Ah, kale. |
As I suspect you know about me, I’m the kind of person who
gorges on kale shakes and soaked almonds and air for three weeks and then,
on day 22, I ease off my cleanse with friends at a great bar over a platter of French fries and a
platter of nachos and a glass of Zinfandel and a beer. Then, on day 23, at my
parents’ house, I virtuously eat a bucket of mashed potatoes, a pork chop the size
of my own head, and a very small regular-sized bottle of good chianti. On day 24, we
braved 25 inches of snow to walk 34 blocks so that I could eat a Shake Shack
fried-chicken sandwich and cheese fries and, because I am virtuous, have long,
noisy slurps of everyone’s Heath Bar shake without being a glutton and getting
one of my own. “You have a real letter-of-the-law approach to your cleanse
being done,” Birdy observed mildly. She did not mention the breach of my
alleged vegetarianism that I had taken up partly in solidarity with her and
partly because of all the YouTube videos of goats laughing and cows talking
existentially about death and marine mammals singing their babies to sleep.
Anyhoo. This is a recipe that is not new, but that I have
never posted here, and it is time. Yes, in the spirit of renewed gluttony, it
is time. It might be my best-ever recipe. If you like ribs, you cannot not like these ribs. They are even better
than the other ribs I have written about, although they are similar. Annoyingly, Michael and Ben slop
gloppy sweet barbeque sauce on them, and, sure, feel free. But they’re so good just
how they are: dry-rubbed, long-cooked, and mopped with smoke-addled vinegar;
not sweet or sticky, but salty, tangy, and falling completely and utterly off
the bone into porky sheets and shreds.
They taste like they spent time in a
barbeque pit—but they didn’t. They just hung out in the oven for half the day
while you more or less ignored them. In that way, this recipe is in the spirit
of a slow cooker, without actually using one—and you get the guilty winter
pleasure of having the oven on for hours and hours, warming your kitchen
cozily.
Fall-to-Pieces Ribs
Serves 3-8 (depending on the gluttony factor)
A couple of things: baby back are fattier and cook a little
more quickly (and sound somehow friendlier) but St. Louis ribs, which is what
I’m using here, are meatier and possibly even tastier. I like them both—get
whatever’s on sale, or whichever look better. If you have time—and I don’t
imagine you do—coat these ribs with the rub, and then let them sit in the
fridge for a day or two. I almost never plan that far ahead, but they’re even
more insanely good that way. Finally: liquid smoke. I know it’s like the
artificial flavoring of the barbecue world, but in its defense, it is a natural
product, and it really adds a certain wonderful smoky something here. Also, it’s
cheap. Get some!
This recipe can be very easily halved or multiplied.
2 large, meaty racks of baby back or St. Louis ribs (2-2 ½
pounds each)
1 tablespoon kosher salt (or half as much table salt)
1 teaspoon celery seeds
2 tablespoons sweet Hungarian paprika
1 teaspoons granulated garlic (aka garlic powder)
1/2 cup white vinegar mixed with 2 teaspoons salt and 1 teaspoon liquid smoke
Make the rub: mash the celery seeds and salt together with a
mortar and pestle until the celery seeds looked pretty powdery (or else use
celery salt and cut back on the salt a bit). Add the paprika and garlic powder,
and stir together well.
Lay each rack of ribs on a large, rimmed baking sheet (I put
them on parchment for easier clean-up), then sprinkle them all over with the
rub, massage it into both sides. Refrigerate them for a few hours (overnight is ideal) if you can spare the time, otherwise, go ahead and pop them in a 275 oven to bake for 3-4 hours
(or 4-5 for St. Louis). The longer the better: you want all the fat and
connective tissue melted so that the ribs are falling apart. If at any point
the ribs seem to be browning excessively, turn the heat down to 250.
When you suspect that that the ribs are about an hour from
being done, brush the vinegar mixture all over the ribs every 15 minutes or so.
When the ribs are truly and totally falling apart (try to
lift the rack with a pair of tongs and see if it wants to come apart) they’re
done. Use a sharp, heavy knife to cut the racks into individual ribs, give them
one last brush with the remaining vinegar mixture, and serve with lots of
napkins. (And, if people require, with bottled sauce. Sigh.)
I haven't even read the whole post yet. That's how excited I got when I saw the word ribs. This is our favorite rib recipe. I think maybe you linked to it once when it was in a magazine...I don't remember for sure but I know it was this recipe. I remember you said, "I'm not from Memphis, or Kansas City or Texas so I have no certain bbq allegiance" or something like that. These are the.best.ribs and I AM from Memphis.
ReplyDeleteThe email came and I read, "Fall-to-pieces Ribs" and I thought to myself, "She's back. And Kale is gone." And then I lol'd when I saw the caption for the first picture.
ReplyDeleteWe have a smoker, but it's hard to use in Colorado winter when temperatures can swing so wildly. Good to have an oven recipe for back up. In case we have a rib emergency.
You are so FUNNY, Catherine! I'm dying laughing because we are cleanse-then-post-cleanse twins. We don't have much else in common, but you really are my long lost cleanse twin.
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ReplyDeleteThank GOD. Catherine's back! I felt so bereft when you were on your cleanse with your soaked almonds and your kale, but this is a recipe I can get excited about.
ReplyDeleteMaking this recipe for the Super Bowl--so glad you survived the cleanse so you could put this recipe out into the world!!! I absolutely love Emily's blog--just checked it out and she has the best projects. Making those sweet rock valentines this weekend!
ReplyDeletehurrah you're back!!
ReplyDeleteHas anyone used 'country style' ribs with this recipe? I bought them on sale today, remembering this post. Google tells me that this cut should be cooked as pork chop, not ribs. Advice appreciated. I have never made 'fall off the bone meat. Wanting to.
ReplyDeleteBeth--do them as carnitas or, in my recipe index, as pork so good it could make you cry!
DeleteOK, thanks both look terrific!!
DeleteHi. Could these go in a crock pot? I am not sure about the lack of liquid (until the end....)
ReplyDeleteJust made these, so I must say, please don't worry about the lack of liquid. I guess the rub seals in the moisture. These ribs were awesome!
DeleteI am passing this recipe along to my carnivorous husband. But have you seen this recipe? I thought it had your name all over it. http://www.bonappetit.com/recipe/buffalo-wing-popcorn#recipe-ingredients
ReplyDeleteSounds fantastic-cannot wait to try!
ReplyDeleteYes you are right. I Like that your post. I think helpful for somebody.
ReplyDeletePune Flowers Delivery
Can you please tell me - would this work with beef ribs? I'm going to throw caution to the wind and try it, but I'd appreciate confirmation. Thanks for another brilliant recipe!
ReplyDeleteI have 2 questions... Do you cook these bone up or bone down? Also do you cook uncovered or covered with foil? Hope you see this & can answer quick, they are in the fridge now soaking up the rub so I can cook them tomorrow! :)
ReplyDeleteHi Kristy! Cook them. . . I guess it would be called "bone down," so the meatier part is on top. Uncovered!
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