Pressure Cooker / Instant Pot Short Ribs
Instant Pot Bone-In Beef Short Ribs are fall-off-the-bone tender, coated in a flavorful, smoky-sweet sauce, and ready in a fraction of the time when you cook them in your pressure cooker.
Short ribs are one of my go-to fancy meals. They have a rich, fabulous flavor that will impress your guests, but my favorite traditional oven-baked beef short ribs take two days to make.
This pressure cooker beef short rib recipe has the same rich flavor, but calls for just 40 minutes at High Pressure.
Plus, you can make it the day before and warm it up in your pressure cooker just prior to serving! (I actually think it tastes better this way!)
How to Make This Instant Pot Short Rib Recipe in Any Brand of Electric Pressure Cooker
This Beef Short Rib Instant Pot recipe will work in any brand of electric pressure cooker, including the Instant Pot, Ninja Foodi, or Power Pressure Cooker XL.
I love this recipe because I generally have most of the ingredients on hand.
- In my fridge, I keep a tube of tomato paste and a container of beef base to make beef stock,
- I keep a package uncooked bacon in the freezer,
- In the pantry, I almost always have fresh onions and garlic, and
- I usually have apple juice on-hand for the grandkids (though I often make a stop because I prefer using the red wine).
The bacon adds a nice smoky flavor to the sauce, and the wine gives it a little bit of sweetness.
What to Serve with Beef Short Ribs
These short ribs have such a flavorful sauce, you’ll want to drizzle it all over your side dishes. I prefer to serve short ribs with my Creamy Instant Pot Mashed Potatoes.
Round out your meal with some fluffy old-fashioned dinner rolls and some Roasted Green Beans.
(If you have any leftovers, I love to cook up egg noodles to serve with them on the second day.)
How Many Short Ribs per Person?
I like to plan on 1 to 2 bone-in short ribs, or about 1 pound of meat, per person. (If you have big eaters, you’ll want to cook more.)
You can double the recipe, with no change to the cook time, as long as the ribs are not crammed into the pressure cooker.
What Kind of Meat to Use?
Bone-in beef short ribs are marbled and meaty, which make them perfect for the pressure cooker!
I prefer English-style beef short ribs, where each rib has only one bone and there’s at least 1 inch of meat above the bone.
You can use boneless short ribs, if you prefer. If the short ribs are wide and thick (at least 1-inch), keep the same cook time. If they’re skinnier, I’d cut the cook time by half and add extra time if needed.
Do You Have to Brown Short Ribs?
Browning the short ribs really boosts the flavor of the sauce. You can skip the browning in a pinch or if you’re cooking from frozen, but it will make a difference in the finished flavor.
You can cook short ribs from frozen without changing the cook time, but be aware that it will take longer for the pot to come to pressure.
Use an instant-read thermometer to verify your ribs are at least 165°F after cooking.
If you wish, you can finish these ribs on the grill to give them a nice char.
Make Ahead Instant Pot Short Ribs
I love to make these short ribs ahead of time! After cooking, I just let them cool in the cooking pot and refrigerate them overnight.
About an hour prior to serving, remove the short ribs from the fridge. Use a spoon to skim the solidified layer of fat from the surface.
Reheat the short ribs in the pressure cooker by selecting High Pressure and 2 minutes cook time. Allow the pressure to release naturally for 5 minutes, then finish with a quick pressure release.
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Bone-In Beef Short Rib Instant Pot / Pressure Cooker recipe
Instant Pot Bone-In Beef Short Ribs are fall-off-the-bone tender, coated in a flavorful, smoky-sweet sauce, and ready in a fraction of the time of traditional oven-baked methods. Plus, you can make them ahead so they're easy to serve
Ingredients
- 4 large English cut bone-in beef short ribs (about 1 pound each)
- Salt and freshly ground pepper, for seasoning
- 2 tablespoons vegetable oil
- 2 slices bacon, finely chopped
- 1 large onion finely chopped
- 3 garlic cloves, minced or pressed
- 1/2 cup dry red wine (such as a zinfandel)*
- 1 cup reduced-sodium beef broth
- 2 tablespoons tomato paste
- 1 tablespoon cornstarch
- 1 tablespoon water
- Prepared mashed potatoes or prepared noodles, for serving
Instructions
- Season ribs generously with salt and pepper. Select Saute to preheat the pressure cooking pot, then add the oil. When oil is hot, brown the ribs in small batches, do not crowd. Remove to a plate.
