RockLobster uses a great technique. You can also make a dry rub from brown sugar, soy sauce, or lime juice (Ive used both), chili powder, onion and garlic powder, and slather them all over the ribs. Foil, bake, then transfer to the smoker for an hour or so.
Alternately, I've used the dry rub and placed the ribs into my slow cooker on the low setting overnight, and then thrown into my Webber Kettle, set up with a divided set of coals, covered when hot with sticks of maple, close the lid, close all vents by half, and cook for 40 minutes. These ribs came out perfect. I put that recipe and technique into one of our local papers. My cousin found it, and specifically sought me out to thank me for it. It seems she had company up from North Carolina, where they take their bbq ribs very seriously, of course with the famous Carolina style vinegar based sauce. Her guests told me that the ribs she prepared, using the slow cooker/Webber kettle technique were the best ribs that they'd ever had.
Yep, my head swelled. A northern boy from Michigan won over a Carolina rib lover.
Put the brown sugar, salt, chili powder, onion and garlic powders together. Taste them. Add more of what you think it needs until it tastes right. Add a little soy or lime juice for extra flavor and massage into the meat (make sure the silver skin has been removed from the ribs). Either wrap in foil and bake, or throw then into the slow cooker. This cooks teh ribs to the desired state, keeping them juicy and tender. Smoking them in the smoker, or on the Webber gives you that wonderful smoke flavor. Apple or other fruit woods also make great flavored smoke.
Seeeeeya; Goodweed of the North