Dish of Spareribs & Cabbage
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Spareribs & Cabbage


Africa - West, Central & South

Serves:
Effort:
Sched:
DoAhead:  
4 main
***
2 hrs
Yes
Tasty and satisfying, this African stew is considerably more healthy than many spare rib recipes. I have increased the amount of ribs from the original to be more in keeping with American expectations.

2
1-1/2
6
10
5
1
1
3/4
1/3
2/3

#
#
oz
oz
oz

cl
t
c
c

Pork Ribs
Cabbage, white
Onion
Tomatoes
Bell Pepper
Chili, fresh (1)
Garlic
Salt
Peanut Butter (2)
Water

Prep   -   (30 min)
  1. Trim PORK RIBS of any removable fat. Cut them into lengths of about 2 inches (a sharp Chinese cleaver knife and soft faced mallet are perfect for this).
  2. Lightly oil a large skillet. Add the ribs and brown them lightly over very moderate heat, tumbling often, to melt out most fat. Drain ribs on paper towels and discard fat.
  3. Meanwhile: Core CABBAGE and cut into narrow wedges.
  4. Chop ONION small.
  5. Chop TOMATOES, BELL PEPPER and CHILI small. Crush GARLIC and chop fine. Mix all with Salt.
  6. Mix Peanut Butter with 2/3 cup Water.
  7. Lightly crush Roasted Peanuts for garnish.
Run   -   (1-1/2 hr)
  1. Place prepared Pork Ribs in a stew pot and add enough water to mostly cover. Simmer them for about 45 minutes.
  2. Stir in All items except garnish. Continue to simmer until ribs are tender, about another 45 minutes,
  3. Serve hot with plenty of steamed long grain rice (also see Note-3).
NOTES:
  1. Chilis:

      The Habanero / Scotch Bonnet is the most used Chili in Africa. They are quite hot so be cautious, but one should be tolerable for most people. If in doubt, seed it, you can always add some chili powder later if you need to heat it up. Adjust to your preference. For details see our African Chilis page.
  2. Peanut Butter:

      Use only pure, all natural peanut butter, not one of those kid pleasing salted and sugar loaded concoctions like Skippy. I use Laura Scudders All Natural Smooth.
  3. Serving:

      As well as having about half the amount of ribs I list here, the original recipe was garnished with crushed toasted peanuts. I've never liked crushed peanuts as a garnish so I used parsley.
  4. U.S. measure: t=teaspoon, T=Tablespoon, c=cup, qt=quart, oz=ounce, #=pound, cl=clove in=inch, ar=as required tt=to taste
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