Oven Baked Ribs Recipe - The Cookie Rookie® (2024)

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By: Becky Hardin

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Oven Baked Ribs are the perfect meal for rainy days when you just don’t have access to your grill. I like cooking ribs in the oven because it’s super easy and they turn out so moist. These dry-rubbed ribs are one of our favorite easy dinners for summer!

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Table of Contents

What’s in this Oven Baked Ribs Recipe?

Ribs are great on the grill, but oven baked ribs might be even better! Baking them really brings out the flavor, especially with this amazing dry rub.

  • Ribs: This recipe works with baby back ribs or spare ribs, so use whichever you like best!
  • Dijon Mustard: Adds a bit of an earthy, spicy flavor.
  • Liquid Smoke: Adds that fresh-from-the-grill flavor. This is optional, so you can leave it out if you prefer.
  • Barbecue Sauce: Adds that classic BBQ flavor.
  • Spice Rub: A sweet, smoky, and slightly spicy blend of brown sugar, paprika, granulation garlic and onion, salt and pepper, cumin, chili pepper, mustard, and cayenne pepper takes these ribs to the next level!

Pro Tip: If you don’t have liquid smoke, I highly recommend using smoked paprika in the spice rub to give these ribs that grilled taste!

Variations on Baked Ribs

I love the classic taste of BBQ baked ribs, but there are so many other fun ways to flavor these ribs. Try one of these variations:

  • Asian-Inspired: Marinate the ribs in a mixture of soy sauce, ginger, garlic, honey, and a touch of sesame oil. Serve with a sprinkle of sesame seeds and chopped green onions for added flair.
  • Honey Mustard: Combine honey, Dijon mustard, minced garlic, and a splash of apple cider vinegar to make a tangy and sweet glaze for the ribs.
  • Citrus-Glazed: Mix together orange juice, lime juice, honey, soy sauce, and grated ginger to create a bright and zesty glaze.
  • Herb-Rubbed: Create a dry rub using a combination of herbs such as rosemary, thyme, oregano, paprika, garlic powder, and salt.
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How long do you bake ribs for in the oven?

Cooking ribs in the oven will vary based on what type of ribs you’re making. You can use spare ribs or baby back ribs for this easy oven baked ribs recipe. If you are baking Baby Back Ribs, cook them for about 1½-2 hours. If you are baking Spare Ribs, cook them for 2½-3 hours in the oven.

Do you bake ribs covered or uncovered?

I like to bake ribs in the oven uncovered at first, and then about halfway through the cooking time, I will cover them with aluminum foil for the remainder of the cooking time. I find this keeps them from drying out.

Should I wrap my ribs in aluminum foil?

It is common to wrap ribs in foil when cooking ribs in the oven, but it’s not always necessary. In this recipe, the ribs spend some time uncovered and some time covered.

Should I bake ribs at 250 or 275?

Contrary to the super low-and-slow method, I actually like to bake my ribs at 300°F. They finish a little faster this way, but they still stay super moist and tender– trust me!

At what temp are ribs most tender?

Ideally, you want the internal temperature of your ribs to be 190-200°F. This will make them fall-off-the-bone tender!

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How to Store and Reheat

Store leftover oven baked ribs in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 3 days. Reheat in a 250°F oven in a pan covered with aluminum foil for about 30 minutes, or until the meat reaches 130-140°F.

How to Freeze

Freeze baked ribs tightly wrapped in 2 layers of aluminum foil for up to 3 months. Let thaw overnight in the refrigerator before reheating.

Serving Suggestions

These BBQ baked ribs are delicious served with the leftover pan drippings or some extra barbecue sauce and a side of shoestring fries (pictured), coleslaw, baked beans, and some freshly baked cornbread. Corn on the cob, potato salad, or macaroni salad would also be delicious!

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For more tips and tricks, check out my guide on how to cook ribs!

More Rib Recipes We Love

  • Grilled Ribs
  • Smoked Ribs
  • Crock Pot Ribs
  • Air Fryer Ribs
  • Instant Pot Ribs

Recipe

Oven Baked Ribs Recipe

4.53 from 51 votes

Author: Becky Hardin | The Cookie Rookie

Prep: 10 minutes minutes

Cook: 3 hours hours

Total: 3 hours hours 25 minutes minutes

Oven Baked Ribs Recipe - The Cookie Rookie® (7)

Serves8

Print Rate

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These Oven Baked Ribs are the perfect rainy day meal. So moist, tender, and delicious!

