Smoked Sous-Vide-Que Ribs with Rosemary Red Wine Sauce

Anova Culinary

With this recipe, the beef rib’s fat and connective tissue slowly break down in a controlled temperature water bath (the sous vide) before the rack soaks up some flavorful smoke on a smoker or grill. https://amazingribs.com/tested-recipes/beef-and-bison-recipes/sous-vide-que-beef-ribs-rosemary-red-wine-sauce-recipe

Author

Lucas Trout

Prep Time: 02:00

Recipe Time: 36:00

Temperature : 150F / 65.6C

Ingredients

Directions

  1. Set your Anova Sous Vide Precision Cooker to 150.0ºF / 65.6ºC.
  2. Prep. Season the ribs with Kosher salt. If you can, give the salt 1 to 2 hours to be absorbed. The process of salting in advance is called dry brining. The rule of thumb is 1/2 teaspoon of kosher salt per pound of meat, but ribs are about 50% meat, so use about 1/4 teaspoon per pound. You can simply eyeball it by sprinkling on the same amount of salt you would sprinkle on the ribs if they were served to you unsalted.
  3. Prepare a sous vide immersion circulator according to instructions and set water temperature for 150°F.
  4. Combine pepper, onion powder, and garlic powder in a small bowl and blend well. Season both sides of the rack of beef ribs with the dry rub mixture.
  5. Cut the rack of ribs into two sections and place each section into a separate sealable freezer bag. Carefully submerge the freezer bags in the water bath until most of the air has been removed and then seal. Once the bags are submerged, cook for 36 hours.
  6. Optional: finish the ribs later, remove the bags from the sous vide bath after 36 hours, and submerge them in a large container filled with a 50/50 mix of ice and water for at least 30 minutes to chill the meat’s core temperature. Place the ribs in the refrigerator until ready to grill (up to 2 days ahead of time).
  7. Fire up. Prepare a grill for 2-zone cooking. On a charcoal grill, place a chimney full of pre-heated charcoal briquets on one side of the grill's charcoal grate in order to create direct and indirect cooking zones. Adjust the grill vents to bring the temperature to about 225°F. Add 2 to 3 chunks of your favorite smoking wood to the charcoal for flavor. On a gas grill, adjust the temperature knobs so that one half of the grill is off and the other half is heated enough to maintain a temperature of approximately 225°F on the indirect side.
  8. Cook. Once the grill is ready, remove the ribs from the bags, reserving the remaining liquid in the bag to make a sauce. Place the ribs in the indirect zone on the main cooking grate as far from the heat source as possible. Set the lid on the grill with the fully opened top vent positioned directly above the ribs in order to force the smoke over and around the meat. Allow the ribs to smoke until they reach an internal temperature of 205°F, about 30 minutes.
  9. During the last 15 minutes of the smoking process, strain the liquid from the sous vide bags through a fine mesh strainer into a small saucepan or skillet to remove solids. Bring to a simmer over medium-low heat, add the red wine and fresh herbs, and let the sauce continue to simmer until reduced in volume by about half, approximately 10 minutes. Whisk in the butter until it butter completely melts and the sauce thickens, about a minute. Season the sauce with salt and pepper and reduce the heat to low to keep the sauce warm as you prepare the ribs.
  10. Serve. Remove the ribs from the grill, slice, and serve immediately with the sauce.

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