
In World of Warcraft Mok'Nathal Shortribs restores 7500 health over 30 seconds. If you spend at least 10 seconds eating you will become affected by a well-fed buff that grants you 20 Stamina and Spirit for 30 min. The real life version bears a striking resemblance to beer braised short ribs and seems to reduce stamina, but maybe that was the Guinness.
As with most tender meats, this recipe is more about patience than precision. Plan on about three and a half hours total for the completion of this dish. Since baking takes up most of the time, it's the perfect time to get a couple of
The only materials necessary for the WoW version of Mok'Nathal Sorthribs are Raptor Ribs, which drop off Bladespire Ravagers, Daggermaw Lashtails, Daggermaw Blackhides, Felsworn Daggermaws, Bladespire Raptors, Scythetooth Raptors in Blade's Edge. The recipe requires 335 cooking and is earned by completing the Mok' Nathal Treats quest in Blade's Edge Mountains. The real life version is slightly more complicated.
The materials:
- 5 pounds Raptor Ribs (bone-in beef short ribs)
- 1/4 pound bacon
- 2 medium onions
- 1 12-oz bottle of Shindigger Stout (Guinness)
- 2 cups beef stock
- 4 bay leaves
- 1/4 cup tomato paste
- 2 tablespoons cooking oil
- salt and pepper
Objectves:
- Pre-heat oven to 350°.
- Trim excess fat from the meat and sprinkle with salt and pepper.
- Add two tablespoons of cooking oil to a heavy bottomed pot over medium-high heat When the oil is hot, brown the ribs in batches of five or six (to avoid crowding), then set browned ribs aside.
- Pour or spoon off accumulated fat but leave any browned bits in the pan.
- Chop the bacon into 1 inch pieces, add to the pan and cook until browned. This will take about five minutes.
- Add the onions, coarsely chopped, stir and cook until golden, another five minutes or so. Add the tomato paste, stock, beer and bay leaves and bring to a boil, stirring to mix well. Add to browned ribs. Cover the pan with a securely-fitting lid or aluminum foil.
- Bake until the meat is fork-tender (about two hours).
- Uncover the pan after about an hour and turn the rib pieces over in the braising liquid.
- Recover the pan with lid or foil and return to oven.
- When the meat is tender, remove it from the pan to a warm place.
- Boil the braising liquid to reduce it to the consistency you prefer for a pour-over sauce. Add flour or cornstarch if necessary.
- Remove bay leaves and add salt if necessary.
- Serve the ribs with sauce drizzled over them.
This recipe makes about four servings of ribs. These ribs can be dressed up or down depending on your audience. Here I served them with my infamous oven-roasted potatoes and sautéed mushrooms and onions. I don't have a vegetarian version of this recipe, so I had soy chicken, but my guests loved it.
If you can't find short ribs at your supermarket, check for back ribs.














Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
4-03-2008 @ 2:13PM
LanceG33 said...
Someone needs to learn how to pour their Guinness. Tilt the glass fergawdsake!
Reply
4-03-2008 @ 2:15PM
Dakira said...
Some people like a lot of head...(dramatic pause) on their beer!
4-03-2008 @ 2:37PM
Brooks said...
@Dakira
Well poured, the Guiness should have a large head that's solid. Unlike the one in the picture which is full of air bubbles and really looks more like Coke than Guiness.
4-03-2008 @ 2:48PM
Dakira said...
I'm more familiar with the 1/4 to 1/2 inch head that usually gets either a smiley face or clover leaf drawn in it.
But your right... thats totally air-head looking with lots of bubbles.
Yep I'm just wasting away the last 30 minutes at work... Sorry!
4-03-2008 @ 4:04PM
Heilig said...
The bubbly head comes from bottled beer. You won't get that thick creamy head from the bottled Extra Stout, you have to use the canned Draught that has the little compressed air widget in it. That's the only way to get the microbubbles and the cascade everyone expects. Also, Guinness is not made with crystal malt, so the bubbles don't hold as well as beers that are. The beer in the picture looks like someone tried to force canned draught action to happen to a bottled beer. All you get is a big head, but it doesn't settle properly.
*15 years of homebrew experience FTW!
4-03-2008 @ 4:16PM
Jp said...
/agree
As someone else with a lot of beer experience(brewing and drinking), the amount of head there is just unbelievable.
4-04-2008 @ 9:21AM
Electrocuted said...
I came in to comment for the exact same reason. I weep early morning tears for the head on that bread-in-a-bottle mispour.
4-06-2008 @ 1:58AM
kenny said...
good things come to those who wait!!!
L2beer
4-03-2008 @ 2:16PM
Dakira said...
I'm thinking there are now enough well fed buff's that someone could open a WOW themed restaurant.
Looks tasty!
Reply
4-03-2008 @ 2:25PM
guesswho? said...
guinness ftw
Reply
4-03-2008 @ 4:42PM
Hawk said...
I'll take the Guinness, and pass on the plate full of heart attack.
Reply
4-03-2008 @ 5:09PM
MechChef said...
Not a fan of beef ribs as much as I am of pork. I'm sure they're good though. I'd probably omit the mushrooms, and try harder to caramelize the onions.
Reply
4-03-2008 @ 5:17PM
SpaceLady said...
The recipe looks great.
I'm sorry the readers seem to be more involved with their heads in places they probably don't belong to appreciate the work that obviously went into the preparation and presentation of this dish. The writer obviously poured the beer correctly but how long can it possibly stay while being photographed?
Reply
4-03-2008 @ 10:47PM
West said...
that head will only dissipate as time goes on. it was a hasty/improper pour as commented heavily above.
however, the dish does look tasty. keep these articles coming..
4-03-2008 @ 7:18PM
isobelle said...
seriously, L2Beer
Reply