Chinese Pork Ribs with Plum Preserves

Chinese Pork Ribs with Plum Preserves

This winter has been super busy here at my Brooklyn studio. Since launching Plate & Pencil, and being busy teaching a ton of post-holiday classes, I've been pretty much sticking to simple nightly cooking routines. Roast chicken and salads. Spaghetti. Takeout. A Sunday of dumpling-making followed by 5 days of dumplings for dinner. I kept meaning to get back into the kitchen to develop a new recipe. And luckily, a few weeks ago, I got asked by Bonne Maman, one of my favorite jam companies, to develop a recipe with the National Pork Board to use one of their delicious jams and preserves with St. Louis-style pork ribs.

How could I say no to developing a recipe for sweet and savory ribs?

When I make Chinese-style roasted meats, there is usually a sweet element involved, whether in the form of honey, sugar, and/or hoisin sauce. So it wasn't a big departure to use plum preserves instead. The thick texture makes the preserves perfect for a marinade, and they whisk easily with other ingredients I have on hand.

bonne-maman-pork-ribs-700px.jpg

For this recipe, I used St. Louis-style pork ribs, which are basically just pork ribs with the sternum  bone, cartilage, and rib tips removed. Any good butcher can easily square off the rack of ribs for you. Though the name of the cut comes from St. Louis-style barbecue, it's also the cut most typically served in Chinese restaurants in the US. 

Chinese Pork Ribs with Plum Preserves

So...have these photos enticed you enough to try them yet? They are super easy with a great complex flavor of sweetness from the preserves, tartness from the vinegar, earthiness from the hoisin sauce, and lip-smacking savoriness from the soy sauce and pork itself. Not to mention roasted garlic aroma and flavor.  You simply cut the ribs apart before roasting, whisk together the marinade, wait a few hours, then roast in the for 45 to 50 minutes. St. Louis-style ribs are so incredibly versatile and easy to prepare that it's surprising more home cooks don't use them for more than barbecue.

Chinese Pork Ribs with Plum Preserves
ribs, pork ribs, Chinese, plum, jam
recipes
Chinese
Yield: 4
Author: Diana Kuan
Chinese Pork Ribs with Plum Preserves

Chinese Pork Ribs with Plum Preserves

These simple ribs are coated with a delicious sauce blend: sweetness from the preserves, tartness from the vinegar, earthiness from the hoisin sauce, and lip-smacking savoriness from the soy sauce and pork itself.
Prep time: 10 MinCook time: 50 MinInactive time: 2 HourTotal time: 3 Hour

Ingredients

  • 4 pounds St. Louis-style pork ribs
  • 6 cloves garlic, minced
  • 1/2 cup Bonne Maman plum jam
  • 1/2 cup soy sauce
  • 3 tablespoons rice vinegar
  • 2 tablespoons hoisin sauce

Instructions

  1. Prepare the marinade: in a large bowl, combine the minced garlic, plum jam, soy sauce, rice vinegar, and hoisin sauce. Whisky until smooth. Place the ribs in a gallon-size freezer bag and pour the marinade over the ribs. Close the bag and shake so that all the ribs get covered with marinade. Place the freezer bag in the fridge for at least 2 hours, or ideally overnight.
  2. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F. Line baking sheets with tin foil or parchment paper. Place the ribs on the lined baking sheets bone-side-down. Reserve the remaining marinade and brush some of it on top with a pastry brush. Roast for 45 to 50 minutes, brushing more marinade over the top of the ribs about halfway through. The ribs are done when they are golden brown on top and cooked through.
  3. Transfer the ribs to a large platter and serve. Enjoy!

Nutrition Facts

Calories

563.78

Fat (grams)

35.50

Sat. Fat (grams)

10.56

Carbs (grams)

34.14

Fiber (grams)

1.02

Net carbs

33.12

Sugar (grams)

21.76

Protein (grams)

26.98

Sodium (milligrams)

996.18

Cholesterol (grams)

119.31
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