Discussion about short ribs...why?

marsha-tbay

Well-known member
I bought short ribs one time. I was so disappointed in the small amount of meat for the effort, I've not boought them again.

Michael Chiarello used them in a recipe on Top Chef Masters recently. I received that recipe and several Top Chef Master recipes in my email this am, which has prompted this question of mine.

I remember the judges really liking them.

Do you use short ribs frequently, or do you avoid them too???

 
I think the short ribs available in the average grocery store bear little resemblance

to the big meaty (relatively) lean ones that I see on cooking shows and in top restaurants. Nice ones produce really lush sauces or gravies because of the cartilage and bone and fat.

 
yes, we love them.....cooked mostly in the winter because I love the braising

method. We go to our locally owned meat shop, they still cut the beef and do custom orders. Everything in there is meaty. I think short ribs are one of the best tasting cuts and so versatile.

They also have the best ham hocks ever loaded with lots of meat.

 
Here's Michael Chiarello's recipe in case you'd like it

Brined Short Ribs with 5 Onion Cavalo Nero
|
Top Chef Masters, final episode.


Ingredients
Serves: Serves 4

Brine:
2 quarts water
2 cups brown sugar
2 cups kosher salt
2 tablespoons juniper berries
3 bay leaves


Ribs:
4 cross-cut short ribs, about 1 pound each (ask your butcher to cold smoke them if he can)
Olive oil
2 cups coarsely chopped onion
1 cup coarsely chopped carrot
1 cup coarsely chopped celery
1 cup red wine
1 quart chicken stock


5 Onion Cavalo Nero:
2 cups leek whites, small diced
2 cups scallion whites, sliced
2 cups shallot, small diced
2 cups red onion, small diced
2 cups yellow onion, small diced
2 cups carrot, grated
Extra virgin olive oil
1/2 cup golden raisins
1 case black cabbage, chiffonade


Directions
Make the brine:
Bring all ingredients to a boil in a sauce pan, stirring to dissolve sugar. Cool completely. Cover short ribs with brine and refrigerate 3 hours.

Cook the ribs:
Preheat oven to 300-degrees F.

Remove short ribs from brine and pat dry. Heat a large high-sided sauté pan over moderately high heat until hot. Add a film of olive oil. When oil begins to smoke, brown short ribs on all sides. (They brown quickly because of the sugar in the brine.) When richly browned, place in a dish that can go from stovetop to oven.

Add onion, carrot and celery to sauté pan and cook over moderately high heat until vegetables are well caramelized. Transfer vegetables to dish with short ribs. Add red wine to sauté pan and simmer until reduced by half, scraping up any stuck-on bits with a wooden spoon. Add stock, bring to aboil and pour over short ribs. Bring short ribs to a boil on top of the stove, then cover and bake until fork-tender, about 4 hours.

5 Onion Cavalo Nero:
Slowly sweat all onions and carrot in olive oil. Add raisins, sweat briefly. Add cabbage and cook slowly stirring frequently until cooked very soft. This will take a two hours.

 
CI agrees with you Melissa. Their recipe for Korean short ribs says to...

...wait until you can get short ribs with at least one inch of meat on the bone.

I rarely, if ever, see that in my market. I have to go to a butcher.

Michael

 
what is the souce of this recipe? would like to check on, a case of cabbage? black cabbage?

 
There are different ways the short rib is cut/sold

The ribs can be separated and cut into short lengths (typically about 2 inches long), called an "English cut", "flanken cut" across the bones (typically about 1/2 inch thick.
Short Ribs make an amazingly good stew, best cooked the day before serving.

 
Hmmm, I've never heard of Cavalo Nero. I just assumed that's what he

called the dish. And I sure didn't know Kale was in the cabbage family. The picture of it sure looks more like Kale or other greens. By reading this recipe I would have bought cabbage, not Cavalo Nero.

 
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