Skip to main content

No-Grill Lemongrass and Soy Ribs

3.0

(1)

ribs with greens and limes on white plate with large serving spoons and forks on linen background
Photograph by Joe Lingeman, food styling by Pearl Jones, prop styling by JoJo Li

If you’re used to cooking slabs of ribs that need a few hours of slow-cooking to render them tender and delicious, try these baby back ribs instead. Cut between the bones into individual strips, baby back ribs pick up lots of flavor and cook (relatively) quickly on the stovetop. Blended to a paste, shallots and lemongrass provide body and flavor, clinging to the meat as they reduce into an aromatic sauce. As a reminder, baby back ribs are not from, um, baby pigs. (It just has to be said!) They’re called as such simply because they come from the top section of the ribs, closer to the backbone, and are smaller in size compared with spareribs or St. Louis–style ribs.

What you’ll need

Read More
This fast stir-fry dish pairs minced pork and fragrant basil with hot Thai chiles and a crispy fried egg.
We reimagined pork dumplings as a filling for juicy stuffed tomatoes.
Braise tender pork belly in soy and vinegar, then grill with shishito peppers and toss with ginger and a tangy dressing for bold, savory Filipino dinakdakan.
A steak dinner that’s more about the sauce than the meat.
A homemade black bean sauce is better than anything you can find in the grocery store. Plus, the 15-minute dinner you can make with it.
Bone-in, skin-on chicken legs glossed in a sticky honey mustard glaze strike the perfect balance of tangy, sweet, and delightfully savory.
Juicy ground chicken and charred cabbage are the stars of this family-friendly meal.
Store-bought dumplings, fresh tomatoes, butter, and soy sauce simmer away for dinner in a flash.