how do i prepare pork ribs with a stove and an oven to get them as tender and tasty as possible?
i was thinking of getting a sear with a skillet then putting them in the oven to slow cook. But i've never cooked ribs before so im not really sure what to expect.
Slow cook in foil and then broil to get some texture on the outside.
Owen Thompson
This is what I do with mine, real tender and yet a crispy outer. Shit nibba I want dem ribs nao
Jaxon Butler
This
Ian Sanders
this but let it cool right down to refrigerator temperature between slow cooking and broiling
Tyler Martin
why?
Parker Bailey
There's absolute no reason to do that. You can broil them right after they're done cooking. Also, make sure you cook them with liquid (bbq sauce most likely) in the foil so they braise nicely.
Jason Reyes
how much liquid? is a thin layer of bbq sauce enough?
Gavin Wood
How long in oven, what temp?
Cameron Moore
OP here, just put mine in the oven at 125c
Asher Wilson
1. remove membrane from back side of ribs 2. rub all over with dry spice rub (chile, paprika, garlic, black pepper, thyme, brown sugar, mustard powder, etc) 3. place on rimmed sheet tray 4. add one cup liquid (beer, cider, citrus juice or water) to tray 5. wrap tray tightly and completely in foil, no air gaps at all 6. bake for about 3 hours at 275* F or until end of bones protrude from meat by about 1/2" and meat is very tender but not yet "falling off the bone" 7. slather in sauce, if desired (not required at all) and broil to caramelize sauce.
*tip:add a little liquid smoke to tray when baking
225F for 4 hours. You can literally pull the bones out of the meat.
Landon Ortiz
"You can literally pull the bones out of the meat"
Then they are overcooked. Stop before this happens.
Lucas Young
It's some shithole Slavic accent (accent, not dialect, dumb dumb)
Aaron Thomas
braise then sauce and sear in oven
Mason Cox
he's swedish you dumb idiot but he actually makes videos in 3 or 4 languages
Cooper Myers
I usually do 8-10 hours on 90 celsius. And then take them out sauce it woth BBQ sauce and grill it at 200 celsius till sticky.
Charles Gutierrez
Swedes are crypto-Slavs
Benjamin Fisher
BBQ pork ribs are never cooked for that long - you want them to still have some texture.
Aiden Wright
Convert that from Commie degrees to Freedom degrees for the rest of the board, faggot.
Jose Stewart
>cooking with foil
Luis Gonzalez
Oh I love this guy. And how he learned Polish as a Swede, no idea. Must have been hard.
Carson Green
>le "my language is so hard to learn" meme How hard can it be when Polish children manage, you fucking idiot?
Chase Carter
Not smoking ur meat why even make it at home at all senpai?
Colton Scott
when you make a retard of yourself and proceed to make an even bigger one: the post yes and he's really good with it, the polish videos are the most funny ones let me guess, english is your only language?
Austin Rogers
English is my third language. My first is Danish and I see plenty of retards claiming that's "just too hard to learn" too. Fucking idiots. Find a real accomplishment to be proud of instead of the language you happened to grow up with, pathetic faggot.
Ryan Reed
Can't believe no one has said parboiling yet. Get a pot of water boiling, dunk your ribs until they turn whitish grey. Take them out and doctor them with your sauce, then grill on charcoal for best results. Fucking plebs itt I swear
Nathaniel Evans
I also speak three languages You can learn basically any language, but you should notice that learning one that is completely outside your cultural group is hard. Like Danish and Swedish are a part of North-Germanic languages so for you guys learning German, English, Dutch etc. it's not that big of a deal since they are belong to the same family and have more or less similar grammatical rules. But Polish is a Slavic language with a lot of things that your languages don't have or don't use often so you gotta work harder to master it. Going further all those languages belong to the common indo-european group of languages, so they have at least some similarity in words or traits. Therefore learning a language outside of this language family (like korean- a language isolate) is even harder and some question if is it possible for an outsider to be absolutely fluent in it. tl;dr: some languages are easier for you to learn, some are harder, some are really fucking hard so stop being a bitch about it
Eli Ward
The ancestors of the Swedish people came from Slavic areas by way of Finland. They're slavs.
