
Make these Chinese stovetop braised beef short ribs tonight – sticky, glossy, and impossible to stop eating. Even better the next day!
Estimated reading time: 9 minutes

Mini rant coming up.
I get this question a lot on socials and in my classes: “Why do recipes say Asian when they mean Chinese?”
Honestly… same. It’s everywhere. “Asian beef short ribs.” “Asian-style ribs.” “Asian glaze.”
What does that even mean? Asia is massive. It’s not one flavour profile, one pantry, one anything. I’m Asian, but I’m not Chinese. And my food doesn’t magically become Chinese because someone’s thrown soy sauce at it.
Call me pedantic but we are calling these what they are: Chinese Beef Short Ribs. The aromatics, the braise, the whole personality of this dish – it’s Chinese-style. Clear, accurate, no umbrella terms. If you’re here for Chinese braised short ribs, you’re in exactly the right place. If you’re here for Asian beef short ribs, also stick around, because well, it’s the same thing.
Rant done. For now.
These Chinese braised beef short ribs are rich, glossy, and deeply savoury, with that soy-and-Shaoxing depth wrapped around warming whole spices like star anise and cinnamon.
We’re cooking it low and slow, so the meat turns incredibly tender, almost spoon-soft at the edges, while the sauce reduces into a sticky, shiny glaze that’s salty, gently sweet, and ridiculously good.
It’s fragrant, bold, and once served, all you’ll hear is crickets as everyone will be too busy enjoying it to say a word.
And before you ask: no, this isn’t “just another beef stew.” It’s Chinese-style braised short ribs – glossy, savoury-sweet, deeply spiced, and made for rice.
This is where LinsFood’s recipe differs. Rant number 2 coming up.
Most, if not all, online recipes for Asian braised beef short ribs (as everyone calls it) will tell you to braise them in the oven. I don’t understand this at all, because the oven is not a common appliance in Chinese cooking. In fact, in much of Asia.
Yes, we use the oven to bake cakes, cookies and such, sure, but you’ll hardly see us using the oven for traditional recipes. Chinese beef short ribs is stovetop territory: a pot, a flame, do like Axl Rose (patience?), and a sauce that clings to the ribs like white on rice.
So yes, I’m showing you how to make Chinese braised beef short ribs on the stove because that’s how it would be made traditionally, and how I’ve always made it.

This is what we’ll be doing:
We want to keep an eye on:
Like all good old recipes, everyone’s going to have their own little addition (or subtraction) to this recipe. Let’s take a look at what some of the main ingredients we’ve got in this recipe, and possible variations.
Given the name of the recipe, we are looking for short ribs. They are ideal because they’re fatty, collagen-rich, and built for slow cooking.
For these Chinese-style braised short ribs, you want big, chunky pieces that can take a long simmer without drying out.
Avoid super-thin flanken-style cross-cut ribs (those 1 cm / ½ inch slices) for this dish – they cook fast, can go stringy, and don’t give you that collagen-melting, glossy-braise payoff.
If you’re buying from a butcher, ask for: “English-cut beef short ribs, cut into 2–3 inch pieces.”
The cut is broadly the same, but the name isn’t universal.
If you want a foolproof way to ask anywhere in the world, say:
“I want chunky short ribs cut between the bones, not thin cross-cut/flanken.”
There you go. Don’t say I don’t spoil you.

We use a combination of soy sauces, so much so that some people call them soy braised short ribs.
Together, these guys create and addictive, finger-licking mad, mad, sauce!
Shaoxing wine gives our Chinese short ribs that unmistakable Chinese braised aroma. If you can get it, use it. But if you can’t or don’t do alcohol, see below.
Substitutes:
Classic whole spices for Chinese braised beef short ribs:
This dish is basically designed to be served with something that soaks up sauce. So to me, nothing beats plain old steamed jasmine rice. It’s classic and unbeatable. There is nothing there to compete with the flavours of our Chinese braised short ribs.
Naturally, sticky rice will also work beautifully. However, you can also serve it with noodles or egg fried rice, if you prefer.
Pair your Chinese braised short ribs with:

This is a great make-ahead dish. Chinese braised beef short ribs get better after a rest.
In the fridge
Freezing
If you refrigerate overnight, the fat will often rise and solidify on top. You can:
My sauce is too thin
My sauce is too salty
My ribs are tough
They’re not done yet. Keep simmering gently until tender. Short ribs don’t respond to bullying; they respond to time.
The spice flavour is too strong
Whole spices can overperform if left too long. Next time:
Yes, and you should. Make them a day ahead, chill, then reheat gently. The flavour deepens and the sauce gets even more cohesive.
No, but it adds depth. If you skip browning, lean harder on aromatics and give the sauce time to reduce properly.
You can, but bone-in gives better flavour and a more luscious texture. Boneless cooks a bit faster and can dry out if you rush the braise.
No. Similar cut, different flavour profile. Chinese braised short ribs lean into soy, Shaoxing, whole spices, and reduction. Korean galbi often uses pear/apple sweetness, sesame, and a different balance.
You can, but stovetop is the most traditional feel and gives you more control over reduction. If you do use a pressure cooker, you’ll still want to reduce the sauce afterwards in an open pot to get that glossy finish.
There you go, Chinese Beef Short Ribs aka Asian Short Ribs, the way we make them in Casa Bloor.
If you make it, let me know how it goes. Post a picture on Instagram and tag me @azlinbloor.
Lin xx

Rub the salt all over the ribs (not in video) and set aside while you get everything else ready.
1.5 kg beef short ribs, ⅛ tsp salt
Peel and finely chop the onion and garlic.
1 large onion, 5 garlic cloves
Peel and cut the ginger into long, thin strips as you see in the video.
7.5 cm ginger
Mix all the sauce ingredients in a small bowl. This will make your cooking easier.
1 Tbsp light soy sauce, 1 Tbsp dark soy sauce, 5 Tbsp hoi sin sauce, 2 Tbsp tomato ketchup, 1 Tbsp Shaoxing wine
Pour in the oil and lower the heat to medium and fry the whole spices and dried red chillies for 30 seconds.
2 Tbsp vegetable or peanut oil, 2 star anise, 1 cinnamon stick, 2 dried red chillies
Tip in the chopped onion and fry for 1 minute.
Now add the garlic and ginger and fry for another minute.
Next we stir in the 5-spice powder for 30 seconds.
1 Tbsp Chinese 5 spice
Then, in go the ribs, stir to coat the ribs with the spices and aromatics.
Add the sauces and stir to coat again.
Now pour in the beef stock, stir well and bring to a simmer. Lower the heat right down, cover and cook for 2 – 3 hours. Check at the 2-hour mark. If the meat isn’t melting soft and tender, go for 3 hours. Also, check at least 3 ribs. In my experience, they don’t always cook uniformly. Add a little water if it’s getting too dry.
750 ml beef stock
white pepper
Dish up and top with the sliced red chillies and chopped coriander leaves. Serve as suggested in the article above.
red chillies, fresh coriander leaves
Serving: I’ve given it as 4. This will also depend on how much meat your ribs have. If they are very meaty, the recipe will even feen 5-6 people. Especially, bearing in mind that you will have other side dishes to go with it.
Calories: 593kcal | Carbohydrates: 21g | Protein: 59g | Fat: 29g | Saturated Fat: 12g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 1g | Monounsaturated Fat: 13g | Cholesterol: 162mg | Sodium: 1539mg | Potassium: 1509mg | Fiber: 2g | Sugar: 10g | Vitamin A: 51IU | Vitamin C: 5mg | Calcium: 86mg | Iron: 8mg






