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Pork Ribs
Pork Ribs
Full product description
Sticky, tender and made for sharing—pork ribs love a gentle, unhurried cook. Rub them, roast or BBQ low and slow until the meat relaxes and the bones start to peek, then glaze and give them a hot blast for deep caramelisation. Whether you prefer a classic smoky finish or sweet–spicy heat, the result is the same: finger-licking ribs with a glossy, sticky bark and juicy meat.
Why you’ll love it
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Meaty racks that turn meltingly tender with time
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Low-and-slow friendly: oven, BBQ/smoker, slow cooker or pressure cooker
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Finish sticky and caramelised with your favourite glaze
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Crowd-pleaser for weekends, game days and family feasts
Cut details
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From the rib section of the pig: may be spare ribs/St. Louis (from the belly) or baby back/loin ribs (from nearer the spine), depending on batch
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Supplied as whole racks or cut sections; membrane may be present (remove for softer bite)
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Fresh, never previously frozen (unless stated on pack)
How to cook (quick guide)
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Prep: Pat dry. Remove the thin membrane from the bone side (optional but recommended). Rub generously with salt, pepper and your favourite spices.
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Oven (low & slow): Wrap or cover and cook at 150–160°C (fan 130–140°C)
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Baby back: 1¾–2½ hours
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Spare/St. Louis: 2½–3½ hours
Uncover, brush with glaze and return to a hot oven 10–15 mins to set and caramelise.
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BBQ/Smoker: 110–135°C indirect heat until probe-tender and bones just start to show (typ. 3–5 hours by cut/size). Glaze, then finish over higher heat for colour.
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Slow cooker (speedy): Low 6–8 hours (or High 4–5). Chill briefly to firm, then glaze and blast under a hot grill/BBQ 5–10 mins.
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Pressure cooker: 20–35 mins at pressure (cut type dependent), natural release; glaze and finish hot for bark.
Doneness cues: Meat pulls back from the bones, a skewer slides in easily, and ribs bend without cracking. Serve piping hot throughout.
Serving ideas
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Classic BBQ: smoky rub, sweet glaze, slaw and pickles
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Honey–chilli with sesame and spring onions over rice
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Garlic & herb with lemon and a green salad
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Sticky Asian-style: soy, ginger and a touch of hoisin
Storage & handling
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Keep refrigerated below 5°C
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Once opened, cook within 1 day
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Suitable for home freezing on day of purchase; defrost in the fridge and cook within 24 hours
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Do not refreeze once defrosted
FAQs
Baby back or spare ribs—what’s the difference?
Baby back are shorter, leaner and cook a bit faster; spare/St. Louis are meatier with more fat and bigger flavour.
Do I have to remove the membrane?
Optional, but removing gives a softer bite and helps rubs penetrate.
Wrap or not?
Wrapping (foil/butcher paper) speeds tenderising and keeps moisture in; unwrap to set the glaze and build bark.
How many racks do I need?
Allow roughly ½–1 rack per adult depending on cut, size and sides.