Beef short ribs are the absolute best cut of beef for slow cooking! The most tender and succulent fall apart beef you will ever have, you’d pay top dollar at fine dining restaurants for a plate of these Braised Beef Short Ribs.
Cooked long and slow in a rich red wine sauce, these beef ribs are easy enough for midweek, and most definitely impressive enough for company. (And after you’d tried these, try the BBQ Beef Ribs next!)
Braised Beef Short Ribs – easy and luscious!
It looks like a lump of coal. Or, as one RecipeTin Family member said, hot chocolate fudge cake. 😩
Photograph challenges aside, this is one of the most luscious slow cooked recipes that I know. The sort of food you will find at fine dining restaurants and quality steakhouses (albeit served alot more elegantly than the “rustic” approach I take 😂).
They’ll charge you top dollar for a single plate of Beef Short Ribs when you can make it at home for a fraction of the cost – and it’s very straight forward.
The red wine sauce in this recipe is amazing. The depth of flavour and the richness you can achieve with so few ingredients is incredible!
Introducing – Beef Short Ribs
But before we dive into how to make it, I just want to show you beef short ribs because it’s a cut of beef that’s not as widely known as others.
Beef Short Ribs are the beef equivalent of pork ribs – but way meatier. They’re called “short ribs” in reference to the part of the cow they are taken from, not because they are “short” (though they certainly are far shorter than full length beef ribs!).
What are beef short ribs used for?
Beef short ribs are a prized cut for slow cooking. Cooking them slowly breaks down the tough connective tissues and the meat becomes fall apart tender. And because they are beautifully marbled with fat, they are more succulent and juicy than other slow cooking cuts of beef such as chuck and brisket.
In Asian cuisine, beef short ribs are sliced thinly so they can be cooked quickly rather than long and slow. Korean beef ribs is a popular example – – marinated thinly sliced beef rib meat cooked on tabletop grills. Any fans of Korean BBQ here? 🙂
Beef short ribs are usually cut into rectangle blocks, as pictured, though sometimes they are more square depending on the width of the bone.
They are also sometimes sold as a rack rather than pre cut individual pieces. In that situation, just cut between the bones to make individual beef short ribs.
How to make Braised Beef Short Ribs with Red Wine Sauce
1. Brown – As with most slow cooked dishes like Beef Stew and Pot Roast, we start by aggressively browning the beef short ribs. This is where we get a ton of flavour on both the beef and in the sauce (from the brown stuff – fond – left on the base of the pot).
2. Soffrito – After that, we slowly sauté garlic, onion, carrot and celery. The longer you take here, the better the flavour base! This is called a soffrito.
Then add tomato paste (to thicken the sauce + a touch of sour) and cook that off for a bit to take the raw edge off.
3. Braising liquid – then add the beef broth/stock, red wine, thyme (optional) and bay leaves (essential).
4. Add ribs – Carefully return the ribs into the pot. Arrange them so they are fully submerged as best you can. If some bits stick out, don’t worry – they will cook just fine too, and the steam keeps those bits nice and juicy.
5. Slow cook – Plonk the lid on and then either slow cook in the oven (my favourite), stove, slow cooker or pressure cooker!
6. After cooking – The liquid will be reduced and the meat should be extremely tender. Check with two forks to ensure it is fall apart. Then carefully remove using a slotted spoon, keeping the meat as attached to the bone as you can (but it will not be attached because if the meat is fall apart, this means the ligaments holding the meat to the bone must be melted).
7. Strain the sauce & adjust – this is optional, to take out the chunks and make the sauce super smooth and glossy, like you get at fine dining restaurants. Strain it back into the pot, then reduce to thicken if needed, and adjust the salt and pepper
8. Transfer ribs onto serving plates, spoon over sauce and serve!
Cheap or expensive wine?
I do not use expensive wines for SLOW cooking. I do not believe you can tell the difference if you made this with a discount end-of-bin $5 bottle or a $50 bottle – and the New York Times agrees…. 🙂
Maybe you could tell the difference using a $100 bottle. But that’s not within my budget!
Non alcoholic sub?
Added to the notes – involves a combination of water, Worcestershire sauce and a bit more beef broth. 🙂
How long does it take to braise beef short ribs?
The time it takes for the beef to become fall apart tender varies depending on what cooking method you use:
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Oven – 3 hours at 160C/325F
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Stove – 2.5 hours
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Pressure Cooker – 1 hour on high
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Slow cooker – 8 hours on low, 5 hours on high
My favourite method is to braise using the oven because you get extra flavour from the beef and surface of the sauce caramelising in the oven, even though it’s cooked covered the whole time.
