Mexican pork ribs. Chili. Tomato. Spice. Creamy cheese grits. It comes together beautifully on the plate. A deeply flavoured, mildly spicy sauce blends with the creaminess of the grits. Meltingly tender pork ribs add a touch of richness. This dish takes Mexican cooking into fine dining territory.

The key is slow roasting back ribs in the oven before a quick braise to enrich the sauce. The slow roasting browns the ribs and contributes the always important Maillard flavour compounds (those flavours you can only get by browning your meat). With any other meat you can brown in the pot but back ribs are curved. You can’t brown them evenly.

Nice thing about this dish is you can cook the ribs ahead and be ready for a dinner party. You can prep the sauce as well. When you are ready to serve you can simply warm the sauce then add the ribs to simmer for 20-25 minutes to let it all come together while you make the grits. Takes some of the pressure off…

Braised baby backs a la Mexicana with cheese grits. - 1

Credit goes to the kitchn.com for the idea to cook the back ribs initially. A solid cookie sheet and a bakers rack lets air circulate around the ribs, promoting browning.

The cheese grits are really cheese polenta. You can’t get grits up where I live. But the fine ground cornmeal works well here. You are going for rich, smooth and creamy. No grit needed.

Melting pork back ribs, fire roasted tomatoes and cheese polenta come together in this fine dining riff on Mexican pork chili. - 2 Melting pork back ribs, fire roasted tomatoes and cheese polenta come together in this fine dining riff on Mexican pork chili. - 3 Melting pork back ribs, fire roasted tomatoes and cheese polenta come together in this fine dining riff on Mexican pork chili. - 4

mexican pork ribs with creamy cheese grits

Ingredients

The ribs

  • 1 3 lb rack meaty pork back ribs
  • 2 Tbsp pure chili powder
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 1/2 tsp cumin
  • 1/2 tsp granulated garlic
  • 1/2 tsp granulated onion

The sauce

  • 1 onion diced
  • 2 cloves garlic minced
  • 1 15 oz can fire roasted diced tomatoes
  • 1 tsp pure chili powder
  • 1/2 tsp cumin
  • 1/2 tsp Mexican oregano
  • 2 Tbsp vegetable oil
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 1/2 cup fresh cilantro chopped

Instructions

The ribs

  • Pre-heat your oven to 300F
  • Mix pure chili powder, cumin, granulated garlic, granulated onion and salt. This is your dry rub.
  • Remove silver skin from the rib side of the ribs. Insert a knife between the membrane and the rib and lift. Get your fingers under the skin and pull. This is easy sometimes and thoroughly annoying other times. I’ve never been able to figure out why.
  • Thoroughly coat the ribs with the dry rub.
  • Place ribs on a rack on the cookie sheet, place in oven and slow roast until they reach an internal temperature of about 185F. This can take up to 2 1/2 hours depending on the rack. Measure temperature in the thick parts and between the ribs. Don’t let the probe touch bone. That will mess up the reading.
  • While the ribs are cooking prep the sauce.

The sauce

  • Add oil to a pan and heat over medium low.
  • Add the onion, chili powder, cumin, Mexican oregano and salt and cook until the onions are translucent.
  • Add the garlic and cook another 30 seconds.
  • Add tomatoes and a splash of chicken stock and simmer around 30-45 minutes, taking care not to let the pot boil dry.
  • When the ribs have reached 185F or so remove from oven and let cool slightly.
  • Slice into individual ribs and add to the tomato sauce. Add the cilantro. Simmer ribs in sauce for about 20-30 minutes.

Notes

Melting pork back ribs, fire roasted tomatoes and cheese polenta come together in this fine dining riff on Mexican pork chili. - 5

creamy cheese grits

Ingredients

  • 4 cups chicken stock
  • 1 cup cornmeal
  • 1 1/2 tsp salt
  • 4 Tbsp butter
  • 4 Tbsp heavy cream
  • 4 oz grated old cheddar

Instructions

  • Add salt to the chicken stock and bring to a boil. Reduce heat to low.
  • Add cornmeal gradually, stirring to incorporate each time before adding more.
  • Cook, covered, stirring every 3-4 minutes for 20 minutes or until creamy.
  • Remove from heat and stir in butter and cream.
  • Add cheddar while stirring and serve immediately

Notes

I love a good prime rib roast. You know – deeply brown and crispy on the outside. Perfectly cooked the whole way through. No sign of grey meat. That’s the dream. Reverse sear prime rib makes that dream a reality.

It’s the exact same as reverse sear steaks but on a bigger scale. A grander scale. And this is how you do it. This is the Serious Eats prime rib recipe. If you want more details that’s where you’ll find them.

A few simple steps

There’s a few steps involved to reverse sear prime rib. First, unwrap your prime rib and let it air dry for a day or two in the fridge. Just make sure you don’t bump other things into it and you’ll be fine.

Then cook it low and slow in a 225F oven. This takes time but it is time well spent. It took almost 3 hours for a 2 rib roast. For a big one plan on 4 or more hours.

Pull it from the oven when the internal temperature hits 125F. Let it rest for 30 to 60 minutes. Crank your oven to as high as it will go – like 500F – and let it pre-heat.

Return the rested prime rib to the oven and blast it for 10-12 minutes to crisp up and really brown. Done. Perfectly done.

Reverse sear prime rib for perfectly cooked beef every time. - 6 Reverse sear prime rib for perfectly cooked beef every time. - 7