- Add bacon to pressure cooking pot and cook until brown and crisp, stirring frequently, about 5 minutes. Add onion to pressure cooking pot and sauté until tender about 3 minutes. Add garlic and cook 1 minute more.
- Add the red wine to deglaze the pot, scraping up any browned bits stuck on the bottom of the pot. Add Stir in the beef broth, tomato paste. Add the ribs and accumulated juices to pressure cooking pot.
- Lock lid in place. Select High Pressure and 40 minutes cook time.
- When the cook time ends, use a natural pressure release. Carefully remove the lid. Check ribs for doneness. If your ribs are not tender enough for your liking, return the lid and cook at High Pressure for additional time until the meat is fall-off-the-bone tender. Use at least a 10 minute natural pressure release.
- When the ribs are cooked, use tongs to remove ribs to a platter and cover with foil to keep warm. Place a mesh strainer over a fat separator and separate the fat and solids from the juices in the pot. Return the strained juices to the cooking pot.
- In a small bowl, combine cornstarch and water. Add to the juices in the cooking pot. Select Sauté and bring to a boil, stirring constantly until juices thicken. Turn the pressure cooker off.
- Add the short ribs and stir to coat with the sauce. Put the lid back on the pressure cooker. Let the ribs rest for about 10 minutes to absorb some of the sauce, stirring occasionally if sauce is still bubbling.
- Serve over mashed potatoes or noodles.
Notes
*In a pinch, you can substitute apple juice.
You can make the ribs the day before you want to serve them. Cool ribs to room temperature and refrigerate. The next day, remove the solidified fat and reheat for a few minutes in the pressure cooker.
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Nutrition Information:
Yield: 4 Serving Size: 1Amount Per Serving: Calories: 675Total Fat: 46gSaturated Fat: 17gTrans Fat: 2gUnsaturated Fat: 27gCholesterol: 168mgSodium: 221mgCarbohydrates: 12gFiber: 1gSugar: 6gProtein: 47g
Other Beef Instant Pot Recipes You’ll Love
- Pressure Cooker / Instant Pot BBQ Bacon Meatloaf
- Smoky Beef Brisket Instant Pot / Pressure Cooker Recipe
- Instant Pot / Pressure Cooker Old-Fashioned Pot Roast
- Pressure Cooker / Instant Pot Beef and Broccoli
- Make Ahead Instant Pot BBQ Back Ribs
- All Our Pressure Cooker Beef Recipes
This recipe was so easy to make and the flavor was just outstanding. The only thing different I did was adding some fresh thyme, just because I had it. I will absolutely make this again!
Thank you Barbara!
Thanks Eliza! Fresh thyme sounds like a delicious addition.
if you have them sealed in foodsaver bags, I would just cover them in water…. Fill the sink with water and immerse the ribs still sealed. They will thaw pretty quickly and I figure they will turn out better. I have tied this method and it has worked well for me. While I haven’t tried cooking ribs or butts from frozen, I recently read an article concerning how this practice may make for a tougher piece of meat….. so take that for what its worth, which may not be much….
Is it the same cooking time for boneless short ribs?
Hi Kasey – the cook time for boneless short ribs is the same if they are about the same thickeness as the ribs shown in the picture. If the ribs are smaller, then you’ll want to reduce the cook time.
Hello,
Thanks for the recipe.
