Beef Spare Rib Stew
Hearty and wholesome meal.
“Spare ribs $4 a kilo” yelled the butcher eager to call it a day and go home. After all, it was already 1pm!
The meat did look very fresh indeed and I knew I had a good deal so I bought 2 kilos. After the bargained purhased, I realised that these are BBQ Beef Spare Ribs (which can be tough) and I’ve never cooked beef spare ribs before. There’s a no open fire BBQ policy at the apartment where we stay so BBQ is out of the culinary equation. What am I going to do with these beautiful ribs that I had acquired out of greed for a discount?
When I got home and rummaged through our kitchen; I found these vegetables in the fridge and some spices in the pantry. I said to myself, “yeah, a beef spare ribs stew. I can risk $8 developing a beef stew recipe for my in-house cookbook”.
Ingredients: 2kg beef spareribs, 7 carrots, 1 red onion, 2 tomato and 9 potatoes, ¼ Cabbage, optional. Amount of vegetables are adjustable to your own preferences (I had these numbers coz they were what’s in my fridge at that time). Spices: 3 bay leaves, 3 star anise, 1 tsp black peppercorns, 1 stick cinnamon, 1 tsp cayenne pepper, 1 tsp sweet paprika, ½ tsp 5-spice powder, 2 tbs BBQ sauce, 5 tbs tomato puree or ketchup, 50g fried shallots (small onions). Seasoning: pinch of salt when cooking and light soy sauce to taste, for final adjustment after meat is tender. Enough oil (ghee) to form a layer in the pot to brown the ribs.
Scald the spare ribs in boiling water and immerse the meat for a few minutes till the raw meat colour change to this. Rinse well and pat dry with kitchen towels.
Pour some oil (I used ghee) in a stockpot, enough to create a layer on the bottom, on very high heat. Place ribs to seal in the juices. Use tongs to turn meat over. Let meat brown a little, even slightly charred. This is the right colour.
When meat is browned, push them aside and put in the spices and onions. Stir-fry till the onions are translucent.
Add boiling water till meat is completely covered and more (about 2 litres), bring to a fast boil. Add diced tomato, tomato paste or ketchup, cayenne pepper, sweet paprika, coarse ground black pepper, dash of five spice powder and a pinch of salt. Add a handful of fried shallots. Cover the pot with lid and simmer on medium low heat till meat is half cooked (about an hour or more, depends on meat). Add carrots. When meat is ¾ cooked, add in the potatoes.
Simmer till potatoes and beef spare ribs are tender.
Adjust seasoning. If not salty enough, add salt or light soy sauce (I used light soy here as it lends a certain sweetness to the dish since we did not use any sugar in this recipe). My sauce turned out well so I did not need to thicken it with cornstarch.
My first attempt at beef spare ribs stew turned out great! I’ve cooked several times since 🙂
Ingredients:
2kg Beef Spareribs.
7 Carrots.
1 big Red onion.
2 Tomatoes.
9 Potatoes.
¼Cabbage, optional.
Amount of vegetables are adjustable to your own preferences (I had these numbers coz they were what’s in my fridge at that time).
Spices:
3 Bay Leaves.
3 Star Anise.
1 teaspoon Black Peppercorns.
1 stick Cinnamon.
1 teaspoon Cayenne Pepper.
1 teaspoon Sweet Paprika.
½ teaspoon 5-spice powder.
2 tablespoons BBQ sauce (MasterFoods).
5 tablespoons Tomato Puree or Ketchup.
50g Fried Shallots (small onions).
Seasoning:
pinch of Salt when cooking and
Light Soy Sauce to taste, for final adjustment after meat is tender.
Enough oil (ghee) to form a layer in the pot to brown the ribs.
Tip: Sticking a Chinese porcelain spoon is one trick to maintain the heat in the pot when simmering the tough meat on low flames and to shorten stewing time.
The stew tastes better if you have it sit in the pot covered for 15 minutes after cooking before serving.
Taste great overnight – add a little water to the stew and simmer till heated through and gravy is of thick.
If you want to prepare this in advance, cooked till just done, let cool completely then refrigerate/freeze. Defrost and continue cooking over stove or in oven till done.
Substitute ribs for oxtail or do half and half.
Happy stewing 🙂
No matter when I look at your blog, I get this gnawing in my stomach to cook. It all looks good.
Yisraela
Glad you enjoyed the stew (with your eyes)! Thanks for your kind comments and visit, Yisreala 😀
i miss this!!!
We’ll cooked this soon darling 😀