Samuel Anderson
I always just do 250 for at least three hours, depending on size.
Isaiah Morales
OP here. took em out after 2½ hours and they still werent tender enough. probably gonna try atleast 4 hours next time.
Dylan Brown
ribs should take about 6hrs on 250F. If you take them out any earlier then they haven't rendered the majority of the fat will be greasy.
Isaac Peterson
It depends on if they're babyback or spare/St. Louis cut. Babyback ribs take 3 to 4 hours, and spare/St. Louis take 5 to 6. OP must have had spare ribs.
Adam Baker
looked like this.
Easton Powell
eh, there might be one hour difference between spares/babybacks.
Nathaniel King
Depends on how big the pig was. Where is the bone? Those look like boneless country "ribs"
Jeremiah Bennett
i've never had a situation where spares took 3 hours longer than babybacks.
Dylan Lopez
can you seriously not see them?
Jordan Morgan
>still continue to make a retard of yourself Geographic location has nothing to do with the culture. Early Germans lived on teritory of todays West Slavs. Slavs probably came from far east. You can talk about a group of people being a certain culture at the moment when they start to use their own language and well, develop their own culture. Where they live have nothing to do with it, migration in the past was a common thing. But then again why I am discussing with a tripfag
Lincoln White
No American is going to help you with ribs cut like that. American BBQ doesn't use that style of cut.
Connor Powell
Those don't look like any ribs I've ever seen.
Zachary Morales
Never reply to trips. They are always worthless “humans”.
Jayden Robinson
Get a pressure cooker but don't blow yourself up
Landon Brooks
I'm still a tripfag even when I don't use my trip. : ^ )
Michael Clark
>searing ribs This really is your first time.
Christian Cruz
When I make ribs in the winter I pressure cook then just glaze them and broil to finish. Totally different than bbq, but still really good.
Christian James
250-300 degree freedom units. Wrap in foil/ Season them you fucking animal. Learn to Google.
Brody Reed
Braise them. Season, sear, remove from pan. Sauté onion, carrots, celery. Add crushed garlic and cook until mild. Add tomato paste and brown. Add ribs back to pan and cover 1/2 to 3/4 the way with lighter flavored beer and water mixture (about one beer per quart water). Add brown sugar, vinegar, hot pepper, dry oregano and dry sage, stir. Place into 275 degree oven. Baste periodically and rotate/flip when crust begins to firm up. Remove when falling apart tender. Trim meat off bones, put bones back into the braising liquid, and bring to a medium simmer. Trim the remaining meat free of silver skin and gristle. Wrap up portions in plastic wrap or form in some other way (ring molds, little bowls, plastic cups, whatever). Portions refrigerate and freeze well, so make a huge batch. Once the liquid has reduced to a thick sauce, adjust seasoning and maybe add some more sugar or vinegar.
Dominic Bennett
Anyone got any Asian rib recipes?
Dominic Bennett
mustard on skin, spice rub on top low heat oven, aluminium foil 3hrs or so
>assuming for a single rack boil the ribs in a big pot of water with some star anise, fennel seeds, cloves and cinnamon mix half a cup of sweet chilli sauce with a cup of ketjap manis, a tablespoon of sambal 2 teaspoons of soy sauce and a teaspoon of honey let the ribs marinate overnight. then in the oven on 300 for an hour and a half
Asher Cook
don't boil your ribs. simmer them. there's a difference.
Jack Gonzalez
sry not a native english speaker
Jack Smith
Basically, a simmer is a low boil. You want bubbles and movement, but nothing crazy, like 200F. Poaching goes even lower, like 160-180F, and there's barely any movement at all. Delicate meats are better poached, and tougher meats need the higher heat of simmering in order to break down the connective tissue. Meat - or anything that isn't a that you're cooking on its own like potatoes or rice or pasta - should never be cooked in water at 212F/100C because the flavors start to break down.
Bentley Powell
I know what a simmer is, I just couldn't think of the word on the spot