I have one question. When you say you can cook a little longer if you want the ribs to get more soft….by what time increments do you recommend to increase the time by? For example do you recommend to add 15 min time increments?
Hi Marianna – more like an extra 5 minutes with another 10 minute natural pressure release.
Suggestions for the wine substitute. Orange Juice, Apple cider vinegar?
Hi Nancy – I often sub apple juice for wine.
Made this recipe last night. Rave reviews from everyone. Yum!
Awesome – thanks Debbie!
Can u cook from frozen state? Obviously wouldn’t be able to brown toe ribs..increase cooking time by 10-20 min? Thx!
Hi Marshall – unless your short ribs are very thick, you won’t need to increase the cook time. It will take longer for them to come to pressure when frozen, so the overall cook time will increase. For thick meats cooked from frozen like a chuck roast, increase the cook time 5 minutes per pound.
This recipe looks amazing. Some other recipes put the ribs in the broiler for the last 10 minutes to crisp up the top. Do you see any benefit of doing that?
Hi Elizabeth – not much benefit to putting short ribs under the broiler because they’re cooked in a rich, luscious sauce/gravy. They’re not like baby back ribs that you want to caramelize the sauce on after cooking.
Can I use this in a crockpot?
Hi Mark – you can make it in a Crockpot. I would use the timing in this recipe and don’t skip the browning. https://thestayathomechef.com/slow-cooker-beef-short-ribs/
These were fantastic! Everyone enjoyed them! Definitely adding this recipe to my Instant Pot folder!
I cooked mine for 45 minutes and they fell off the bone!
Thank you for a wonderful recipe!
Great – thanks Shannon!
I’m making this tonight but I don’t have any cornstarch. What would be a great substitution for the cornstarch??
You can substitute flour, but you’ll probably need a little bit more.
I am excited to try these this weekend. I purchased boneless “ribs” on sale last week and froze them vacuum sealed.
Always nice to find a sale. Enjoy!
I am having trouble finding bone in ribs, was able to buy 3 ribs but total weight is 1.5 lbs.
what adjustment would i make for cooking and NPR?
Hi Mary – I often have to ask my butcher for them, but if the boneless are on sale, I’ll buy those. Since your ribs are small, I would divide the cook time in half. If after the 10 minute release they aren’t as tender as you’d like, cook them a little longer. Enjoy!
This recipe is “flippin” fantastic!!! So easy and flavorful! Thank you so very much! Keeping this one forever ❤️❤️❤️
Now that’s a rave review. Thanks Lisa!
Excellent! I didn’t measure anything and I cut 5 minutes off the cook time, but other than that I followed everything. I used Pinot noir also. Delicious!
I added some dried thyme and Worcestershire sauce. Theses were delicious!!!!
Great – thanks Eileen!
Had everything in my kitchen to do this, and it came out great. Healthier than using a sugary sauce. Served with mashed cauliflower. Dogs lived the leftovers. 🙂
Great – thanks Pat!
How much do you increase them time for a double batch?
Hi Annie – no need to increase the cook time for a double batch. You’ll only increase the cook time if the meat is significantly thicker.
I made these last night and doubled the recipe, all gone. There were no leftovers for my lunch. Fantastic flavors. Will most definitely make this again!! Thanks so much!
That’s great – thanks Traci!
Can you use a 3 qt pot?
Hi Christine – yes, you can make the ribs in a 3 quart pot, just don’t fill the pot more than 2/3’s full.
The ribs were great, my family likes some heat in their food so I added a couple of chopped chipotle peppers with some adobo sauce and some brown sugar. I know it sounds weird but it taste awesome
Fantastic!
I put for 55 mins and absolutely incredible.
That’s great – thanks Sandy!
Loved the flavor for these Bone-In Beef Ribs and followed the recipe but I did have to cook them a little longer than called for as they weren’t quite tender enough after the 40 minutes and NPR for 10. Pressure cooked another 10 minutes and they were perfect. Also used your recipe last night for Baby Back Ribs and those came out perfect! Thanks again for your wonderful cookbook.
