You can take GRITS out of the South, but you can never take the South out of GRITS. We GRITS (Girls Raised In The South) seem to recognize each other instantly anywhere in the world, and more than likely, it won’t take long before we’re commiserating over the things we miss from down home. Magnolias, warm summer rainstorms, and the food. Oh, the food.
It’s been more than thirty years since I left Alabama, but I still dream about those long, lazy meals after church on Sunday, the one day of the week we went out to eat. More often than not the menu included country fried steak, a mystery to anyone who is uninitiated. To be honest, I probably haven’t eaten that dish in the intervening years because it can be so hard to make it just right.
Now, after trying Chris Shepherd’s succulent ribs, I may never think about that steak again. Shepherd takes braised short ribs (a glorious thing in their own right), coats them in seasoned flour, and fries them up in a pan. I’m telling you right now, go make these. Do the braising a day ahead and let the flavors develop. Really, they’re a sensation. Heck y’all, you could even do something outrageous and serve them with a side of grits. You’ll thank me, yes indeed, you will.
— Mona Helen
At Underbelly in Houston, James Beard award-winning chef Chris Shepherd and his full-time butcher go to work on an entire cow every single week. Which means that they have to find creative uses for each part of the animal—including the ribs, which carry a whole lot of meat. “One day, we had ribs left over,” Shepherd says, “and we said, ‘Let’s just braise and fry these damn things. It’ll be delicious!’” Indeed they were. In a state where diners take chicken-fried steak very seriously, these ribs are a nod to tradition, but with more beef flavor than the customary eye of round. “It’s chicken-fried steak, but it’s also not,” Shepherd says. “When you bite into it, it’s meaty, tender, and thick.”
The Southerner’s Cookbook
Recipes, Wisdom, and Stories
From the editors of Garden & Gun
Photography by Peter Frank Edwards
Harper Wave
- 8 beef short ribs
- Kosher salt and freshly
- ground black pepper
- 4 tablespoons olive oil
- 6 cups beef stock
- ½ bottle dry red wine (about 2 cups)
- 10 garlic cloves
- 1 carrot, cut into quarters
- 1 white onion, cut into quarters
- 4 stalks celery, cut into large pieces
- 1 cup all-purpose flour
- 1 tablespoon plus 1 teaspoon kosher salt
- 1 tablespoon freshly ground black pepper
- 1 teaspoon paprika
- 2 large eggs
- ¼ cup whole milk
- Peanut oil for frying
- Preheat the oven to 325˚F.
- Season the short ribs generously with salt and pepper. Place a large cast-iron skillet over high heat and add the oil. Sear the ribs for 1 to 2 minutes per side, working in batches if necessary to prevent crowding.
- Place the ribs in a deep pan and add the stock, wine, garlic, carrot, onion, and celery. Make sure the ribs are submerged in the liquid, then cover with foil and braise in the oven for 6 hours, carefully turning them in the liquid halfway through cooking (you want the braised meat to stay attached to the rib bone if possible). Carefully remove the ribs to a plate, cool to room temperature, then refrigerate. The ribs can be braised and cooled the day before frying. (Strain and save the stock for another use—it makes delicious gravy.)
- Combine all the seasoned flour ingredients in a large bowl. In a separate bowl, whisk together the eggs and milk to make an egg wash. Dredge the cooled ribs in the seasoned flour, then dip them in the egg wash and dredge again.
- Pour 1⁄2 inch of oil into a Dutch oven or a large, deep-sided cast-iron skillet and clip a frying thermometer to side of the pan. Bring the oil to 325 to 350˚F over medium-high heat (the temperature will drop when the ribs are added, so you want to make sure to regulate the heat to maintain a temperature right around 325 to 350˚F as you fry). Working in batches, shake off excess flour and carefully add the ribs to the pan, adjusting the heat as needed to ensure the oil maintains an even temperature. Fry each side for 2 to 3 minutes, until golden brown. Drain on a paper towel–lined plate and serve.
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