Oven Baked Ribs Recipe - The Cookie Rookie® (8)

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Ingredients

For the Ribs

  • 4 pounds baby back ribs or spare ribs
  • ¼ cup Dijon mustard
  • 1 teaspoon liquid smoke optional
  • ½ cup spice rub (see recipe below)
  • ½ cup barbecue sauce store-bought or homemade (Blues Hog recommended)

For the Spice Rub

  • 4 cups dark brown sugar
  • ½ cup ground smoked paprika or sweet paprika
  • ¼ cup granulated garlic — not garlic salt!
  • ¼ cup granulated onion — not onion salt!
  • ¼ cup kosher salt
  • ¼ cup ground black pepper
  • ¼ cup ground cumin
  • cup ground ancho pepper or chipotle pepper
  • ¼ cup ground mustard
  • cup ground cayenne pepper

Recommended Equipment

Instructions

  • Line a baking sheet with double layers of aluminum foil and set a cooling rack inside the pan. The rack allows for heat to circulate evenly on all sides of the ribs. Place the ribs on the rack.

    4 pounds baby back ribs

  • In a large bowl, combine all dry rub ingredients and whisk well until all ingredients are completely incorporated. Set aside ½ cup of dry rub and place the remainder in an airtight container/jar to save for later use.

    4 cups dark brown sugar, ½ cup ground smoked paprika, ¼ cup granulated garlic, ¼ cup granulated onion, ¼ cup kosher salt, ¼ cup ground black pepper, ¼ cup ground cumin, ⅛ cup ground ancho pepper, ¼ cup ground mustard, ⅛ cup ground cayenne pepper

  • In a small bowl, mix the mustard and the liquid smoke. Brush a thin layer of the mustard/liquid smoke mixture over both sides of the ribs. Sprinkle the dry rub over the mustard and pat it gently so the rub will adhere to the meat. If desired, the seasoned meat can sit overnight in the fridge, just be sure to cover the pan tightly with foil.

    ¼ cup Dijon mustard, 1 teaspoon liquid smoke, ½ cup spice rub

  • When ready to cook the ribs, set the oven to broil and place the pan on the top rack of the oven. Broil the ribs (watching closely) for 4-5 minutes or until the dry rub sugar is bubbling and ribs are browned.

  • Remove the ribs from the oven and set the oven to 300°F. Move the oven rack to the middle position of the oven (wear oven mitts!). Once the oven has heated to 300°F, place the pan of ribs (uncovered) in the oven. If cooking Baby Back Ribs, roast the ribs for 1½-2 hours. If cooking Spare Ribs, roast for 2½-3 hours. Halfway through cooking, cover the ribs with aluminum foil to keep them from getting dry.

  • After the ribs have cooked with only 30 minutes left, brush the ribs lightly with barbecue sauce. Cover with foil and cook until the ribs are fork-tender when tested in the thickest part of the ribs.

    ½ cup barbecue sauce

  • Allow the ribs to rest, covered for 15 minutes.

  • To serve, cut between the bones to separate into individual ribs. Serve with extra barbecue sauce or your favorite dipping sauce.

Last step! Don’t forget to show me a pic of what you made! Upload an image or tag me @thecookierookie on Instagram!

Becky’s tips

  • Remove the membrane from the back of the ribs for better tenderness. Pat the ribs dry with a paper towel before applying the seasonings.
  • Brush the ribs with more barbecue sauce in the last 15-20 minutes of cooking to create a sticky glaze, if desired.
  • Properly cooked ribs should have an internal temperature of 190-200°F. The meat should be tender and easily pull away from the bone.
  • Let the ribs rest before serving to lock in the juices.

Storage:Store oven baked ribs in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 3 days or in the freezer for up to 3 months.

Nutrition Information

Serving: 0.5pound Calories: 369kcal (18%) Carbohydrates: 11g (4%) Protein: 28g (56%) Fat: 24g (37%) Saturated Fat: 8g (50%) Polyunsaturated Fat: 4g Monounsaturated Fat: 10g Trans Fat: 0.2g Cholesterol: 99mg (33%) Sodium: 397mg (17%) Potassium: 436mg (12%) Fiber: 1g (4%) Sugar: 6g (7%) Vitamin A: 192IU (4%) Vitamin C: 1mg (1%) Calcium: 99mg (10%) Iron: 3mg (17%)

Did You Make This?I want to see! Be sure to upload an image below & tag @thecookierookie on social media!

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Meet Becky Hardin

Becky Hardin is a wife and mother living in Saint Louis Missouri. She founded The Cookie Rookie in 2012 as a creative way to share recipes. Now, she is a trusted resource for easy cooking around the world, being featured in Taste of Home, The Kitchn, ABC’s Home and Family, and more. Here at The Cookie Rookie she is the editor in chief of all recipes and continues to enjoy sharing her passion for cooking for busy families. She has since founded two additional food blogs, Easy Chicken Recipes and Easy Dessert Recipes.

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18 Comments

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Oven Baked Ribs Recipe - The Cookie Rookie® (14)

Tj Hall

Posted on 6/13/2022

My wife and I really enjoyed these ribs, however, the volume of Spice rub is a bit of overkill. I did a half batch of the spice rub and still had enough rub leftover for ribs for the next few years. If I were to do it again, I’d cut the rub recipe down another half, (1 cup brown sugar, etc.), and roll from there.