Thanks Audrey – so glad you cooked them until they were just right for you!
I tried this, but my ribs had been in freezer for to long. It was edible, but nobody enjoyed it. I am cleaning out my freezer, so these are the breaks. You win some, you lose some. I will have to try it again with fresh ribs.
That’s a shame. Definitely try it again with some fresh ribs.
My goodness were these ever good!! i am printing this recipe as we speak to put in my go to for short ribs… why would you do them any other way??! thanks so much.
Hi Barbara
I am very new to the Instant Pot Duo-6qt
I have 1.5lbs of boneless short ribs, what adjusts on timing would I need to make!
Thank you
Hi Karyn – it depends on how thick the ribs are. If they’re pretty small, then I’d reduce the time by half.
OH MY GOODNESS!!! I made these last night and they were SOOO GOOD!!! They’re so rich and wonderful – we have enough for leftovers tonight! We’ll make these on a regular basis!!
Thanks Catherine! So nice to hear you love them as much as we do.
I’m trying these tonight! However I have two lbs short ribs (4 ribs so 1/2 lb each). Should I be halving the ingredients? Also should I reduce the time?
Hi Alice – I would reduce the cook time, probably 30 minutes depending on how thick they are – if they’re long and not very thick maybe even less. You’ll want to use at least 1 cup of liquid, more if your pressure cooker is larger than 6 quarts. If they’re not as tender as you’d like after 30 minutes, cook them a little longer. Enjoy!
I tried your short-ribs today and while I think the sauce is delicious, and the recipe was straightforward and easy to follow – I was frustrated that after adding the cornstarch/water mixture to the pot small balls of cornstarch congealed and wouldn’t break down. I should have known better than to follow that part of the recipe. Did others’ not find that problem?
I think I would make this recipe again – I would just make sure to mix the cornstarch/water mixture in a small amount of hot liquid first.
Thank You
Hi Betty – so glad you enjoyed the ribs. I haven’t had trouble with cornstarch congealing like you’ve described – sometimes I’ll have the problem with flour. But definitely if it works better for you add some of the hot rib sauce to the cornstarch and water. I often do that with a flour slurry.
Do you cook on bacon on the sauté setting?
Hi Lisa – you can leave it on browning (saute adjusted to more on the Instant Pot) or use saute either one.
Do you cook the bacon on sauté?
Made these tonight and they did not disappoint! Thank you! I think I may use these recipe ingredients for my pot roast. The flavors were spot on.
Great idea – thanks Paula!
I also loved the outcome although I reduced the ingredients for my one and half lbs of ribs. Also added about a tsp of hickory or pecan smoke flavor, apple cider vinegar, and rubbed applewood grilling rub on them before putting them into the PC. Delicious.. Didn’t use the bacon. Turkey bacon doesn’t have much smoke flavor, all I had.
Thanks for your recipe. Its a keeper!
locong45
I also loved the outcome although I reduced the ingredients for my one and half lbs of ribs. Also added about a tsp of hickory or pecan smoke flavor, apple cider vinegar, and rubbed applewood grilling rub on them before putting them into the PC. Delicious.. Didn’t use the bacon. Turkey bacon doesn’t have much smoke flavor, all I had.
Thanks for your recipe. Its a keeper! Lois Congdon
locong45@gmail.com
Thank you! We had beef short ribs for the first time on a cruise. It was in one of the fine dinning restaurants on board. We have been trying to find a recipe for short ribs that would elevate the dish to 5 star restaurant standards. This recipe is 5 stars, very delicious, the broth was so yummy! This recipe was very easy, ingredients were in my pantry ( used sparking cider non alcoholic for apple juice because that is what I had on hand) and instant pot made it quick. Thanks again!!
