This 4-ingredient oven pork rib tips recipe is all about keeping things simple without sacrificing flavor. You start with raw pork rib tips, toss them straight into a glass baking dish, add three everyday pantry staples, and let the oven do the work. Pork rib tips are a flavorful, slightly rustic cut often used in Midwestern barbecue joints because they’re rich with connective tissue that turns tender and succulent with slow heat. Here, instead of firing up the grill or fussing with a smoker, you get that deep, sticky, finger-licking goodness right from the oven with minimal prep and cleanup.
Serve these sticky pork rib tips with simple sides that can handle all that rich, savory-sweet glaze. I like them with a pan of roasted potatoes or buttered egg noodles and something bright and crunchy—think coleslaw, a vinegar-dressed cucumber salad, or steamed green beans with lemon. A pot of white rice or brown rice works beautifully to catch the extra sauce from the glass dish. If you’re leaning casual, pile the rib tips on a platter, set out napkins, and add cornbread or crusty rolls to round out the meal.
4-Ingredient Oven Pork Rib Tips
Servings: 4

Ingredients
3 pounds raw pork rib tips
1 cup barbecue sauce (store-bought, your favorite style)
1/4 cup soy sauce (regular or low-sodium)
2 tablespoons brown sugar, packed
Directions
Preheat your oven to 325°F (165°C). Place a rack in the middle position so the heat circulates evenly around the glass baking dish.
Place the raw pork rib tips in a single, fairly even layer in a 9x13-inch glass baking dish. Some overlap is fine, but avoid piling them too high so they cook and glaze properly.
In a medium bowl, whisk together the barbecue sauce, soy sauce, and brown sugar until the sugar is mostly dissolved and the mixture looks smooth and glossy. This will be your thick, dark glaze.
Pour the glaze evenly over the raw rib tips in the glass dish, using a spatula or spoon to toss and turn the pieces so every surface is well coated. The rib tips should be nestled in a shallow pool of sauce with a visible, dark, sticky coating on top.
Cover the glass dish tightly with aluminum foil. This first stage traps steam and helps the rib tips gently braise in the glaze, turning them tender while the flavors soak in.
Bake the covered rib tips at 325°F (165°C) for 1 1/2 hours. About halfway through, carefully remove the dish from the oven, peel back the foil away from your face to avoid steam, and give the rib tips a gentle toss in the sauce, then re-cover and return to the oven.
After 1 1/2 hours, remove the foil and increase the oven temperature to 375°F (190°C). Toss the rib tips again in the thickened sauce so they’re well coated, then spread them back into an even layer.
Return the uncovered dish to the oven and bake for another 25–35 minutes, tossing once more halfway through, until the glaze is dark, glossy, and clinging to the rib tips and the meat is very tender. The sauce should look like a thick, dark mystery glaze pooled slightly around the edges of the glass dish.
Check for doneness: the rib tips should be tender enough to pull apart with a fork, and any meaty portions should reach at least 145°F (63°C) on an instant-read thermometer, though they’ll likely be higher because of the long, slow cook.
Let the rib tips rest for 5–10 minutes out of the oven. This short rest allows the bubbling glaze to settle and cling even more. Toss once more in the sauce, then transfer the rib tips to a serving platter, spooning extra glaze from the glass dish over the top before serving.
Variations & Tips
You can adjust this basic 4-ingredient formula to match your pantry and preferences while keeping the spirit of the recipe intact: Use any barbecue sauce you like—smoky, spicy, or sweet. A thicker sauce will give you a heavier, clingier glaze; a thinner one will reduce down more in the oven. If you prefer less sweetness, cut the brown sugar to 1 tablespoon or skip it entirely, letting the barbecue sauce carry the sweetness. For a deeper, more savory glaze, swap half of the soy sauce for Worcestershire sauce, still keeping the total liquid amount the same. If you want gentle heat, choose a spicy barbecue sauce or add a pinch of red pepper flakes to the glaze (this will technically add an ingredient, but you can also just use a spicy BBQ sauce to stay within the 4-ingredient spirit). You can also scale the recipe up or down as long as you keep the rib tips in a relatively even layer in the glass dish; for more than 3 pounds, use two dishes so the meat doesn’t steam too much.
Food safety tips: Always start with fresh, cold pork rib tips and keep them refrigerated until you’re ready to cook. Avoid rinsing raw pork in the sink; it can spread bacteria around your kitchen. Use a dedicated cutting board and utensils for raw meat, and wash your hands, tools, and surfaces with hot, soapy water after handling. Make sure the rib tips are fully cooked—while pork is safe at 145°F (63°C), these will usually be cooked to a higher temperature because of the slow bake, which is fine and helps with tenderness. Do not leave cooked rib tips out at room temperature for more than 2 hours (or 1 hour if your kitchen is very warm). Cool leftovers quickly, store them in a shallow container in the refrigerator, and eat within 3–4 days. Reheat thoroughly until steaming hot before serving.