How-To Guides

How to Cook Rib of Beef

What is a Rib of Beef?

How to Cook Rib of Beef: Rib of beef is a traditional British roasting joint, often served as the centrepiece for Christmas dinner or a celebratory Sunday roast. Taken from the primal rib section, this cut is also known as a standing rib roast or prime rib. It is rich, marbled and incredibly flavourful.

Roasted on the bone, the large fat cap bastes the meat as it cooks, locking in moisture for a juicy, tender result. The outer fat crisps up beautifully, forming a golden crust that enhances the succulence of the roast beef beneath. Whether you are cooking rib of beef for a festive meal or special occasion, it is a classic choice that never fails to impress.

Roast Rib of Beef Cooking Time

  • Begin with a quick blast in a hot oven for 15 minutes. This initial heat kickstarts caramelisation and browning on the surface. Then roast at a more moderate 145 to 170 °C (depending on your oven), allowing approximately 20 minutes per 500 g for medium-rare doneness. If you prefer your rib closer to rare or medium, simply reduce or increase cooking time by about 4 to 5 minutes per 500 g.
  • For a tender, evenly cooked joint, slow roasting (also known as low and slow) is an excellent method. It typically takes a minimum of four hours, depending on joint size.
  • Always rely on a meat thermometer for precision. Aim for 49 to 51 °C for rare, 53 to 55 °C for medium-rare, and 57 to 59 °C for medium. This ensures a juicy, perfectly cooked rib of beef.

Best Way to Cook a Rib of Beef

Traditional Roasting

A time-tested method that begins with high heat to develop a deep, flavoursome crust, followed by gentler roasting to cook the meat through. Ideal for those who enjoy a classic roast with bold, caramelised edges. A meat thermometer is still recommended for precision.

  1. Remove your rib of beef from the vacuum packaging and pat it dry with kitchen paper. Allow it to come up to room temperature.
  2. Preheat the oven to 220ºC / Fan 200ºC.
  3. Rub a little oil into the joint to help the seasoning adhere, then generously season with freshly ground black pepper and good-quality sea salt. For added depth of flavour and a beautiful golden crust, rub the external fat with a little English mustard powder.
  4. Arrange a trivet of beef bones and roughly chopped onion, carrot, and celery in a heavy, good-quality roasting tray. Place the beef on top.
  5. Roast for 15 minutes at the high heat, then reduce the oven to 145ºC / Fan. From this point on, cook according to your preferred level of doneness (see timing guide below), basting the joint occasionally as it roasts.
  6. Check the internal temperature to ensure it’s cooked to your liking before removing from the oven. Rest the beef uncovered for 10 minutes, then loosely cover with foil and allow to rest for at least another hour. This helps the juices redistribute evenly throughout the meat.
  7. A Proper Gravy: Place the roasting tray on the hob over a medium heat. Scrape up all the browned bits from the base, then add around 500ml of good-quality beef or chicken stock. Reduce to your desired consistency, then strain off the bones and vegetables. For a final flourish, whisk in a knob of cold butter to give the gravy a rich gloss.
  8. When ready to carve, slice the meat away from the bone. Our rib of beef is chined, making carving straightforward.

Low Temperature Roasting

This technique delivers exceptionally even cooking and a more succulent result than traditional high-heat roasting. When preparing a larger joint like prime rib, especially using this method, a meat thermometer is essential to ensure perfect doneness throughout.

  1. Remove your rib of beef from the vacuum packaging and pat away any surface moisture. Allow it to come up to room temperature.
  2. Set your oven to 65ºC. This is a very low temperature, and if using a gas cooker, the pilot light may be sufficient. The technique still works at slightly higher temperatures if needed, though timings will vary.
  3. Rub the beef with a little oil and season generously with sea salt and freshly ground black pepper.
  4. Depending on the size of the joint, roasting will take a minimum of 5–6 hours. Use a meat thermometer to monitor internal temperature: aim for 49–51ºC for rare, 53–55ºC for medium-rare, and 57–59ºC for medium.
  5. Once your target temperature is reached, remove the joint from the oven and rest for 20–30 minutes, loosely covered in foil. You can complete this stage up to an hour before serving.
  6. Ten minutes before you’re ready to serve, return the beef to the oven at its highest setting. Roast for 10–12 minutes, until the exterior is well caramelised. This final blast enhances the crust without overcooking the centre.
  7. Carve against the grain into thin slices, around ½ to ¾ inch thick.

