I want to tell you about the day I stopped fighting my ribs and started listening to them.
For years I did what every backyard cook does — I’d pull the membrane, trim the fat, wrap them in foil, babysit the temperature, and convince myself I was being precise. The ribs were fine. Sometimes better than fine. But they were never those ribs. You know the ones. The kind that make people go quiet for a moment before they say anything.
Then I learned how they cook ribs in Argentina, and everything changed.
A DIFFERENT PHILOSOPHY
Argentine asado isn’t a cooking technique so much as a belief system. The belief is roughly this: fire is patient, meat is honest, and your job is mostly to stay out of the way. There are no foil tents. No spritzing with apple juice every 45 minutes. No probing the meat every time you get anxious, which for most of us is every eight minutes.
If you spend any time watching Al Frugoni’s YouTube channel — and if you cook over fire, you should — you’ll notice he comes back to the same reminder at the start of nearly every cook. When it comes to open fire cooking, he says, there are three simple rules:
AL FRUGONI’S THREE RULES OF OPEN FIRE COOKING
1. Patience. 2. Patience. 3. Patience.
— Al Frugoni, via his YouTube channel
Keep those three rules in your back pocket for the next three hours. You’ll need them.
“Leave the membrane on. Leave the fat on. The fire knows what it’s doing.”
I know. I know. Every rib recipe you’ve ever read tells you to peel that membrane off first thing. And if you’re cooking fast and hot, that’s reasonable advice. But when you’re cooking low and slow over embers, that membrane does something useful — it seals moisture in from below while the bones slowly conduct heat upward through the meat. You’re essentially using the architecture of the rib itself as a cooking tool.
THE HOUR YOU SPEND BEFORE YOU COOK
Start your fire an hour before you plan to put a single thing on the grate. I realize that sounds like a lot, but this is the part most people rush, and rushing it is how you end up with ribs cooked over flames instead of embers — which is how you end up with ribs that are charred on the outside and confused on the inside.
You want embers. Dense, glowing, steady embers. The kind that radiate heat rather than throw it. Keep feeding wood to the fire as it burns — you’ll need enough to sustain a solid two hours of cooking, so don’t be stingy with the pile.
How do you know when the heat is right? Here’s the test, and it sounds more dangerous than it is: hold your hand at grate height. If you can hold it there for 6 to 8 seconds before your instincts take over and you pull away, you’re in the zone. Less than 6 seconds and it’s too hot. More than 8 and you’re going to be there all day. This is your benchmark. You’ll come back to it every time you add embers.
BONE SIDE DOWN. TRUST THE BONES.
Pat the ribs dry. Season with salt and pepper — good salt, fresh pepper, don’t be shy. Then place them on the grate bone side down, and leave them there. About 75% of the entire cook happens in this position.
This is where Frugoni’s rules earn their keep. The temptation to flip, to peek, to poke is real. Resist it. The bones are doing the work. They’re drawing heat up from below and distributing it slowly and evenly through the meat. It’s essentially a built-in heat diffuser, and it’s been there the whole time.
After about an hour and a half, reach over and press gently on the top of the rack. If the surface is warm to the touch, the heat has traveled all the way through. That’s your signal. The ribs are ready to flip.
THE FINAL HALF HOUR (AND THE GLAZE)
Flip meat side down and give it another 30 minutes. When the internal temperature reads around 200°F, you’re close. Flip back to bone side down, apply your BBQ sauce or glaze over the meat, then flip glaze side down for the finish.
This is the part where you do not walk away. Two to four minutes over live fire with sugar involved is an exercise in attention. The difference between beautifully caramelized and “well, I guess we’re scraping that off” is about 90 seconds. Watch it. The color change happens fast, and when the glaze sets with that dark, slightly tacky surface — that’s when you pull them.
WHAT YOU’LL HAVE
Cut between the bones, plate them up, and take a moment before you eat. The meat won’t fall off the bone in the way that overcooked ribs do. It’ll pull cleanly, with some resistance — which is how it’s supposed to be. Beneath that caramelized crust is meat that stayed moist for the entire cook, protected by fat and membrane and the patient geometry of the bones.
