Barbecue Ribs
Submitted by Gookie
Barbecue ribs braised foil-wrapped in the oven, then basted with a sweet-savory sauce of brown sugar, dark rum, soy, and Worcestershire. Fall-apart tender pork ribs with a glossy, sticky glaze.
YIELD
4 servingsPREP
10 minCOOK
2 hrsREADY
190 minThese ribs use the two-step method that pitmasters have been quietly relying on for years: a long, low braise in foil first to render the fat and tenderize the meat, then a hot finish under the glaze to caramelize the sauce into a sticky lacquer. The result is fall-apart tender ribs without firing up a smoker.
The sauce is what makes this version stand apart. Dark rum brings a molasses-like depth that pairs beautifully with the brown sugar, while soy sauce and Worcestershire add umami and salt without dominating. Chili sauce gives the glaze its tomato-and-tang backbone, with dry mustard and garlic sharpening everything.
The 1-hour marinade after the foil braise is the step most cooks skip, and they shouldn’t. Letting the meat sit in the sauce while it’s still warm lets the flavors penetrate beyond the surface. By the time the ribs hit the oven again or the grill, the seasoning has worked deep into the meat.
Grilling the final 30 minutes gives you a smoky char that the oven can’t replicate, but if it’s pouring outside, the oven still produces excellent ribs. Serve with cornbread, coleslaw, and a cold drink.
Pro Tips
- Pull the silverskin off the bone-side of the ribs before cooking. It looks like a thin membrane, and removing it lets seasoning penetrate properly. Slip a butter knife under one edge, grab with a paper towel, and peel.
- Drain the fat from the foil packet before adding the sauce. Rib drippings are heavily fatty and will dilute the glaze.
- Baste often during the final 30 minutes, especially on the grill. The sauce should layer up in glossy coats, not slather on at the end.
- Pull at 200°F to 205°F (93°C to 96°C) internal temp for fork-tender results. A probe thermometer takes the guesswork out.
- Let rest 10 minutes after the final cook before cutting. Juices redistribute and the slices stay tender.
Variations
- Swap rum for bourbon for a smokier, oakier glaze.
- Add 1 teaspoon of liquid smoke to the sauce for a backyard-pit flavor without the wood.
- Stir in a teaspoon of Chinese five-spice for a Korean-inspired sweet-spicy ribs riff.
Ingredients
Directions
Wrap ribs in double thickness of foil and bake for 1½ hours at 350℉ (180℃). Unwrap and drain drippings.
Combine all ingredients and pour over ribs. Marinate at room temperature for 1 hour.
Bake at 350℉ (180℃) 30 minutes, basting with sauce, or grill 30 minutes, 4 inches above coals turning and basting.
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