Thanks for the great review! I’m so glad you enjoyed it as much as on your cruise. Thanks for sharing 🙂
Barbara, Thank you so much for this awesome recipe! I just purchased a Instant Pot and i was looking for great recipes to try. I am so glad that I tried this recipe first. I have worked in a fine dining/4 star restaurant for over 28 years. I have had the opportunity to taste some great Chefs version of Braised Short ribs. I have used their recipes at home before and they are very time consuming and tasted great . Your recipe for Bone in Beef Short Ribs in the pressure cooker was just as great with 1/4 amount of the time!! Thank you again for your talents.
Thanks Paulette – that’s quite a compliment! I’m so glad you tried the recipe. It’s one of my favorites too.
Hi Barbara, I’d love to try this recipe. My husband braises short ribs/ oxtail for 2 1/2 hours in the oven. Very delicious but very time consuming. We can taste the love in every bite!! Will the recipe work with oxtail as well? I have to make this for him ?
Hi Aye – I haven’t tried it with Oxtail, but I assume it would work just fine.
Hi Barbara,
I was just looking at your short rib recipe. I love to pressure cook. Last time I made short ribs I came up with this great de-fatting method. I make the ribs the day before we’re going to eat them. I cut a piece of cheesecloth the same diameter as the pressure cooker. I poke it down a little into the juice and refrigerate overnight. Next morning when you pull off the cheesecloth the fat comes with it. The ribs seem to have a more flavorful taste the next day without all the fat.
I enjoy your site and I just subscribed to it. Happy New Year
Hi Barbara – I haven’t tried it with thecheesecloth, but have refrigerated them overnight and removed the solidified fat from the top the next day before warming them up. I agree, the ribs are more flavorful the next day. Thanks for sharing!
Can you double the recipe? I’m new to using the instant pot!!
I’m new tho pressure cooking. So far so good! My family loved the short ribs. I did however change a few things. I added about 1/3 cup sun dried tomatoes, a litle more beef broth, wine, and a shallot (doubled the cornstarch and water mixture). Yummy! 40 minutes was more than enough cooking time.
Thank you for sharing your recipe! Mary
Have a small pack of beef county ribs. Do you think above recipe would work? Are they same thing as short ribs? Probably not, as they look to be about 8 inches long:)
Hi Bridget – I haven’t tried it with other kinds of beef ribs, but I assume beef country ribs would work well in this recipe.
These were wonderful! This was my first foray into pressure cooking in the instant pot, and now I can’t wait to try something else. Thank you for the recipe!
Thanks Mary! What a great pick for a first recipe. I’m in love with short ribs. Have fun!
I have a stove top pressure cooker. What PSI should I keep the ribs at?
Hi Dina – just cook it at high pressure for your pressure cooker and start the timing when it reaches high pressure.
Hi, just want to check on some word variations. Is beef broth the same as a beef stock? Also is cornstarch the same as cornflour? Thankyou. I am a newbie at this and am loving your recipes.
Thanks Michelle!! Yes, cornstarch is the same as cornflour. Beef broth and beef stock are interchangeable in this recipe.
I had my short ribs cut in smaller pieces. I ended up with 3 lbs and cooked them a total of 60-65 minutes. They were delicious!
One of my favorite cuts of meat to eat for sure!
Am I using beef broth or beef Bas or both and how much of each? Thank you!
Hi Sandra – just as long as it equals 1 cup, you’ll be fine.
Thank you!
What kind of release do you recommend? Natural? Quick?
Hi Jenny – I like to do a natural release for 10 minutes with most meats. I’ve updated the recipe. Thanks!
What would lb. weight be on 4 beef short ribs? How many does this recipe serve??
Hi Edi – these short ribs weighed about a pound each and would serve four people.
First time user. I am anxious to learn how to use my new cooking device.
Have fun!
You can appreciate knowing I for one will be serving 15 lbs. of meaty butcher quality boneless to my family Xmas day using this recipe. More so, it’ll be prepared adding much love. I’m anticipating much praise ; )
Wow – what a great treat for your family. Hope they all loved it and you had a wonderful Christmas Day.