You’ll see in the video when I take the lid off after it comes out of the oven – it looks like a big pot with lumps of coal swimming in a pool of tar that is impossible to photograph nicely.😩
As unattractive as it might look, it’s a big pot of serious deliciousness. Just touch it with a fork, and THIS is what you see ↓↓↓
That’s my dinner right there. Literally my dinner – I made it this afternoon and I’m eating it tonight. Can’t wait!! – Nagi x
Slow Braised Beef Short Ribs
Watch how to make it
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Braised Beef Short Ribs in Red Wine Sauce
Ingredients
- 5 - 6 beef short ribs , 300-400g/10-14oz each (Note 1)
- 1.5 tsp each salt and pepper
- 2 tbsp olive oil
- 3 garlic cloves , crushed
- 1 large onion , chopped (brown, yellow or white)
- 2 celery ribs , chopped
- 2 carrots , chopped
- 2 tbsp tomato paste
- 2 cups (500ml) dry red wine (Note 2)
- 2 cups (500ml) beef stock/broth, low sodium
- 2 sprigs thyme (optional)
- 2 bay leaves
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 160°C/325°F.
- Sprinkle beef all over with salt and pepper.
- Heat oil in a large ovenproof pot over high heat. Add half the ribs and brown aggressively all over (~5 - 7 min in total). Remove and repeat with remaining ribs, then remove.
- Turn heat down to medium. Add onion and garlic into the same pot and cook for 2 minutes.
- Add carrot and celery, cook for 5 minutes until carrot is softened and sweet.
- Add tomato paste and cook for 1 minute.
- Add wine, broth, thyme and bay leaves. Stir until tomato paste is dissolved.
- Return beef into liquid, arranging them so they are submerged (Note 3).
- Cover with lid and transfer to oven for 3 hours, or until the meat can easily be pried apart with forks. (Note 4 Other cook methods)
- Remove beef carefully, keeping the meat on the bone. (Note 4) Cover to keep warm.
- Strain all liquid in the pot, pressing juices out of the onion, carrot etc. (Optional - can skip if you don't mind chunky sauce) Return sauce into pot, bring to simmer and stir. Adjust as necessary - simmer to reduce/thicken, add water to thin, season with salt and pepper if needed.
- Place beef on serving plate, spoon over sauce. Serve!
Recipe Notes:
- Stove - 2.5 hours on low simmer, lid on
- Slow cooker - 8 hours on low, 5 hours on high. Sear beef and sauté vegetables in a skillet, add the liquid, bring to simmer then tip it all into a slow cooker. When beef is fork tender, strain liquid into a large skillet and simmer liquid rapidly for 10 minutes or until it reduces down to a syrup consistency. Optional: spray beef lightly with oil and grill/broil on high for 5 minutes to brown.
- Pressure cooker - 1 hour on high, follow slow cooker directions above. Depressurise naturally for 10 minutes, then release valve.
- Instant Pot - Follow slow cooker directions above but do the searing in your Instant Pot. Cook using slow cooker or pressure cooker function using above times.
- Sauce: reduces by half so should be thickened to syrup consistency. If not, simmer on stove for a bit.
- Sauce excess fat: If the sauce is too fatty for your taste, pour it into a jug and leave for a bit so the fat rises to the surface, then scoop it off.
- Bone attachment: In order for the meat to be fork tender, it needs to be cooked far enough so that the connective tissue holding the meat to the bone becomes tender. So the meat is not really attached. But if you handle it carefully, it stays together.
- Remove bone: At some fine dining restaurants, beef short ribs are served without the bone. The bone is removed, the fatty bit on the underside of the meat that was attached to the bone is cut off and the meat is served by itself. It looks quite posh! 6. Nutrition assumes all sauce is consumed which it probably will not be. Does not take into account any fat discarded from sauce.
Nutrition Information:
More slow cooked fall-apart meat
I’m a big fan of slow cooked meats!!
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BBQ Beef Ribs – slow cooked ribs in a sticky sweet BBQ sauce!
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Osso Buco – traditional Italian slow cooked veal
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Browse the Winter Comfort Food collection!
Life of Dozer
I returned home from grocery shopping to howling coming from the bedroom – the wind had slammed the door shut and trapped him in there (for a whole 30 minutes, max).
He was very relieved to be rescued – upon which I promptly shoved him back in there to re-enact it for this photo 😂
Marlene says
Hi Nagi
I know you are involved with your new cookbook.
But I miss reading your e-mails. Please let us know when we will hear from you.
Jenny says
Oh wow, absolutely delicious- and not too rich. I served on a bed of mash with peas and left the sauce chunky.
elizabeth shiell says
Too fatty. Flavour was ok.not as intense as I would like
Sarina Rommedahl Rudzik says
Fantastic short ribs! The red wine is a must. I have also made your Yukgaejang soup and bibimbap. All your recipes are AMAZING! Thank you so much.