Again, loved the recipe, cooked quick and great, just way high volume on the spice rub.Oven Baked Ribs Recipe - The Cookie Rookie® (15)

Reply

Oven Baked Ribs Recipe - The Cookie Rookie® (16)

Becky Hardin

Posted on 6/16/2022

Reply to Tj Hall

Definitely modify to your taste!

1

Reply

Oven Baked Ribs Recipe - The Cookie Rookie® (17)

Christy

Posted on 7/23/2020

Your recipe calls for 1/2 cup of spice rub but when I read down further you say to mix the dry rub together and set aside 1 cup. Do I need 1/2 cub or full cup?

Reply

Oven Baked Ribs Recipe - The Cookie Rookie® (18)

Becky Hardin

Posted on 7/26/2020

Reply to Christy

When you prepare the spice rub, it makes more than a 1/2 cup so you’re able to save more for later!

Reply

Oven Baked Ribs Recipe - The Cookie Rookie® (19)

Jenny

Posted on 12/7/2023

Reply to Christy

Then why make so much?

Reply

Oven Baked Ribs Recipe - The Cookie Rookie® (20)

JIll Naylor

Posted on 4/22/2020

Would this rub be suitable for Large Beef Ribs.
Your comments would be appreciated

Reply

Oven Baked Ribs Recipe - The Cookie Rookie® (21)

Becky Hardin

Posted on 4/25/2020

Reply to JIll Naylor

I think that would taste great!!

Reply

Oven Baked Ribs Recipe - The Cookie Rookie® (22)

Josh

Posted on 11/18/2019

These were amazing! Going to cook them again soon! And glad to see someone enjoying one of my favorite beers in the picture you postedOven Baked Ribs Recipe - The Cookie Rookie® (23)

Reply

Oven Baked Ribs Recipe - The Cookie Rookie® (24)

Becky Hardin

Posted on 11/26/2019

Reply to Josh

One of mine also! I’m happy to hear you enjoyed the ribs!!

Reply

Oven Baked Ribs Recipe - The Cookie Rookie® (25)

Lyrra

Posted on 8/28/2019

Any tips for cooking these in a convection oven? We recently moved, and I’m still figuring this oven out! Lol

Reply

Oven Baked Ribs Recipe - The Cookie Rookie® (26)

Lauretta Beltz

Posted on 8/11/2019

Made these oven baked ribs today they were awesome!!

Reply

Oven Baked Ribs Recipe - The Cookie Rookie® (27)

Becky Hardin

Posted on 8/14/2019

Reply to Lauretta Beltz

Yay! They’re great!

Reply

Oven Baked Ribs Recipe - The Cookie Rookie® (28)

Jennifer Fulk

Posted on 5/19/2019

Hi Becky! Can you please tell us if we have to remove the membranes on the ribs before cooking? I read that you have to. If you do, could you share some tips on how to do it? Thank you!Oven Baked Ribs Recipe - The Cookie Rookie® (29)

1

Reply

Oven Baked Ribs Recipe - The Cookie Rookie® (30)

Jim

Posted on 9/17/2023

Reply to Jennifer Fulk

The best way is to use paper towel and start at the small end. The paper towel makes it easier to get a grip on the membrane.

Reply

Oven Baked Ribs Recipe - The Cookie Rookie® (31)

Jim

Posted on 5/19/2019

Please tell me that the calories listed is for the whole batch of ribs ????????

Reply

Oven Baked Ribs Recipe - The Cookie Rookie® (32)

Becky Hardin

Posted on 5/23/2019

Reply to Jim

I wish! That would be per serving and there are 8 servings in this dish.

Reply

Oven Baked Ribs Recipe - The Cookie Rookie® (33)

Harold

Posted on 12/20/2018

As an old Southern boy, I’ve been cooking ribs most of my life. I used Grills, smoked them for hours, tried all kinds of rubs and sauces and these are the clear winner. Beats any I’ve had at B-B-Q joints. Be sure to use St Louis style ribs and Sweet Baby Ray’s original sauce if you can find it. Better outcome with a lot less work.Oven Baked Ribs Recipe - The Cookie Rookie® (34)

Reply

Becky Hardin

Posted on 12/21/2018

Reply to Harold

OMG thank you!!! That means the world to me. I live in STL so I love Sweet Baby Rays!! Great suggestion.

Reply

Oven Baked Ribs Recipe - The Cookie Rookie® (2024)

FAQs

Should you cover ribs when baking in oven? ›

Do you bake ribs covered or uncovered? You can cook ribs either covered with foil or uncovered. Foil is used to stop the meat from drying out but is not essential. If cooking uncovered and you notice the meat is drying out or browning too quickly, you can cover with foil for the remaining cook time.