Top Tips for Perfect Roast Beef

  • Allow plenty of time for your rib of beef to come up to room temperature before cooking. This is crucial for a large joint, especially when roasting on the bone, as it promotes even cooking throughout.
  • To check for doneness, particularly if you’re aiming for beautifully pink, medium-rare meat, insert a skewer into the thickest part of the joint and leave it in place for 10 seconds. Remove the skewer and gently touch it to the inside of your wrist. It should feel warm for medium-rare.
  • Resting is just as important as roasting. Once out of the oven, the residual heat needs time to evenly distribute through the meat, while the muscle fibres have a chance to relax. Rushing this stage can result in uneven texture and lost juices. Give it the time it deserves for a truly exceptional roast.

Roast Rib of Beef Recipe

For a standout alternative to the traditional roast dinner, try George Ryle’s Roast Rib of Beef with Parmesan Cream Baked Onions. This elegant, flavour-packed dish pairs perfectly cooked beef with rich, savoury onions and a sharp watercress salad — a combination full of confidence and sophistication.

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  • A classic of French cooking, built on combinations that have stood their ground for good reason, and long may they do so.

Chicken breast roasted in brown butter, creamy mash worked with plenty of butter and dairy, and a mustard sauce brought together with cream. It reads rich, but it eats with balance. The Dijon and tarragon cut through, lifting the dish and keeping it in check.
  • A classic of French cooking, built on combinations that have stood their ground for good reason, and long may they do so.

Chicken breast roasted in brown butter, creamy mash worked with plenty of butter and dairy, and a mustard sauce brought together with cream. It reads rich, but it eats with balance. The Dijon and tarragon cut through, lifting the dish and keeping it in check.

This is food that does not chase anything. It knows exactly what it is.
  • Filmed on a blustery day at the Harewood House estate, Ellen talks us through the Highland cattle and the wider farming approach shaping the land here.

These short films look at how the estate is guiding the land back towards what it once was, using the right livestock for the right terrain and allowing systems to work with the landscape rather than against it. Hardy cattle, able to outwinter on pasture alone, reduce the need for inputs and bring a different kind of balance to the farm.

For chefs, this is where the story begins. The flavour comes later, but it is built here, in the fields, through decisions made over time rather than in a single season.

It is a strong example of thoughtful farming, where lower inputs and careful management can support both the land and a sustainable margin, all driven by a clear intention to make the estate work for nature as much as it does for people.
  • We love it when a plan comes together! And this little project with @llewelynslondon provides a great example. 

It all started with a trip up to Swaledale HQ, to see the butchery and meet the team; bacon, black pudding and egg baps were laid on fo breakfast. Then it was off to see one of our network of farmers; Jim Mallender, over in Thornton in craven. Jim and his family showed us round and held a sort of farming Q&A. Then we cooked some cuts on a bbq and sampled the llewelyns take on a hotpot. Truly bringing farmers and chef together and a wonderful day for all involved. 

Off the back of the visit a special dinner an d a three course menu of dreams. It celebrates not just our produce and their cooking but also the 6 beautiful years that head chef michael (@skinnylittlefatman) has spent at the helm of this charming restaurant. 

We are extremely excited to eat and drink tonight to celebrate all those things.
  • There might not be a food that is more of this generation than fried chicken. It’s eminently Instagram-able (or TikTok-able depending on your age), malleable to various cuisines and extremely delicious. Plus, it has just the right amount of technique, if you know what I mean. The sort of thing that, if you’re not giving it the requisite thought and attention, can be a bit ropey. No danger of that here though…

@Grylos has given it the Swaledale treatment, i.e. keeping it simple, making it delicious and showing off our incredible meat. So, with no more than a saffron aioli, some shredded iceberg and a few sliced pickles, this is the fried chicken burger of dreams! Oh, sorry, nearly forgot the crispy chicken skin – told you there was just the right amount of technique. 

There are few things that we would want to munch down for lunch more than one of these bad boys. Give ‘em a whirl!
  • Always good to welcome chefs to the butchery. Earlier this week the teams from @llewelynslondon came up to see us. We showed them around the cutting room, talked through how we work, then headed up the hill for a bit of cooking and conversation.

For many chefs it is the first chance to see the whole journey. From the farms and fields where the animals are raised, through our ageing rooms, and finally into the kitchens that cook it.

If you are a chef and fancy a visit this year, you would be very welcome. Send us a message and we will put the kettle on.
  • March sits between seasons. Winter has not quite loosened its grip, and there is still time, and need, for fortifying pleasures. A bowl of chicken broth is one of them.

