Summer Short Ribs? Yup.
If we were playing word association (since we just got back from vacay, there has been a lot of this game going on in our house) and we started with say, short ribs...Where would you go from there?
“Winter?” “Braise?” “Dutch Oven?” “Anna?”
I’ll tell you where I wouldn’t have gone:
“Grilling.”
Call me naive, but it never would've occurred to me to associate short ribs with backyard barbecuing -- until a week or two ago, when our friends Todd and Anne had our family over for some dinner. Now, as you well know by now, dinner at their house in the summer is not your run-of-the-mill burgers-and-dogs-and-corn-on-the-cob kind of event. (Not that I would EVER turn down ANY of those things EVER!) But every time I walk in to Todd and Anne's homey kitchen overlooking the Hudson River -- whether it's winter, spring, summer, or fall -- Todd is busy concocting something curious. This time, he was mad-geniusing a cocktail: Lord only knows what the thing was -- something that involved beer, cider vinegar, fresh lemons, bourbon, maybe even a small animal, can't be sure, but whatever it was, it totally got the job done. Next to him was a platter of short ribs that Anne had dropped into a marinade a few hours earlier, getting ready to be tossed onto the grill. "It's basically Tony's Steak," Todd told me, simultaneously working on a pot of quinoa and drizzling rice wine vinegar into some wilted spinach. Oh boy, oh boy, oh boy. This is so my kind of eatin'.
And I haven't even gotten to the part in the story where the sun sinks into the horizon, casting a golden glow over the Hudson, the treetops, and the dinner table. So yeah, today, if you asked me to play word association with "short ribs" I'd have no choice but to say one thing: Summer.
Grilled Short Ribs with Scallions Todd & Anne served this with an herby quinoa dish and wilted spinach that had been tossed with a drizzle of rice wine vinegar, a drop or two of sesame oil, salt, pepper, sesame seeds. Oh and also a nice cold glass of Ramey Chardonnay.
1/3 cup soy sauce 1 tablespoon brown sugar 1 tablespoon olive oil 1 teaspoon dark sesame oil 1/2 cup chopped scallions 1 garlic clove, chopped 1 teaspoon hot sauce Juice from one lime Salt and pepper 2 1/2 pounds boneless short ribs 1 bunch scallions, trimmed (as shown above) and tossed in a little olive oil with salt
Add all the marinade ingredients to a large ziploc bag. Add ribs, seal it, and marinate in the refrigerator for anywhere from 2 to 4 hours. Heat grill to high and add ribs and scallions as shown above. Cook ribs about 3 to 4 minutes a side, about 10-12 minutes total, browning all sides. Flesh should feel tender, but not smushy. Scallions are ready when they are slightly charred and wilted.