What a Rack, a Rib Roast, and a Loin Roast Actually Are
The cuts on this page go by several names that all mean the same thing. A rack, a rib rack, a rib roast, a bone-in loin roast, a rack roast — these are different words for the same piece of meat. It is the rib section of the animal, cut as one piece with the bones still attached, sized to roast or grill whole and then carve at the table.
Confused by all the names? Here is the short version:
- Rack — the bone-in rib section, sold whole. Standard for lamb, common for pork.
- Rib roast — the same cut, usually said for beef. A prime rib roast is a beef rib rack.
- Bone-in loin roast — another name for the same cut on a pig, since the loin and the ribs are attached.
- Frenched — the rib bones have been scraped clean of fat and meat, so they stick out like handles. Looks impressive, makes for easy carving.
- Crown roast — two racks tied together in a circle, ribs pointing up. The classic holiday centerpiece, often filled with stuffing.
None of these are the spare ribs or baby back ribs you would smoke on a Sunday afternoon. Those come from the belly side of the pig and are sold separately. The cuts on this page are the larger, rib-attached roasts, meant for a special meal where the meat is the main event.
Which Protein for Which Occasion
Trying to choose between them? Here is how each protein fits a meal:
- Wagyu beef prime rib roast — the splurge centerpiece for a big holiday dinner. Feeds 6 to 12 depending on size, and it is what to order when the meal is Christmas, an anniversary, or a milestone where you want the most impressive roast on the table. The Wagyu beef collection has the rest of the cuts beyond the rib.
- Iberico pork rack — the right pick for a smaller dinner of 4 to 6 where you want something most guests have never tried. Cooks like a steak, served pink, from the same Pata Negra breed that becomes Jamon Iberico. Less expensive than Wagyu, more interesting than standard pork. The pork collection covers the full Iberico range, including pluma, secreto, and presa.
- Frenched rack of lamb — the elegant choice for a smaller meal of 3 to 4, or two racks tied into a crown roast for 6 to 8 at the holidays. New Zealand lamb is milder than American, so it works for guests who think they do not like lamb.
- Berkshire pork tomahawk or Frenched loin rack — the heritage-pork roast for a 4 to 6 dinner where the family expects pork but you want it considerably better than the supermarket version. The bones make for a dramatic presentation, the marbling keeps it juicy.
- Cervena venison rack — for the host who wants something different. Lean, mild, refined rather than aggressively gamey, and cooks in roughly half the time of beef because there is so little fat. The game and exotic meats collection carries whole game cuts beyond the rack, including venison, elk, bison, and wild boar.
How to Cook a Centerpiece Roast
Worried about ruining a $200 roast? Don't be. These cuts are easier to cook than a steak, because the larger mass gives you more time to react. The basics:
Pull the roast out of the fridge an hour before cooking, so it comes up toward room temperature. Season it simply, with salt and pepper at minimum, herbs if you like. Set the oven to 250 or 275 degrees, low enough that the meat heats slowly and evenly. Cook to an internal temperature about 10 degrees below your target — 130 for medium-rare beef, 135 for medium-rare lamb, 135 for medium pork (Iberico and Berkshire both want medium, not well-done). Then crank the heat to 450 for a final 10 minutes to brown the outside, or sear the roast in a hot pan if you prefer. Rest the meat for at least 10 minutes before carving, longer for larger roasts.
The single most useful tool for this is a meat thermometer. Internal temperature is the only reliable way to know when a roast is done, and even an inexpensive instant-read takes the guesswork out. For the seasoning side, our rubs, spices and seasonings collection has finishing salts, herb blends, and dry rubs for every protein on the page.
Also Worth Exploring
Need a few things to round out the meal? For the steakhouse cuts beyond the rib section, including steaks, brisket, and ground Wagyu, the Wagyu beef collection covers the broader range. And for grilling cuts when the occasion calls for fire rather than a roast, the BBQ grilling meats collection gathers chops, steaks, and kebab cuts perfect for direct-fire cooking.
Ribs, Racks & Loins: Frequently Asked Questions
Frenched, or French-trimmed, means the rib bones have been scraped clean of fat, meat, and connective tissue, so the bones stick out from the meat like clean handles. The technique is mostly cosmetic, since the exposed bones make for a dramatic presentation on the plate, but they also make carving easier because you can grip a clean bone instead of fighting through fat. Lamb racks are almost always sold Frenched. Pork and venison racks are often Frenched as well. Beef rib roasts are sometimes Frenched, sometimes not, depending on the cut. A Frenched rack is no different in flavor from one that isn't, but it costs a little more because of the extra labor, and it cooks the same way either way.