then rub it with some oil… either veggie or maybe sesame oil. Then do a light dusting. Don't go to heavy on it. I think the 5 c's or all-purpose would be awesome tofu.
Janet
I just got really excited that you're from CO. I live on the Western Slope and the weather's been AWESOME. Definitely gonna try out one or two of these at a BBQ in a couple weeks!
Chris
The five C's sound like it would be excellent made into a mojo with lime or orange juice.
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Jeff
i will have to try the coffee dry rub. sounds intriquing
Adam
Hi, great site. Question for you. Do i have to add sulfur dioxide to my rubs. I am launching a new line of rubs and wanted to know if i did…
Nick
I don’t, but I’m not sure if you are making them for mass production… good luck!
Char
I just finished making the all purpose rub I added 1T of cumin. I’ll let you know how I like it tomorrow once I grill my Spatchcock chicken. #excited
Nick
Definitely one of my fave chicken rubs Char. Let me know how it turns out!
Amanda
Loved the coffee rub. Looking for a DIY alternative after we ran out of our Weber coffee rub. Doubled the coffee and pepper. The smell was offsetting,but the final result on a nice strip steak was A++! Can’t wait to try the rest (but need to get more cardamom first!) Thanks for sharing!
Sheryl B
Just tried the all purpose rub. I’m in a weight loss challenge with some friends, and while the food we can eat is a REALLY narrow list of things, we ARE allowed to season to our heart’s content. I just made my chicken with the AP rub. Now, I’m getting ready to make gifts of it for my friends who are also in the challenge, bc this stuff is DELICIOUS! Thanks for the recipe- MUCH appreciated!
Nick
Packaging these for gifts is a great idea Sheryl! I still use this all-purpose rub all the time. One of my favorites. Glad you liked it!
Brittany
We use a lot of these seasonings regularly, I make a lot of South Indian curries/dishes, mostly because it’s what my husband and son prefer… on the other nights they both prefer BBQ/Mexican-ish food. If you can get your hands on “Kashmiri Chilli Powder” (we buy from a local South Indian market), it has a great taste and a huge kick!! A little goes a long way. It’s even just awesome with salt and pepper on chicken and fish, then fried in a tablespoon or so of oil. Hoping to make your all three of your rubs with the Kashmiri chilli powder too. Thanks so much for your recipes. Happy Cooking :)
Mat
What is with all of these self-promotion posts? “My recent post…” ???
Nick
Haha. I used to have a widget installed on comments that let you link to a recent post on your website. I deleted the widget but some old comments still have the links. There are thousands of them so it’d be too much work for little old me to go through and delete the text in all of them. So they live on… ;)
Marcia
Hello. I just found this post. I am interested in trying these runs but I didn’t see any measurements. Is it equal parts for each component? I’m specially interested in the all purpose rub. Thanks!
Nick
Hey Marcia! There’s a full ingredient list at the top of the page… also in the print page: https://www.crunchtimekitchen.com/homemade-dry-rubs/?print_recipe=1
Thanks!
Marcia
Oh my goodness…sorry, brain fart! Thank you! I have no words…lol
Kelly A Gayhart
I’m wanting to use some of these rubs when our grill is up and ready for use