It begins with a proper chicken stock. Just bones and time in the pot, slowly giving up their flavour until the liquid runs clear and deeply savoury. If you watched our earlier film on how to break down a whole chicken, this is where the rest of it finds its purpose.

From there the broth is built. Pearl barley for substance. Cavolo nero and turnips for the season. Simple things, allowed to do their work in good stock.

Just before serving, a small splash of oloroso lifts the whole bowl.
  • British Pie Week, apparently.

We do not usually pay much attention to themed food weeks. We prefer to make and sell things when they feel right.

This year is different, thanks to our growing friendship with Yorkshire chef and pie obsessive Josh Whitehead, and his excellent pie project, Finer Pleasures.

Josh started @finer_pleasures in 2023 to make pies the way they should be made. Proper fillings, local meat and traditional methods.

So we thought we would join in.

The pie is a classic. Chicken, ham, leek and mushroom.

Brined chicken, smoked ham hock and a rich velouté finished with herbs, mustard and chestnut mushrooms or leeks.

A proper pie.

Available this week while they last.
A classic of French cooking, built on combinations that have stood their ground for good reason, and long may they do so. Chicken breast roasted in brown butter, creamy mash worked with plenty of butter and dairy, and a mustard sauce brought together with cream. It reads rich, but it eats with balance. The Dijon and tarragon cut through, lifting the dish and keeping it in check.
2 days ago
7
View on Instagram |
1/8
A classic of French cooking, built on combinations that have stood their ground for good reason, and long may they do so. Chicken breast roasted in brown butter, creamy mash worked with plenty of butter and dairy, and a mustard sauce brought together with cream. It reads rich, but it eats with balance. The Dijon and tarragon cut through, lifting the dish and keeping it in check. This is food that does not chase anything. It knows exactly what it is.
3 days ago
475
View on Instagram |
2/8
Filmed on a blustery day at the Harewood House estate, Ellen talks us through the Highland cattle and the wider farming approach shaping the land here. These short films look at how the estate is guiding the land back towards what it once was, using the right livestock for the right terrain and allowing systems to work with the landscape rather than against it. Hardy cattle, able to outwinter on pasture alone, reduce the need for inputs and bring a different kind of balance to the farm. For chefs, this is where the story begins. The flavour comes later, but it is built here, in the fields, through decisions made over time rather than in a single season. It is a strong example of thoughtful farming, where lower inputs and careful management can support both the land and a sustainable margin, all driven by a clear intention to make the estate work for nature as much as it does for people.
7 days ago
62
View on Instagram |
3/8
We love it when a plan comes together! And this little project with @llewelynslondon provides a great example. It all started with a trip up to Swaledale HQ, to see the butchery and meet the team; bacon, black pudding and egg baps were laid on fo breakfast. Then it was off to see one of our network of farmers; Jim Mallender, over in Thornton in craven. Jim and his family showed us round and held a sort of farming Q&A. Then we cooked some cuts on a bbq and sampled the llewelyns take on a hotpot. Truly bringing farmers and chef together and a wonderful day for all involved. Off the back of the visit a special dinner an d a three course menu of dreams. It celebrates not just our produce and their cooking but also the 6 beautiful years that head chef michael (@skinnylittlefatman) has spent at the helm of this charming restaurant. We are extremely excited to eat and drink tonight to celebrate all those things.
1 week ago
56
View on Instagram |
4/8
There might not be a food that is more of this generation than fried chicken. It’s eminently Instagram-able (or TikTok-able depending on your age), malleable to various cuisines and extremely delicious. Plus, it has just the right amount of technique, if you know what I mean. The sort of thing that, if you’re not giving it the requisite thought and attention, can be a bit ropey. No danger of that here though… @Grylos has given it the Swaledale treatment, i.e. keeping it simple, making it delicious and showing off our incredible meat. So, with no more than a saffron aioli, some shredded iceberg and a few sliced pickles, this is the fried chicken burger of dreams! Oh, sorry, nearly forgot the crispy chicken skin – told you there was just the right amount of technique. There are few things that we would want to munch down for lunch more than one of these bad boys. Give ‘em a whirl!
2 weeks ago
665
View on Instagram |
5/8
Always good to welcome chefs to the butchery. Earlier this week the teams from @llewelynslondon came up to see us. We showed them around the cutting room, talked through how we work, then headed up the hill for a bit of cooking and conversation.

For many chefs it is the first chance to see the whole journey. From the farms and fields where the animals are raised, through our ageing rooms, and finally into the kitchens that cook it.