This sounds awesome!! I like your comment about making the day before. I have been doing that quite a lot with pressure cooker recipes. It helps to have food ready when I get home from work so I have been cooking dinner the evening before for quite some time.
I find that when I first started pressure cooking, I underestimated the time it takes to come up to pressure. This sometimes made for a late dinner. Cooking the night before solved this and honestly gives time for the flavors to develop overnight.
Love your site! Most of my pressure cooker recipes come from here.
Thanks so much Andi!
I made it just now and it turned out terrific. Read most of the comments so I used brown sugar as I did not have apple juice and used chicken stock instead of the beef stock. I was afraid of burning the ribs or drying it out so I added a half cup of liquid ….it was unnecessary. I had a lot of liquid after the cooking process. I guess it helped that when the pressure cooker bevel rose and the bell began to dance ( i am using the old type stove top pressure cooker), I lessened the heat. Maintaining it just enough for the bell to still be dancing. Thanks for the recipe!
Thanks Monette – glad you enjoyed it! You’re so right, maintaining just enough heat is key with stovetop pressure cooking.
not enough liquid ergo my pot burned badly
Sorry it burned. That’s frustrating. A cup and a half of liquid is plenty unless you’re losing lots of liquid through an improperly sealed pot, or on the stovetop your heat is too high.
Just made these and they are great! So glad I found your site; now I don’t have to choose a print book and risk being disappointed!!!
Thanks Bob! I’m so glad you found my site and love the ribs.
First time with my new pressure cooker. I followed the recipe exactly and they were unbelievable!!! My husband couldn’t stop raving! Thanks for sharing the recipe. I’m so excited to try more now. Next up is the brisket 🙂
Thanks Joanie – I’m so glad you and your husband loved them! I hope the brisket is a hit as well.
Barbara, thank you — another delicious pressure cooker adventure/winner for us! I added a tablespoon of brown sugar in place of the apple juice (none on hand — though I cook pork with it frequently, so why not beef? Will add it the next time!) and used 4 lbs. of short ribs. Fantastic!
Thanks Valerie!! I’ll have to remember brown sugar makes a good substitution.
I’m going to try thiscrrcipe soon. I wanted d to comment on the lengthy of cooking time. I sell natural-raised, dry-aged beef for a living
The short ribs come in many sizes. If you get the really big ones, they would probably take the whole cooking time but the smaller ones wouldn’t take nearly as long. When people buy them from me I encourage them to buy them all the same size. Thanks for the great recipes.
Thanks Marcia – great advice. Hope you enjoy the recipe.
I’m a pressure cooking newby. I’d love to try these but I need 6 portions. If I add more meat do I increase the liquids accordingly?
No you should have plenty of liquid for 6 ribs. Enjoy!
pressure cooker newbie
Welcome!
I made this recipe tonight and it was delicious!! I cooked the short ribs for about 45 mins in an electric pressure cooker. I didn’t have any tomato paste on hand so I used ketchup. I also added carrots to my vegetables in the beginning and added my veggie/bacon base back into the gravy after separating the oil. My husband loved it. Thanks for the great recipe!
Thanks Jada! It’s one of my family’s favorites too. Nice to know ketchup works as well.
I made the Bone-in Beef Short Ribs last night and we loved them. However I cooked them only 35 minutes in a stovetop PC. I cannot imagine how this recipe would take 90 minutes even knowing people have differing ideas of “doneness.” Granted recipes cooked in a digital PC sometimes take a bit longer than those made in a stovetop, but not almost 3X as long. I could see cooking them 40 minutes instead of 35, but if anyone is going to try this recipe, I’d pressure cook them for 35-40 minutes, release the pressure, and check for doneness. If not to your liking bring them back to pressure and cook for whatever number of additional minutes seems to make sense to you.
I used a fat separator that has a top that filters out solids as the juices/fat pour into the separator. I then discarded those solids as I figured that the flavor had cooked out of them by then. However one could add the solids back into the sauce if desired once the fat was separated from the juices.