How long should you cook ribs in the oven? ›

Larger, fattier ribs need to be cooked longer than baby backs. Shoot for around 2 hours at 350 degrees if the ribs are uncovered, as in our Barbecued Pork Ribs. If wrapped in foil, the ribs can go for up to 3 hours at 300°F degrees, or crank the oven up to 400 degrees for a briefer baking time—1.5 to 2 hours.

Do you flip ribs when baking in oven? ›

It might be necessary to turn the rack around to get an even sear on the top surface of the ribs, but don't worry about flipping them over. You are only crusting the top surface.

How do you bake ribs without drying them out? ›

Bake 2 1/2 to 3 hours for spareribs or 1 1/2 to 2 hours for baby back ribs. Halfway through cooking, cover the ribs with aluminum foil to protect them from drying out. Brush with barbecue sauce.

How do you keep ribs moist when baking? ›

When it's time to bake, unwrap the ribs then place them on a foil-lined, nonstick-sprayed baking sheet. If baking more than one rack, give them each their own baking sheet. Cover the ribs tightly with foil then bake for 3-1/2 hours at 250 degrees.

Do you bake ribs meat side up or meat side down? ›

Place ribs, meat side down, in baking dishes. Cover the baking dishes with aluminum foil and place in the oven. If you are using small baby back ribs, take out after 3.5 hours. If you are using regular baby back or St. Louis style ribs, then take out after 4 hours.

Can you overcook ribs in oven? ›

Cooking any kind of meat for too long will usually leave it dry, tough, and utterly unappealing. In all honesty, cooking BBQ ribs to perfection is something of an artform. It's not something the home chef does very often, and overcooking the ribs is a common way to disappoint yourself when you sit down to eat.

Should I bake ribs at 250 or 275? ›

Baking Ribs:
  1. Temperature: Preheat your oven to a low temperature, around 275°F (135°C).
  2. Cooking Time: Place the ribs on a baking sheet or in a roasting pan and cook for approximately 2.5 to 3.5 hours.
Feb 12, 2023

What is the best temperature to cook ribs? ›

Ideal Technique & Temperature For Cooking Ribs

Preheat your smoker, charcoal grill, or gas grill to 225°F - the ideal temperature for cooking ribs. Smoke/slow cook for 3 hours using indirect heat. Wrap the ribs in foil with some liquid and continue cooking for 2 hours.

Do you put water in the pan when baking ribs? ›

Fill a small baking pan two-thirds full with cold water and place on the lowest rung in the oven. This helps to keep the ribs moist during the lengthy cooking time.

Do you put barbecue sauce on ribs before baking? ›

When To Put Barbecue Sauce on Ribs. We like the method this recipe uses, which is to put the barbecue sauce on the ribs after they're boiled — but before they go in the oven. This will allow the ribs to get all the barbecue flavor while the sauce bakes into the ribs.

How to cook ribs in the oven for dummies? ›

Method:
  1. Preheat oven to 300 Fahrenheit.
  2. Line a baking sheet with foil or parchment paper.
  3. Slather mustard (and liquid smoke, if using) over both sides of the ribs.
  4. Sprinkle rub all over.
  5. Bake the ribs for 2 hours.
  6. Paint a thin layer of barbecue sauce onto both sides of the rack, then bake for another 30 minutes.
Sep 26, 2023

Do you bake ribs covered or uncovered? ›

Place ribs on a foil-lined baking sheet (or large roasting pan), meat-side up. Bake for 4 hours (middle rack, uncovered). Turn oven up to 250 degrees F and let ribs cook for another hour. Turn oven up to 275 degrees F and let ribs cook for another hour.

How to get ribs to fall off the bone? ›

The best, most fool-proof way to make sure that your ribs are fall off the bone tender is to bake them, covered, at a low temperature in your oven. We bake our ribs in a 275°F oven for two to three hours. It is this simple method that guarantees tender ribs!

Why are my baked ribs tough? ›

The light connective tissue in ribs begins to break down around 195 degrees F. Anything under that temperature and your ribs will be chewy, stringy, and tough. At 195 degrees F, that tissue starts to gelatinize and turn into tasty, melty deliciousness.

Should you wrap ribs in tin foil in oven? ›

Preheat the oven to 300 degrees F (150 degrees C). Bake ribs wrapped tightly in foil in the preheated oven for 2 1/2 hours. Remove ribs from foil and serve with more sauce, if desired.

Do you cook ribs in foil meat side up or down? ›

Place the ribs meat side down on the foil and wrap tightly. 7 – Put the ribs wrapped in foil back on the grill and increase the grill temperature to 250 degrees for 1 hour. 8 – The wrapped ribs go meat side down onto the grill. 9 – After 1 hour, gently pick up one end of the ribs.

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