Ruby supports date arithmetic in the Date and DateTime classes, which are part of Ruby's standard library. Both those classes expose #+ and #- methods, which add and subtract days from a date or a time.
$ irb
> require 'date'
=> true
> (DateTime.new(2015,4,1) - 90).to_s # Apr 1, 2015 - 90 days
=> "2015-01-01T00:00:00+00:00"
> (DateTime.new(2015,4,1) - 1).to_s # Apr 1, 2015 - 1 day
=> "2015-03-31T00:00:00+00:00"
Use the #<< and #>> methods to operate on months instead of days. Arithmetic on months is a little different than arithmetic on days. Using Date instead of DateTime makes the effect more obvious.
> (Date.new(2015, 5, 31) << 3).to_s # May 31 - 3 months; 92 days diff
=> "2015-02-28"
Following your joda-time example, you might write something like this in Ruby.
now = DateTime.now
ninety_days_ago = now - 90
or maybe just
ninety_days_ago = DateTime.now - 90