• Skip to main content
  • Skip to header right navigation
  • Skip to site footer
Umami Days

Umami Days

Cooking in a house on a hill

  • Pick a meal
    • Breakfast
    • Lunch / Dinner
      • Appetizers
      • Salads
      • Soups
      • Main Courses
      • Side Dishes
      • Sweets
    • Snacks
  • Pick your protein
    • Chicken (and other birds)
    • Meat
    • Seafood
    • Eggs
    • Mushrooms
    • Tofu
  • Pick your carb
    • Rice & Grains
    • Noodles
    • Bread
  • Notes
    • Kitchen
    • Dining
    • Edible Garden
    • Food Tales
  • Recipes
    • By Meal
      • Breakfast
      • Lunch / Dinner
        • Appetizers
        • Salads
        • Soups
        • Main Courses
        • Side Dishes
        • Sweets
      • Snacks
    • By Main Protein
      • Chicken (and other birds)
      • Meat
      • Seafood
      • Eggs
      • Mushrooms
      • Tofu
    • By Carb
      • Rice & Grains
      • Noodles
      • Bread
  • Notes
    • Kitchen
    • Dining
    • Edible Garden
    • Food Tales
  • About
  • Privacy
  • Contact
You are here: Home / Meat / Pork ribs braised in beer

Pork ribs braised in beer

Cooking meat in wine is nothing new nor unusual. But cooking in beer? Ah, you have to try pork ribs braised in beer to believe the delicious results. You can make this dish with beef or chicken too.

Pork ribs cooked in beer sprinkled with parsley

Despite the name of the dish, there’s a bit more to cooking it than pouring beer into a pan, dropping in the ribs and waiting until the pork meat is tender.

It starts with seasoning, flouring and browning the pork ribs in a mixture of oil and butter. Butter, by itself, will burn too fast because of its low smoking point. That might be okay for sauteeing which requires a lower temperature. But we’re browning meat here and that requires that the stove be set on HIGH.

Since we want the flavor of butter but we don’t want it to burn, we mix it with oil to raise the smoking point. If you haven’t discovered the wonders of browning meat before braising or stewing, read about Maillard reaction, how it happens and why it adds a lovely richness to a dish.

Browned pork ribs in pan with beer and vegetables

The browned pork ribs are scooped out and in the remaining oil, the vegetables are sauteed with browned bits left from browning the pork. The beer is poured in and the bottom of the pan is scraped to loosen the browned bits so that they can swim freely, and later dissolve, into the cooking liquid. SO. MUCH. FLAVOR. And it is in that flavorful liquid that the pork ribs will cook slowly.

Thickening sauce with starch

Instead of serving the pork ribs in a bowl with the sauce, I served this dish with the sauce spooned over the meat. To prevent the sauce from looking and tasting like soup, I thickened it with a bit of corn starch dissolved in water. To make sure that the pork ribs don’t fall apart with the stirring, I moved them to a plate, very carefully, before pouring in the starch solution.

Beer-based sauce

With the sauce thick enough like gravy, a final touch to make the dish a real standout. Butter. Two tablespoons of butter are stirred in until fully incorporated. That’s the sauce spooned over the fork-tender pork ribs.

Pork Ribs Cooked in Beer

Connie Veneracion
A lovely cold-weather dish to enjoy. Floured pork ribs are browned in a mixture of oil and butter, then braised in beer with sauteed celery, carrot, onion, garlic, rosemary and thyme. The cooked meat is scooped out, the braising liquid is thickened with corn starch then spooned over the ribs.
Pork ribs cooked in beer served with its sauce over black rice
Print Pin
Prep Time 15 mins
Cook Time 1 hr 15 mins
Total Time 1 hr 30 mins
Course Main Course
Cuisine Fusion
Servings 4 people

Ingredients
  

  • 4 portions premium pork ribs - thick slices of pork chops will work too
  • salt
  • pepper
  • ¼ cup all-purpose flour
  • 2 tablespoons cooking oil
  • 4 tablespoons butter - divided
  • ⅓ cup chopped celery
  • ⅓ cup chopped carrot
  • ⅓ cup chopped onion
  • 2 cloves garlic - minced
  • 1 teaspoon dried rosemary
  • ¼ teaspoon dried thyme
  • 1 bottle Pale Pilsen - I used San Miguel (dark beer will yield even better results)
  • 1 teaspoon corn starch

Instructions
 

  • Pat the pork ribs dry with paper towels. Rub generously with salt and pepper. Toss with the flour until every inch is coated. Shake off any excess.
  • Heat the oil and half of the butter in a pan.
  • Brown the pork ribs on all sides. Scoop out and set aside.
  • In the remaining oil, saute the celery, carrot, onion, garlic, rosemary and thyme until the vegetables are softened.
  • Pour in the beer and scrape to loosen any browned bits sticking to the bottom and sides of the pan. Let boil for a minute. Stir in a little salt and pepper.
  • Arrange the browned pork ribs in the pan in a single layer.
  • Cover the pan, lower the heat and simmer the pork ribs for an hour or until fork tender.
  • Scoop out the pork ribs and transfer to a plate.
  • Stir the cornstarch in two tablespoons of water.
  • Pour half into the sauce and stir until the sauce is thickened and no longer cloudy. If the sauce is still too thin, pour in the rest of the cornstarch solution.
  • Add the remaning butter to the sauce. Stir until melted and incorporated. Taste the sauce one last time and add more salt and pepper, as needed.
  • To serve, arrange the pork ribs on a plate and spoon some of the sauce and vegetables over them. Optionally, sprinkle with snipped parsley.
Print Pin
Keyword Beer, Pork Ribs

Keep reading

Beef tongue tacos with mango salsa

Beef tongue tacos with spicy mango salsa

Beef shank and marrow stew

Beef shank and bone marrow stew

Thai-style dry curry garnished with chili slices and kaffir lime leaves

Thai-style dry beef curry

Char siu (Cantonese-style pork BBQ) served over rice

Char siu (Cantonese-style pork BBQ)

Filipino ground pork menudo with quail eggs

15-minute ground pork menudo and quail eggs rice bowl

Welsh cawl with lamb, carrot, potato and celery

Welsh cawl

Last updated on April 30, 2022 ♥ Meat, Lunch / Dinner, Main Courses

Previous Post: « Sandwich with chicken schnitzel, pastrami, bacon and cheese omelette filling Meat lover’s sandwich
Next Post: Campari orange cocktail Campari orange cocktail served with orange twists »

Sidebar

Connie Veneracion, Chiang Mai, 2020

Hi, I’m Connie!

Welcome to Umami Days, a blog that advocates innovative home cooking for pleasurable everyday dining. No trendy diets, no food fads and definitely no ludicrous recipe names like crustless quiche, noodleless pho or chocolate lasagna.

Read more →About
umamidays.com
  • About
  • Privacy
  • Contact

Umami Days is powered by Apple, Canon, coffee & crispy pork belly · Copyright © 2022 Connie Veneracion · All Rights Reserved