This Sticky Chinese Pork Belly is one of my absolute favourite recipes on the blog. Check out my three step process for pork that’s meltingly tender, with a crispy exterior and gloriously sticky/sweet/spicy coating.
I wonder how many recipes I’ve published with sticky in the title…
Sticky chicken stir fry, Gingerbread cake with Sticky Whisky glaze, sticky Asian sea bass this sticky pork belly and AT LEAST ten others (just did a quick count). I’m all about the sticky. Just call me sticky Nicky.
Actually don’t. That sounds weird.
I sometimes like to kid myself and call it caramelized – like this ‘caramelized beef brisket‘. But at the end of the day, I just mean coated in some kind of sugar and then cooked until you reach the dark brown, shiny stage, creating an intense flavour that takes whatever you’ve just made to a whole new level. How could anything finished in that way not taste amazing?
For this recipe, the sticky layer is added right at the end. Don’t be fooled though. Just because the pork hasn’t been marinating for hours, doesn’t mean it’s not going to taste amazing (I confused myself with double negatives there, but I’m basically saying it tastes amazing even though we’re only glazing at the end).
📋 What do we need?
For the slow-cooked pork belly
For the sticky glaze
📺 Watch how to make it
Full recipe with detailed steps in the recipe card at the end of this post.
- This pork actually has three layers of flavour. The first coming from being slow-cooked in a pan for 2 hours with stock, garlic, ginger, rice wine and a little sugar:
- The second layer comes from being crisped in a pan with a little vegetable oil and seasoning (it’s actually hard not to just stop right here and eat it from the pan like this).
- The final layer coming from the soy/chilli/sugar/lemongrass and a couple of other ingredients that are stirred together, then poured over the fried pork, before bubbling away until thick and glossy.
👩🍳PRO TIP The fat can spit quite a bit at the frying stage so we use a splatter screen/guard (<<– affiliate link) to prevent hot oil spitting out all over the place.
🍽️ What to serve it with
That’s it. Three layers of flavour in a simple recipe that really does take minimal effort.
🍲 More fantastic Chinese recipes
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Sticky Chinese Pork Belly
Ingredients
Slow Cooked Pork Belly:
- 1 kg (2.2 lbs) rindless pork belly slices chopped in half (each piece being approx. the length of your index finger)
- 1 litre (4 1/4 cups) hot chicken stock
- 1 thumb sized piece of ginger peeled and minced (or 1 tbsp of ginger puree)
- 3 cloves garlic peeled and roughly chopped
- 1 tbsp rice wine
- 1 tbsp caster sugar
Glaze:
- 2 tbsp vegetable oil
- pinch salt and pepper
- 1 thumb-sized piece of ginger peeled and minced
- 1 red chilli finely chopped
- 2 tbsp honey
- 2 tbsp brown sugar
- 3 tbsp dark soy sauce
- 1 tsp lemon grass paste
To Serve:
- chopped spring onions
- chopped red chillies
Instructions
- Add pork belly slices, stock, ginger, garlic, rice wine, and sugar to a heavy-based pan. I use a cast iron casserole pan.1 kg (2.2 lbs) rindless pork belly slices, 1 litre (4 1/4 cups) hot chicken stock, 1 thumb sized piece of ginger, 3 cloves garlic, 1 tbsp rice wine, 1 tbsp caster sugar
- Bring to the boil, then place a lid on, turn down the heat and simmer for 2 hours.
- Turn off the heat, remove the pork from the pan and pat it dry using kitchen towels. You can reserve the liquid if you like (Perfect for a Thai or Chinese noodle soup).
- Chop the pork into bite sized chunks.
- In a small bowl, mix together 1 tbsp of the oil, along with a pinch of salt and pepper, ginger, chilli, honey, brown sugar, soy sauce, and lemongrass paste.pinch salt and pepper, 1 thumb-sized piece of ginger, 1 red chilli, 2 tbsp honey, 2 tbsp brown sugar, 3 tbsp dark soy sauce, 1 tsp lemon grass paste, 2 tbsp vegetable oil
- Add the remaining 1 tbsp of oil to a frying pan and heat over a medium-high heat.
- Add in the pork, along with a pinch of salt and pepper, and fry, turning regularly, until the pork starts to turn golden. Be careful as the oil can splatter at this stage (I recommend a splatter guard).pinch salt and pepper
- Now pour the glaze over the pork and continue to cook for a couple of minutes, turning the pork often, until the pork looks dark and sticky.
- Remove from the heat and serve. I like to top with a few spring onions and chopped chillies.chopped spring onions, chopped red chillies
Video
Notes
Replace the rice wine with sherry (usually gluten free, but best to check).