If you are a chef and fancy a visit this year, you would be very welcome. Send us a message and we will put the kettle on.
Always good to welcome chefs to the butchery. Earlier this week the teams from @llewelynslondon came up to see us. We showed them around the cutting room, talked through how we work, then headed up the hill for a bit of cooking and conversation.

For many chefs it is the first chance to see the whole journey. From the farms and fields where the animals are raised, through our ageing rooms, and finally into the kitchens that cook it.

If you are a chef and fancy a visit this year, you would be very welcome. Send us a message and we will put the kettle on.
Always good to welcome chefs to the butchery. Earlier this week the teams from @llewelynslondon came up to see us. We showed them around the cutting room, talked through how we work, then headed up the hill for a bit of cooking and conversation.

For many chefs it is the first chance to see the whole journey. From the farms and fields where the animals are raised, through our ageing rooms, and finally into the kitchens that cook it.

If you are a chef and fancy a visit this year, you would be very welcome. Send us a message and we will put the kettle on.
Always good to welcome chefs to the butchery. Earlier this week the teams from @llewelynslondon came up to see us. We showed them around the cutting room, talked through how we work, then headed up the hill for a bit of cooking and conversation. For many chefs it is the first chance to see the whole journey. From the farms and fields where the animals are raised, through our ageing rooms, and finally into the kitchens that cook it. If you are a chef and fancy a visit this year, you would be very welcome. Send us a message and we will put the kettle on.
3 weeks ago
52
View on Instagram |
6/8
March sits between seasons. Winter has not quite loosened its grip, and there is still time, and need, for fortifying pleasures. A bowl of chicken broth is one of them. It begins with a proper chicken stock. Just bones and time in the pot, slowly giving up their flavour until the liquid runs clear and deeply savoury. If you watched our earlier film on how to break down a whole chicken, this is where the rest of it finds its purpose. From there the broth is built. Pearl barley for substance. Cavolo nero and turnips for the season. Simple things, allowed to do their work in good stock. Just before serving, a small splash of oloroso lifts the whole bowl.
4 weeks ago
952
View on Instagram |
7/8
British Pie Week, apparently.

We do not usually pay much attention to themed food weeks. We prefer to make and sell things when they feel right.

This year is different, thanks to our growing friendship with Yorkshire chef and pie obsessive Josh Whitehead, and his excellent pie project, Finer Pleasures.

Josh started @finer_pleasures in 2023 to make pies the way they should be made. Proper fillings, local meat and traditional methods.

So we thought we would join in.

The pie is a classic. Chicken, ham, leek and mushroom.

Brined chicken, smoked ham hock and a rich velouté finished with herbs, mustard and chestnut mushrooms or leeks.

A proper pie.

Available this week while they last.
British Pie Week, apparently.

We do not usually pay much attention to themed food weeks. We prefer to make and sell things when they feel right.

This year is different, thanks to our growing friendship with Yorkshire chef and pie obsessive Josh Whitehead, and his excellent pie project, Finer Pleasures.

Josh started @finer_pleasures in 2023 to make pies the way they should be made. Proper fillings, local meat and traditional methods.

So we thought we would join in.

The pie is a classic. Chicken, ham, leek and mushroom.

Brined chicken, smoked ham hock and a rich velouté finished with herbs, mustard and chestnut mushrooms or leeks.

A proper pie.

Available this week while they last.
British Pie Week, apparently.

We do not usually pay much attention to themed food weeks. We prefer to make and sell things when they feel right.

This year is different, thanks to our growing friendship with Yorkshire chef and pie obsessive Josh Whitehead, and his excellent pie project, Finer Pleasures.

Josh started @finer_pleasures in 2023 to make pies the way they should be made. Proper fillings, local meat and traditional methods.

So we thought we would join in.

The pie is a classic. Chicken, ham, leek and mushroom.

Brined chicken, smoked ham hock and a rich velouté finished with herbs, mustard and chestnut mushrooms or leeks.

A proper pie.

Available this week while they last.
British Pie Week, apparently. We do not usually pay much attention to themed food weeks. We prefer to make and sell things when they feel right. This year is different, thanks to our growing friendship with Yorkshire chef and pie obsessive Josh Whitehead, and his excellent pie project, Finer Pleasures. Josh started @finer_pleasures in 2023 to make pies the way they should be made. Proper fillings, local meat and traditional methods. So we thought we would join in. The pie is a classic. Chicken, ham, leek and mushroom. Brined chicken, smoked ham hock and a rich velouté finished with herbs, mustard and chestnut mushrooms or leeks. A proper pie. Available this week while they last.
4 weeks ago
611
View on Instagram |
8/8