Am thinking that the next time I make this recipe I’ll substitute a bit of dry red wine for some of the beef broth. Whatever one does, this recipe is a winner.
So glad you thought the recipe is a winner. Deglazing the pan with a little red wine if you have it on hand is a great idea. Others have said the cook time is too long as well. I’ll try and find some time to cook them again soon. I adjusted the timing in the recipe. Thanks!
This sounds delicious.. But are you kidding – 90 minutes? Mine was a solid black cinder after 60 minutes. I will try this again and cook under high pressure for 30 minutes. Even a pot roast takes only 40 minutes.
Beware cooks of this recipe, only a railroad spike would take 90 minutes at high pressure!
Hi Bunne – what type of pressure cooker are you using? You must be losing a lot of moisture while you’re cooking.
Hi Barbara, I use a Fagor Duo. I kept it on lowest heat while cooking this recipe.. Just enough to maintain pressure. Am I doing something wrong?
Bunne
I am concerned that you’re losing too much liquid when you’re pressure cooking. Typically you should be losing less than 4% every 10 minutes. You may want to do a water test. Boil 2 cups (16 ounces) of water for 10 minutes on high pressure and then measure the water again to see how much you’ve lost. You should have lost less than 1 ounce (.64 of an ounce) in 10 minutes.
Tried these last night. SO DELICIOUS! Thank you!
I’m Caribbean so I modified a little — more seasonings before browning, and some Angostura bitters and Worcestershire sauce in the broth. They only needed 45–50 minutes to be completely off the bone in my Cuisinart CPC-600. Delicious and soft enough for my 24-month old to enjoy.
Thanks for sharing your additions. I love that you gave them a tropical flair.
made your short ribs two days ago, 90 minutes was a little too long, all the meat fell off the bone in pieces, but the flavor was to die for. excellent will make again & cut back on the time maybe to 60min instead of 90.
1st time visiting this site, I am going to make your pork chops tonight & let you know how I like them
Hi Rose – so glad you loved the flavor. Fall off the bone tender is just how I like them, although mine did not break in to pieces. But thanks for commenting so that if others like them a little less done, they can cook them less as well.
Love this recipe!!! Family devoured it as they thanked me. Will be making again! Used about 6-8 ribs. I didn’t have tomato paste so I used ketchup. I didn’t have beef broth so I used some Worcestershire sauce and some water. Cooked on high in my WMF pressure cooker for 40 minutes. Did a fast cool down (poured cold water on the lid) because I ran out of time. The ribs on the bottom were perfect melt in your mouth. The ribs on top needed just ten more minutes. Served it with mashed potatoes, pinto beans, and steamed spinach and the gravy on everything. Delicious! Thank you!
Thanks Anna – so nice to hear you and your family loved it! Thanks for sharing your tweaks.
How many people does this serve and approximately, how many pounds was the beef ribs?
I cooked 4 large 5-inch ribs and served one person. If you have smaller ribs, you’d want to serve two per person. Sorry I didn’t make note of the weight.
Oh, wow, do these look fantastic. So, I’ve never seen that beef base, but I’m going to keep an eye out for it. It sounds like a great pantry staple. The apple juice is ingenious. That must really give these a great sweetness contrast. Sorry about the splashed sauce, and it sounds like something I’d do. They look fabulous, and love that they take a fraction of the time to make.
I made short ribs just the other day. Sooooo yummy!
I don’t think I’ve ever cooked short ribs…at least I don’t remember cooking them. Yours look so good. I’ll keep my eyes open for some good ones at the grocery store.
Ohhhhh that “Ijust move this one little thing-it’s bothering me” and what happens after? Been there done THAT plenty-and yes indeed-I use that as a sign that that’s enough photos for today. Bob? Nope…..”Carol…..come fix this mess…”
What? Really? Sigh…………….
Thanks for the great looking recipe, Barbara.