Also make sure you use gluten free stock. Vegetarian Option? I haven’t tried this with a meat-like alternative, but my Asian-style cauliflower wings make a great alternative. Can I use my slow cooker? Yes, you can do the first stage in the slow cooker. Cook on high for 4-5 hours or low for 6-7 hours. Keep an eye on the level of liquid and top up with a little more if needed. Nutritional information is per serving.
Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
This post was first published in March 2015. Updated in October 2018 and then again in July 2022 with new photos, video and some housekeeping.
Some of the links in this post may be affiliate links – which means if you buy the product I get a small commission (at no extra cost to you). If you do buy, then thank you! That’s what helps us to keep Kitchen Sanctuary running. The nutritional information provided is approximate and can vary depending on several factors. For more information please see our Terms & Conditions.
Equipment:
In order to make this recipe you will need:
- A splatter guard/screen – to avoid hot fat spitting when frying the belly pork
- A good Kitchen knife. In the video I use my Leiths knife however I have recently bought this Dalstrong one and love it.
- Chopping Board
- Cast Iron Casserole Dish
- Measuring Jug
- Fying Pan/Skillet or a Wok.
- Wooden or Silicon Coated Spoons. We have just bought these and love them.
- A small mixing bowl to mix the glaze ingredients in. Instead of a mixing bowl we use loads of these for mixing, prepping, and serving.
Hi Nikky
It Florence from youtube Comment on u video and we love u Nikky ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️and I love pork 🥩
Our family’s favourite pork belly recipe! So glad I found it.
Just made this today, and it was amazing! As good as any Chinese restaurant, and better than most of them! Simple and quick. Highly recommended! Had in on a bed of jasmine rice with a side of homemade daikon kimchi.
Made this for my family and went down an absolute treat! All empty plates! Thank you for sharing:)
I have even kept the stock…but not sure what to do with it…any recommendations?
Hi Ally, the stock makes a fantastic Chinese broth. I have added prawns, shredded cooked chicken or pork and even scallops. It is glorious and beats any Chinese take out broth hands down
Am I being dense? Can’t figure out how to view the video for this recipe?
Hi JS, just underneath the ingredients photos there is a header saying ‘Watch how to make it’ – the video is under there.
Here’s a link that should jump to the video
I will certainly be cooking this again, though there is a little confusion in the recipe over lemon grass and ginger which needs clarification.
I bought some pork belly on impulse from my local pig farm (I often drive past and see the pigs running around in their fields, clean and seemingly happy). They make the best sausages I know, but their shop is so full of other temptations. I googled recipes and this came up. I already had almost everything in the kitchen so I thought I would give it a go. I had to adapt it for the Aga (longer cooking time, less stock, frying stage on the floor of the roasting oven with the crackling grilling on the top shelf). There were no vegetables, so I served it with a stir-fry of carrots and runner beans from the garden, red pepper, shiitake mushrooms and savoy cabbage from Waitrose. The rice was Tilda basmati cooked according to Jamie Oliver’s foolproof method – boil for six minutes, drain into a colander and steam for six minutes over a pan of boiling water (Tilda has a nicer flavour than the higher montain varieties but has more of a tendency to disintegrate; not with this method, though). Somehow everything came together simultaneously and the meal was a great success.
This turned out soooo good!
I’m even keeping the broth for soup!
Thank you for sharing!
Hi Nicky
I love cooking and the sticky pork belly looks and I bet tastes great but my wife doesn’t eat pork so can you please tell me if I can use the same ingredients for chicken
Kind regards
Ross Crawford
Hi Ross, you can use chicken – but I wouldn’t slowly cook the chicken first (as I do with the pork). I would toss chunks of chicken thigh fillet in a tablespoon of cornflour and a good pinch of salt and pepper, then fry in oil over a high heat until browned and cooked through, then add in the sauce. Hopw that helps 🙂
This recipe is amazing!!!! I didn’t know what to do with a Costco sized tray of Pork belly strips, so I followed this recipe because it had great ratings. The only thing I did differently is to use my deep fryer to crisp up the batches of tender meat instead of pan frying them. I didn’t have any oil splattering using the deep fryer. I poured the glaze over the meat and popped it in the oven to carmaloze the glaze. Served it over rice at a potluck at church and topped with green onions. Even the skeptics were raving about it. Thanks for such a wonderful recipe. I will be making this on repeat.
The sauce is great. I have made this 2 times. I simmered my pork for 2 hours the first time. They came out falling apart and I cut them thick. I did it again and simmered for only 1/2 hour. came out perfect. As stated slow cook in oil the render the fat then you can turn heat up if you desire.