Serve with chimichurri if you have it, grilled bread if you want it, and something cold to drink. The full recipe is below.
Total time: about 3 hours. One hour to build the fire, two hours to cook. Plan accordingly — and start the fire before you think you need to.
Argentine Baby Back Ribs — Open Fire
Asado-style low & slow over wood embers •
Serves 4 • ~3 hours (1 hr fire prep + 2 hrs cooking)
Ingredients
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Amount
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Ingredient
|
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2 racks
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Baby back ribs — membrane on, excess fat left intact
|
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To taste
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Kosher salt & freshly cracked black pepper
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Pat dry
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Paper towels (for drying the ribs)
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Glaze / Finish
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½ cup
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BBQ sauce or glaze of choice
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—
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Hardwood (oak, cherry, or hickory) — enough for 3+ hours of
burning
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Instructions
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1
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Prep the
Ribs Do not remove
the back membrane — it holds moisture during the long cook. Do not trim
excess fat. Pat both racks completely dry with paper towels. Season
generously all over with salt and pepper.
|
|
2
|
Build the
Fire Start a
hardwood fire in your grill or open pit. Let it burn down for about 1 hour
until you have a solid bed of glowing embers. Keep feeding fresh wood
throughout — you need enough fuel to sustain 2 full hours of cooking.
|
|
3
|
Set the
Heat Shovel enough
embers beneath the grate to create steady, even heat. To calibrate: hold your
hand at grate height — you should be able to hold it there 6–8 seconds before
it becomes too hot. This is your target throughout the cook.
|
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4
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Cook Bone
Side Down (~1½ hrs) Place ribs bone
side down. 75% of total cook time is bone side down. The bones conduct heat
upward through the meat. Replenish embers every 20–30 min to maintain the 6–8
second hand test. After ~1½ hours, touch the top of the rack — when it feels
warm, the heat has worked all the way through.
|
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5
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Flip &
Finish Meat Side Down (~30 min) Flip the racks
meat side down and cook another 30 minutes. Check internal temperature —
target is around 200°F (93°C) for tender, pull-apart meat.
|
|
6
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Glaze Flip back to bone side down. Apply BBQ
sauce or glaze liberally over the meat side. Flip glaze-side down and cook
2–4 minutes until caramelized and set. WATCH CLOSELY — sugar-heavy sauces
burn fast. Don’t walk away.
|
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7
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Rest, Cut
& Serve Remove from the
fire, rest 5 minutes, then slice between bones. These will be the most moist
ribs you’ve ever had.
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Nutrition (per serving, estimated)
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Nutrient
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Per Serving
(approx.)
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Calories
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580 kcal
|
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Protein
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42 g
|
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Carbohydrates
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12 g
|
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Fat
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38 g
|
|
Fiber
|
0 g
|
|
Sugar
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9 g
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Sodium
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740 mg
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Tips & Notes
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Note
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Detail
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Total time
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~3 hours: 1 hour to build and burn down the fire, 2 hours of
active cooking. Plan accordingly — start your fire early.
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Why keep the membrane?
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The back membrane seals in juices from below during the long
bone-side-down cook. Removing it is a shortcut that costs moisture.
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Wood choice
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Oak is classic Argentine asado. Cherry or hickory add sweeter
smoke. Avoid softwoods like pine — they produce bitter, resinous smoke.
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Glaze sugar warning
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The more sugar in your sauce, the faster it burns. Watch the
grate constantly during the final caramelization step — 2 minutes can be the
difference between perfect and charred.
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Serving ideas
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Serve alongside chimichurri, grilled bread, and a simple green
salad. Cold Argentine Malbec or a cold Quilmes beer pairs perfectly.
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Substitutions
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St. Louis spare ribs work with the same method — add 20–30
minutes total cook time due to thickness. A dry rub (smoked paprika, garlic
powder, cumin) can replace or supplement salt & pepper.
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