They can be either.
Yes, beef ribs are larger but there is more meat on pork ribs.
The homophone for "beef pork ribs poultry" is "beef, fork, ribs, poultry."
homophone for beef
spare ribs are on top of the rib cage chest baby back r on the back and short ribs are cut against the grain. Duly noted. Additionally helpful information would be that back ribs, be them beef or pork baby back ribs, are called so because the literally come from the back of either the cow or pig. These can often have a plumper meat to bone ratio. As is my understanding, beef finger and pork spare ribs are physically more frontal. St. Louis are just trimmed pork spare ribs Beef short ribs are cut against the direction of the ribs so one length of them features evenly spaced cross sections of ribs that run it's width
Pork.
There are two types of ribs sold in stores. One type is Beef and the other type is Pork. Ribs can be bone-in or boneless. They come in many different variations such as riblets, baby back ribs, country ribs and spare ribs.
Baby back ribs are pork ribs that are smaller in size. Most UK butchers think that a baby back is small cut of ribs. For BBQ aficionados and classically trained butchers baby back ribs are a special cut of pork rib, taken from the rib portion closest to the spine alongside the loin. A picture of the various cuts can be found on the following site images.huffingtonpost.com/2010-09-02-cuts.jpg
A full slab of ribs typically consists of 13 ribs, which are usually taken from the pork spareribs or baby back ribs. The exact number can vary slightly depending on how the slab is cut, but a full slab generally contains these 13 ribs. In some cases, beef ribs may also be served in slabs, but the standard reference is for pork ribs.
Ribs may either be pork or beef. The preference is typically more regional than anything else. Texans seem to prefer beef ribs over pork. Most of the Deep South prefers pork ribs. When buying ribs in the grocery store, the label should indicate whether they are pork or beef. If the label is missing this information, ask the butcher.
It's not always pork - sometimes it's beef. Pork is cheaper and easier though, so it's more common. If you want beef ribs, go to a halal friendly restaurant.
A homophone is a word that sounds the same as another word but has a different meaning. In this case, "beef" and "beef" are homophones, as are "pork" and "pork," "ribs" and "ribs," and "poultry" and "poultry."
The U.S.D.A defines baby beef as follows: "Baby beef" and "calf" are 2 interchangeable terms used to describe young cattle weighing about 700 pounds that have been raised mainly on milk and grass. The meat cuts from baby beef are smaller; the meat is light red and contains less fat than beef. The fat may have a yellow tint due to the vitamin A in grass. Baby Beef Ribs would simply be the short ribs taken from such animal.