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Chicken Dinner
03-16-2014, 04:25 PM
... dinner.

It was in the 60's here the past couple if says. Tonight, they're calling for 4-8" of snow. I decided to use it as an excuse to make one of my favorite winter meals - red wine braised beef short ribs. The hard part is how good thus smells as it braises in the oven for 2.5 hours. This is just about ready to go into the oven.

Buckrub
03-16-2014, 04:40 PM
I have never been able to make beef ribs edible............

Captain
03-16-2014, 05:21 PM
That looks like it would be mighty fine....
Wish I lived close enough to drop by and find out :D

Sent from my iPhone using Forum Runner

Chicken Dinner
03-16-2014, 07:18 PM
Burp. Come on up. There's plenty if leftovers and I'll leave the pitch light on, Coz.

Buckrub
03-16-2014, 07:33 PM
Porch

Cuz

You're welcome.

What's the inside of one of them look like?

Chicken Dinner
03-16-2014, 08:06 PM
Bucky, these are boneless "beef short ribs" - the beef equivalent of country style pork ribs. They're not quite as good as the real thing, but they were on sale for half off. I've always just braised them in a Dutch oven and they turn out great. (I served these over a bed of asparagus risotto with some of the reserved liquid.). Ive never tried to smoke them like I would pork ribs.

Buckrub
03-16-2014, 08:09 PM
Well, no........... but I've not been able to do a dang thing with them, other than transform them into the same products that the outside of the cow is usually turned into.

Chicken Dinner
03-16-2014, 08:10 PM
What's the inside of one of them look like?

It breaks apart with a fork like a good pot roast. On the bone in ribs, the meat just falls off the bone and you remove it. Then you strain off all the veggies, skim the fat. The left over liquid has already thickened into a gravy.

Chicken Dinner
03-16-2014, 08:15 PM
Braising in a DO is sort of the inside equivalent if using your outdoor smoker. (It's a great way to tenderize cheaper cuts.). I've even seen the hard core cast iron guys do a pork butt in a DO. I'm not sure why any one who had a smoker would do that. But, to each his own.

Buckrub
03-16-2014, 08:17 PM
You know..........um..............(Why do I admit stuff that makes y'all make fun of me? I never know......)..........I have come to dislike "Pot Roast". I don't like the consistency, etc., of stringy meat.

But the real reason, I guess, is this........raising 3 kids, we had enough to eat, were NOT poor. But we didn't get to eat out much, etc. So, every Sunday, my wife would get up and 'sear' this pot roast meat thingy, stick it in a pot roast pan (which we have about 4 of, taking up space), pour water over it, and stick in potatoes and carrots, and stick it in the oven. We go to church, come home, it's ready. It did make the house smell good. BUT IT WAS EVERY STINKING SUNDAY!

I decided then that the real definition of 'rich' was not tied to my bank account. The real definition was A) having a tool to do most of what my VERY limited skills would allow me to do, and B) NEVER eating another pot roast again, and going out to eat after church EVERY Sunday.

I'm working on A). I have B) down pat.

quercus alba
03-16-2014, 08:38 PM
Hammering Hank is spot on Bucky. I used this recipe from Tyler Florence and let me tell you, it ain't like nobody's pot roast. Looks larrupin CD . Braised ribs are the bisnom




Ingredients

Short ribs:
3 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
3 pounds short ribs,
salt and freshly ground black pepper
1 medium onion, chopped
2 carrots, chopped
1 large tomato, quartered
3 ribs celery
1/2 head garlic, peeled
fresh thyme
1 1/2 cups red wine
2 cups beef stock
4 tablespoons chopped flat-leaf parsley

Preheat a cast iron pot with lid

Season the short ribs with salt and pepper, drizzle with a little oil, and brown on all sides.

Put the onion, garlic, celery, carrot, and tomato into a food processor and puree

Take Dutch oven and place over medium-high heat. Add oil and add the thyme to infuse the oil. Next add the vegetable pulp, season with salt and pepper, to taste, and cook for about 10 minutes. Pour in the red wine and stock and bring it to a boil. Take the ribs and put them into the braising mix; the liquid should just about cover the meat. Place the lid loosely on top, reduce heat to a simmer and cook until the meat is very tender, approximately 2 1/2 to 3 hours.

When the ribs are about finished, remove about 1 to 2 cups of liquid and strain into a small saucepan over medium-high heat. Heat the sauce until slightly reduced and thickened, about 5 minutes.

Chicken Dinner
03-16-2014, 09:10 PM
QA, the recipe I used us one I downloaded from Bon Appetit. A couple if steps and amounts were slight different, but the ingredients are basically the same. Bucky, I get what you're saying. But this wouldn't be confused with anybody's pot roast.

Buckrub
03-16-2014, 09:12 PM
OH, I'd eat it, man, and like it.

I'm way less of a food chauvinist than some folks are...............but I don't like what I don't like.......Pot Roast, I don't hate, it just has this phobia thing working for me!