Restaurant Style, Meltingly Tender Ribs
I always imagined cooking delicious, tender ribs to be some restaurant secret. I figured attempting to cook ribs at home would be complicated, time consuming and would result in a tough, possibly inedible waste of money. Lucky for us, I took the chance one year and I’ve been making these delicious ribs ever since. They are one of my favorite meals to make for company or a crowd because they are so easy and impressive. Just keep in mind, regardless of who does all the work-cleaning, preparing, rubbing, wrapping, and cooking the ribs-the person who actually grills the meat for 10 minutes in the final step will be the one who gets the credit for making the ribs.
The key to making restaurant tender ribs at home is the cooking technique-which is quite simple. You can use any spice rub combination you like or simply salt and pepper, which is how I make them when the kids are eating. My grown-up rub consists primarily of kosher salt and fresh cracked pepper, garlic powder, brown sugar, Worcestershire sauce, and lime juice then equal amounts of cumin, cayenne, paprika and mustard. mrChaos’s rub is here. I simply add a teaspoon of this or that until it smells right. The cooking method then is as follows:
Baby Back Ribs
serves 4, prep 10 min, cook 3 1/2 hours- 2 racks baby back ribs
- spices of choice
- 1/4 cup barbecue sauce
- Clean ribs and remove silver skin fat from the back. It should pull right off if you can get a good grip on it. Don’t worry about it too much, they’ll be delicious either way.
- Place each rack atop two sheets of heavy duty foil. Rub ribs with spice mixture all over.
- Fold and wrap foil around each rack. At this point you can place them in the fridge to marinate or put them directly in the oven.
- When you are ready to cook preheat oven to 300°F and place rib packs on a rimmed baking sheet. You want to catch any juices if your packets leak or your oven will be a mess.
- Cook ribs for 3 hours. Remove a rack and unwrap a small section to check for tenderness. You should be able to twist the bones in the meat with little resistance. If not, re-wrap and put them back in the oven checking every 1/2 hour.
- Heat the grill and dilute barbecue sauce with a little water until it is thin and brush-able.
- Unwrap cooked ribs and transfer them carefully to the grill and brush with barbecue sauce.
- Grill over a high flame for a few minutes, or until charred.
- Alternately, you can crisp them up under the broiler in the oven if you don’t have a grill. Just give them a nice crust.
Follow these same steps regardless of how many racks of ribs you are cooking. I have cooked as many as six racks at a time piled up in the oven and it works just fine, although you may need to allow for a slightly longer cooking time.
September 3rd, 2008 at 9:47 am
LOL! I loved your comment that the one using the tongs to flip those ribs one lovely time gets the rib-making credit:)))). Hilariously true!!
I just started making ribs too, it is such an easy meal to assemble when I am shoveling off my kids from one extracurricular to another!!! Esp. when all it requires is the closest person and a pair of tongs:).
September 4th, 2008 at 6:54 am
Those look melt in your mouth, delicious!
September 4th, 2008 at 11:16 am
Yeah, that last 10 minutes comment is true and funny. 😉
Steve’s been begging me to make another batch of ribs soon. These look surprisingly good to me right now… I say surprising because it’s 10 in the morning. But YUM.
September 4th, 2008 at 11:48 am
Funny what you say about credit for the ribs, it’s so true!
These sound amazing.
September 4th, 2008 at 7:05 pm
Sounds and looks like you know what you’re doing with these ribs! The picture speaks volumes!
October 23rd, 2008 at 5:19 am
That is so funny about the person at the end getting all the credit! You have to make sure that it is yourself somehow! I agree that there is no massive restaurant style secret about cooking ribs and as they are not usually that expensive to buy they are a great treat to cook at home!
October 23rd, 2008 at 1:57 pm
thank God you didn’t say to boil the ribs. That would have been extremely bad.
How big is your bamboo cutting board?
I love my bamboo cutting board! It is by far my favorite cutting board. It is 18 inches x 12 inches which makes it the perfect size for me-lots of space but still store-able! -Katie
November 25th, 2008 at 5:01 pm
Sounds great. I add a little smoked paprika to the rub…very tasty and pour in some cider vinegar mixed with water inside the tinfoil for the ribs to soak up. Delicious!
April 10th, 2010 at 6:43 am
We followed your recipe and the ribs were incredible!
June 4th, 2010 at 6:17 pm
Ribs are ready and in the fridge. Making them tomorrow, will let you know how they turn out!
June 5th, 2010 at 8:28 pm
Best ribs ever! I could not find ancho chili powder. I replaced with a New Mexico chili powder. These were the easiest ribs to make! So tasty and the meat just fell off the bone. Everybody loved them! Thanks for the great recipe!