March 2010
S M T W T F S
« Feb    
 123456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28293031  

Search



Tags


Braised Country Ribs With Fermented Black Beans Recipe

January 15th, 2008 by alice  Tags: , , , , ,

INGREDIENTS

  1. 4pork ribs, cut in half crosswise(meaty, thick, and country style)
  2. flour(for dredging)
  3. 2tablespoonspeanut oil
  4. 1onion, sliced thinly
  5. 1inch cubefresh ginger, peeled and sliced thinly
  6. 5garlic cloves, peeled and sliced thinly
  7. 2 1/2tablespoonsfermented black beans, roughly chopped
  8. 1/2quartchicken brothor vegetable broth
  9. 1tablespoondark soy sauce
  10. 4mediumJapanese turnips, peeled and cut into chunks
  11. cornstarch, slurry
  12. 1scallion top, sliced thinly on the bias
  13. 1/4cupfresh cilantro, roughly chopped

DIRECTIONS

  1. Dredge ribs in flour, coating it thinly. Shake off excess.
  2. Heat oil in the bottom of pressure cooker or stovetop casserole or Dutch oven. When it is nearly smoking, add ribs in a single layer, and allow them to brown deeply on that side, then turn them, repeating until all sides are golden brown. Do this in several batches as needed–if you crowd the pot it will lower the temperature too much and will make it harder to get that nice golden crust.
  3. Remove the ribs and set them aside on a plate. Add onions to the pot, and stir, cooking until they turn a deep golden brown color. Add the ginger and chiles and continue cooking until onions are reddish brown. Add garlic and black beans and stir until fragrant.
  4. Deglaze the pot with water, scraping up any browned bits left on the bottom. Add ribs back to the pot and add the chicken broth and soy sauce.
  5. Bring to a boil. If using a pressure cooker, close lid, lock down and bring to full pressure. Turn down heat and cook at high pressure for about thirty minutes. If you are just using a regular pan, turn down the heat and cover the pot, and cook covered until the ribs are fork tender–it will probably take a couple of hours.
  6. When the ribs are done, uncover the pot or pressure cooker and add turnips. Cook, uncovered, until turnips are fully tender and the sauce has reduced slightly.
  7. Thicken sauce with cornstarch slurry, and remove meat and turnips to a heated serving bowl, with plenty of sauce. (As you pull the meat out of the pot, many of the bones will fall free–this is fine and to be expected. You can purposefully remove the bones before serving–this makes it a little easier to pick up chunks of pork with chopsticks, though in truth most of the Chinese folks I know like to nibble on the bones of ribs and spareribs, so you can leave them, too.).
  8. Just before serving, sprinkle with scallion tops and cilantro.
  • Share/Bookmark

Posted in Recipes | No Comments »


Leave a Comment

Please note: Comment moderation is enabled and may delay your comment. There is no need to resubmit your comment.