{"id":34341,"date":"2018-01-01T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2017-09-08T00:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/origin-www.tasteofhome.com\/recipes\/country-style-grilled-ribs\/"},"modified":"2024-06-28T09:17:01","modified_gmt":"2024-06-28T14:17:01","slug":"country-style-grilled-ribs","status":"publish","type":"recipe","link":"https:\/\/www.tasteofhome.com\/recipes\/country-style-grilled-ribs\/","title":{"rendered":"Grilled Country-Style Ribs"},"content":{"rendered":"

This grilled country-style ribs recipe is great when there’s a break in the weather and the sun comes out. If it’s not quite cookout season but it’s hot enough to make you crave something fresh off the grill, these country-style ribs are the perfect hybrid recipe for this time of year. They start in the oven and finish on the grill.<\/p>\n

The oven does most of the work, cooking the ribs until they’re tender and juicy (like in our favorite oven-roasted baby back ribs<\/a>). Then, the ribs are bathed in a simple, homemade barbecue sauce and finished on the grill to infuse the meat with a signature smoky barbecue flavor. These country-style ribs on the grill are a crowd-pleaser and perfect for your next fringe-season cookout.<\/p>\n

What are country-style pork ribs?<\/h2>\n

Country-style pork ribs aren’t actually ribs. This type of pork comes from the area where the loin and shoulder blade meet. They’re called ribs because they share a similar flavor and texture to back or spare ribs.<\/p>\n

Country-style ribs contain more meat than spare ribs and just as much connective tissue. For this reason, country-style ribs benefit from low-and-slow cooking like all of our best barbecue ribs recipes<\/a>. This makes them an ideal candidate for grilling, smoking, oven-roasting or slow cooking.<\/p>\n

Ingredients for Grilled Country-Style Ribs<\/h2>\n