Nagi says
I am happy you enjoyed them Sarina! N x
kate says
Another winner! This recipe was SO easy I can’t believe I haven’t tried it before. I made mine in the oven after searing the meat on the cooktop. The only changes I made were adding the garlic last (after the rest of the veg were sauteed) because I tend to burn it, and I pureed the sauce at the end instead of straining it. The sauce wasn’t as pretty but it thickened it up nicely. I had boneless short ribs that I bought on sale, they worked great in this recipe!
Fi says
Hi, did you puree the carrots and celery etc? I was thinking of doing the same but worried about losing that deep dark glossy look. Maybe I’ll add a little dark chocolate to it once puréed.
kate says
I pureed everything with a stick blender, but you could use a regular blender. You will not have the dark glossy look if you do this. I don’t think chocolate would help. I’d try Kitchen Bouquet for darkening the color, it doesn’t have much flavor. Even then, it won’t be glossy, just darker.
Kitchen Bouquet Ingredients: Caramel Color (Sulfites), Water, Vegetable Base (Water, Carrots, Celery, Cabbage, Onion, Parsley, Turnips, Parsnips), Less Than 2% Of: Spices, Salt, Sodium Benzoate Added to Preserve Freshness.
kate says
Posting again because I forgot to rate it in my first comment 🙂
BD says
I would not use a wine I would not drink a cheap wine gives one a cheaper finish. If you cant taste the difference then don’t cook with wine.
Heat says
I used cheap wine and my sauce was absolutely gorgeous and achieved the flavor and beautiful texture of any top rated restuarant, if not better… you don’t really think restaurants are cooking with the likes of Meiomi, do you?
Nagi says
I’ve used inexpensive bin ends wine from my local Dan Murphy’s with great success in this and other recipes – maybe my palate just isn’t that refined 😂🍷!! N x
James Fahy says
Agreed. I used the cheapest Merlot and it was delicious.
Dave says
Very good as usual. I frequently use your site as a reference. Tonight Char Siu predominantly using your recipe and later in the week will be using velveting technique for some Chinese style beef 👍
Owen Jenkins says
I used your recipe for our Sunday dinner and it was delicious, I did not strain the sauce afterwards as it seems a waste to throw the veg away.
I also like the various cooking methods and times that you gave.
Thank you
Nici says
SUPER delicious. I love so many of your recipes but always forget to comment. I added 2 tsp dried oregano and 2 tap dried Italian seasoning.
Paige says
I have a .744kg package of short ribs (bone in), should I double my sauce?
Togue Brawn says
This was delicious. I added some dried mushrooms I’d foraged this past summer but even without them it would have been great. I didn’t need to strain off the sauce either – I just absorbed a little of the fat from the top with paper towels and reduced it a bit. It was lovely!
Rio says
I was scrambling to find a good recipe and stumbled upon your recipe & I’m so glad I did. Truly delicious! Thank you
Enzo Cuglietta says
Wonderful Recipe, I’ve made this 3 times already and wouldn’t change a thing! Pairs beautifully with a mushroom risotto
Cody says
Any changes to make if using boneless?
Nagi says
See Note 1, Cody, for how to tell it’s ready using other cuts of beef! N x
Char says
Hi Nagi… I made this recipe and it was great! Very delicious. Can we also make this with lamb?
Momo says
10/10 this was soooo good. I halved the recipe and made it in my slow cooker, making this a perfect week night dinner for two if you have a couple sides. I wish I could add a photo to show it off because it was actually beautiful despite what the recipe intro says hehe. Thank you for sharing it! Might be my favorite slow cooker recipe ever.
Jonny Vick says
Absolutely beautifully full of flavor recipe. Very easy to follow and assemble. Wife said this is an absolute meal o be had again. I did add mushrooms to the gravy, worth a try.
Laura Dickens says
Amazing! Like, seriously amazing! I absolutely love your recipes … this recipe makes one of the BEST dishes I have ever had. It beats any short rib recipe at any restaurant. The key is the browning process. If you don’t have a Dutch oven, invest in one. It makes all the difference! The sauce that goes along with the short ribs is unbelievable! I highly recommend this recipe! Thank you Nagi for another AMAZING recipe.
Jim says
Made this tonight. Quick and easy prep. I look forward to short ribs for winter dinner and this didn’t disappoint. Plenty of sauce even after reducing.
Cj Villanueva says
If I could have a meal prepared by ANY chef in the world, I know hands down I would choose Nagi. As for the dish itself, I would ask for whatever she’s in the mood to make.
Every.single.recipe I’ve used from this site is incredibly delicious! Thanks for the great meals, Nagi! My family and I appreciate you!!!
Nagi says
I appreciate you taking time to write that!! You made my day!! 😊 N x