Make this pork rib recipe in the air fryer. You can have tender, pull-apart ribs in a fraction of the traditional time.
Author: Ben Mims
Author: Stanley Lobel
Author: Bon Appétit Test Kitchen
Bourbon adds oaky sweetness to the honey-hoisin-chili glaze.
Author: Kenny Callaghan
Slow-cooked and broiled in the oven, these sweet ribs can be made year-round.
Author: Kemp Minifie
The Potato Gratin with Cream and Fresh Herbs is a nice accompaniment to this main course. And for the wine, consider serving a flavorful red, such as a Pinot Noir from Oregon.
Author: Patrick Corrigan
Author: Adam Roberts
Author: Ian Knauer
The secret to these ribs is the stunning glaze-these have great depth of flavor with a beautiful hit of sweetness and spice. Marinate them overnight for best results!
Author: Donna Hay
Learn to make the best jerk baby back ribs on the grill from this recipe from Tanya Holland.
Author: Tanya Holland
Author: Catherine McCord
Author: Carla Lalli Music
These baby back ribs from Rob Rainford are rubbed with brown sugar and smoked paprika and smoked on the grill, then brushed with homemade barbecue sauce.
Author: Rob Rainford
Author: Pat Neely
These boneless barbecue ribs are par-boiled to help them get tender, and then coated in tangy-sweet sauce and baked in the oven.
Author: Linda Kuipers
Author: Steve Raichlen
Author: Bruce Aidells
To make this pork ribs recipe, you'll use indirect heat. Serve these grilled ribs with homemade barbecue sauce made with Coca-Cola or ginger ale.
Author: Brigid Washington
Country-style ribs are not actually ribs. This cut of meat comes from the shoulder of the pig, where it is sliced in half under the blade bone and then cut into long strips to resemble ribs. As a result,...
Author: Kendra Bailey Morris
Author: Bon Appétit Test Kitchen
Author: Diana Kennedy
Author: Bon Appétit Test Kitchen
Cooking ribs under pressure means they get incredibly tender without falling apart or shredding-in a fraction of the time as braising and with no attention needed.
Author: Mark Bittman
Author: Steven Raichlen
Skip the same old boring barbecue sauce and opt for a sticky malt vinegar, bourbon, and maple syrup glaze to slick up these boiled-and-baked pork ribs.
Author: Donna Hay
Author: Molly Stevens
Tamarind is sweet, sour, and quite tart and provides the ideal base for this finger-licking glaze.
Author: Harneet Baweja
Author: Amy Finley
Cook ribs over a mix of red cabbage and tart apples in this easy one-pot pork dinner.
Author: Magdalena Wszelaki
Author: Joan Oswalt
Author: Lyn Utsugi
These grilled pork ribs are all about the sauce. This stir-together gochujang situation has everything you want-heat, sweetness, and palate-gripping acid-but with extra tang.
Author: Chris Morocco
It's hard not to love this classic Italian pasta-it's just the right mix of spicy and sweet.
Author: Maialino
Folks in St. Louis pride themselves on their ribs. You could say it's the city's signature dish. Growing up in the projects like we did, we didn't have a barbecue pit or a smoker, so when we wanted ribs,...
Author: Miss Robbie
This meaty and satisfying soup is just right for a sick day.
Author: Karen Busen
The glaze for these ribs combines Korean gochujang and Italian Calabrian chiles-a perfect example of Whitaker's fearless fusion.
Author: The Wolf's Tailor, Denver, CO
Author: Maggie Ruggiero