Know Your Cut: Beef Ribs

The key to success when cooking ribs is the low temperature and several hours of cooking time. However, this beef primal cut also contains popular tender, juicy cuts of meat like Ribeye Roast and Ribeye Steaks.

The beef Rib Primal is located under the front section of the backbone and used primarily for support. Popular cuts from the Rib include the rich, flavorful Ribeye Steak and the Prime Rib Roast.

One thing beef and pork ribs have in common is their amount of connective tissue, which requires long and slow cooking. Either dry—or moist-heat cooking methods can be used. The key to success when cooking ribs is the low temperature and several hours of cooking time.

PrimalCuts_LtGray_s3_rib-primal_NCBA.png

Beef Primal Cuts: The Rib

Beef. It’s What’s for Dinner.

The Ribeye

The most popular cut from the Beef Rib Primal is easily the ribeye steak. This steak is rich, juicy, and full-flavored, with generous marbling throughout. It is sold bone-in. Due to the exceptional taste and tenderness Beef Rib Steaks delivers for operators and diners alike, Bone-in Rib Steaks offers great plate coverage and impressive presentations.

Beef Back Ribs

Similar to pork back ribs, beef back ribs come from the upper portion of the carcass. Beef back ribs are generally bone and fat with a bit of cartilage and a small amount of meat.

There is a good reason for the ribs being cut like this, however. Meatpackers and butchers do so because the meat is reserved for ribeye steaks and prime rib. It just so happens that those two cuts of meat are some of the most profitable per pound. Beef ribs are significantly less desirable than other cuts of meat, so the intercostal meat, meat between the ribs, usually ends up like ground beef.

Beef Short Ribs

Beef short ribs, like pork short ribs, come from the lower part of the ribcage where it meets the sternum. Beef short ribs are tough with plenty of connective tissue. Unlike beef back ribs, beef short ribs have plenty of meat on them because, from an economic standpoint, there is no other real use for the meat.

They are called short ribs because they are generally cut shorter, usually between three to four inches. This is done because a beef carcass is much larger than a pork carcass and if they were cut any larger they would be difficult to manage when cooking.

The most common way to prepare beef short ribs is to braise them, although people can and do smoke them on occasion.

Related Stories
Tight cattle supplies favor poultry and pork while keeping beef margins under pressure.
While access to China remains uncertain, U.S. beef exporters are finding resilience and opportunity in other global markets, which could help maintain industry value and expand export opportunities.
Higher livestock prices reflect resilient demand, even as disease and herd shifts reshape 2026 supply expectations.
RFD NEWS Correspondent Frank McCaffrey was in Mission, Texas, where state and federal officials addressed growers and producers at a round table event hosted at a citrus grower’s facility. He shows us how welcome news was all around.
Top issues facing the beef industry took center stage at CattleCon this year in Nashville.
Texas cowboy chef and host of RFD Network’s Twisted Skillet, Sean Koehler, shares an elote-style street corn dip just in time for Super Bowl Sunday. This skillet-cooked corn dish combines open-fire cooking and bold regional flavors for a delicious twist on Mexican Street Corn.

Agriculture Shows
Farmweek is broadcast from Mississippi, one of the South’s most geographically diverse states. The Magnolia State’s most important resource is its people—and about a fourth of the state’s population hold jobs tied to agriculture.
“DocTalk” with host Dr. Dan Thomson will be teaming up with practitioners around the country to tackle issues with your livestock.
This high-yield corn contest showcases real-life Corn Warriors dealing with elements that every farmer knows well. Get an authentic look at what it takes to compete in a high-yield corn contest, and see who will take the title of Corn King.
As the trusted voice of the U.S. cattle and beef industry, the National Cattlemen Beef Association strives to share timely, relevant news. NCBA’s “Cattlemen to Cattlemen” is the leading TV show for beef producers to receive cattle industry news, education, and information.