Sweet and sticky, this melt-in-your-mouth Chinese-style beer braised pork belly is simple to make and incredibly flavorful. Served with potatoes, noodles, or rice.

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Whenever I go to the market and pick up a pork belly, I often think it's going to be turned into bacon or some form of crackling something but today was going to be different because I was craving a saucy meal which rice and the only thing I had in the fridge was a can of beer. Today is going to be a good day.
Is this super traditional? Nope - the traditional Chinese braised pork belly recipe doesn't usually have garlic and onions and most definitely not beer but caramelized garlic and onions add another dimension of flavor which go fantastic with pork belly.
The final dish has a sweet, sticky, and flavorful dish with hints of bitterness from the beer to offset the sweetness.
Ingredients for Beer Braised Pork Belly
- Pork Belly - Try to use pork belly for this recipe. It may seem a bit fatty but the texture from the fat is melt in the mouth and melds with the sauce.
- Beer - For the beer, I used a dark beer but that is only because I enjoy the hint of bitterness to it. If you prefer something less bitter, you can use a light beer. A few people have made this with dark beers (stouts and porters) and found it incredibly bitter. Since beers have different IBU (International Bitterness Scale), I recommend using a beer that you enjoy drinking or a light or medium beer - unless you enjoy the bitterness of dark beers.
- Broth - I like to use beef broth for this because it is a bit more robust in flavor but you can definitely substitute it with any type of broth.
- Soy Sauce/Dark Soy Sauce - For the regular soy sauce, I like to use light soy sauce. The dark soy sauce is used mainly for dark rich color, you can omit it if you can't find it or you can find it online here.
- Rice Vinegar - Rice vinegar is lighter than regular white vinegar and has more flavor. If you cannot find it, you can substitute it with half the amount of apple cider vinegar.
- Chinese Cooking Wine - You can use either the Chinese white rice cooking wine or the dark Shaoxing Cooking wine for this recipe. If you can't find either of them you can use dry sherry or find it online here.
- Chinese Five Spice Powder - This ingredient cannot be omitted or substituted since it gives this dish its flavor.
- Chinese Yellow Rock Sugar - For the sugar I used Chinese yellow rock sugar because it gives the meat and sauce that glossy sheen. It cooks down almost syrupy which is one of the traits of a good braised pork belly. This can be substituted with regular sugar.
How to Make Chinese Braised Pork Belly
- Slice up the ginger and roughly smash the garlic.
- Cut the pork belly into 2cm x 3cm chunks. Don't cut them too thin or it will melt away and there won't be much to eat!
- Brown the pork belly. Add in the onions, ginger and garlic to brown as well as this will give it even more flavor.
Note: When you brown pork belly it splatters - a lot. I'm pretty sure I have splatters of grease on my ceiling - occupational hazard right? To alleviate this issue I had to literally hold up the lid like a shield against the pot and deflect the oil splatters away from me. If you foodies out there have a better method, give me a shout! 🙂 - Add all the braising liquids and spices into the pan and set the stove to high and bring everything to a vigorous boil and boil everything for 15 minutes.
- Once it has boiled for 15 minutes, reduce the heat to medium low and braise for 1 hour and 20 minutes. A lot of fat will render out of the pork belly, skim off the fat before serving.
- Serve it up with white rice, plain noodles or roasted potatoes (Yep, potatoes! We liked it with fries!)
How to Serve this Asian Braised Pork Belly
- Rice - The easiest way to serve this is with a side of egg fried rice or steamed white rice. The rice absorbs the sauce and it's an easy, comforting meal!
- Noodles - I also like to make this with noodles. You can use any type of noodles for this recipe. Boil it the way according to the instructions and top it with the pork belly and sauce!
- Potatoes - You can serve this with roasted potatoes or mashed potatoes but my personal favorite is dipping fries into it.
More Chinese Recipes You May Like
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Recipe Card
Beer Braised Pork Belly (Chinese Style)
Recipe Notes
- IMPORTANT UPDATE: Update 08/29/18: A few people have made this with dark beers (stouts and porters) and found it incredibly bitter. Since beers have different IBU (International Bitterness Scale), I recommend using a beer that you enjoy drinking or a light or medium beer - unless you enjoy the bitterness of dark beers.
- During the simmering process a lot of the fat will render out of the pork belly. Skim off the fat so there isn't a layer of grease before serving.
- Pork belly splatters a lot during the browning process! Use a lid as a shield to deflect some of that hot oil away from you
- An alternative to pork belly that this also works with is pork ribs or pork hocks! 🙂 Cut up the pork ribs into individual ribs and use the same directions.
Ingredients
- 2 lbs pork belly
- 1 onion (sliced)
- 4 x4 cm ginger (sliced)
- 2 cloves garlic
- 1 cup beer
- 3 cups beef broth
- 3 tablespoons soy sauce
- 2 tablespoons rice vinegar
- 2 tablespoons dark soy sauce
- 1 tablespoon Chinese rice cooking wine
- 1 teaspoon Chinese five spice powder
- 2-3 small Chinese yellow rock sugar (or 3 tablespoons of regular sugar)
Toppings (Optional)
- green onions (finely chopped)
- toasted sesame seeds
Instructions
- Slice the ginger and onions and roughly smash the garlic
- Cut the pork belly into 2cm x 3cm chunks. (Don't cut them up too thin else they will melt away into nothing!)
- In a skillet or heavy-bottomed pot, set the heat to medium and add in the pork belly to start browning it. (Be careful at this point. Pork belly splatters a lot! Use a lid as a shield to deflect some of that hot oil away from you, if you have to!)
- When you have browned the pork belly halfway through, add in the onions, garlic and ginger to brown them as well.
- Once all the pork belly has been browned, add in the five spice, beer, rice vinegar, broth, soy sauce, dark soy sauce, shaoxing cooking wine, sugar.
- Set the stove to high and bring everything to a vigorous boil and boil it for 15 minutes
- Once everything has boiled for 15 minutes, set the stove to medium-low to low heat and put a lid on the pot. You want the braising liquid to be doing a low rolling boil. Check on the pot at the 45-minute mark to make sure the sauce hasn't reduced to less than half the amount of liquid and that it isn't burning. If the sauce is a syrupy consistency, then it's done. If the sauce hasn't reduced to a syrupy consistency, cook it for another 35 minutes but check on it every 10 minutes. (For a total of 1 hour and 20 minutes)
- If it still hasn't reached that syrupy consistency, continue to cook it for 5-10 more minutes until the sauce has thickened.
- Serve with white rice, plain noodles or roasted potatoesmashed potatoes (we liked fries! 🙂 )
Nutrition
*Nutritional information is calculated using online tools and is an estimate*
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xmxx says
How come I get this ? when using Firefox and when I am using Internet Explorer shows what I am supposed to get, (Wed) ,as the text. If you cannot see what I put down it is a small box with the numbers 26 and 20 inside of it.. Is there a fix for my problem?. Thanks in advance..
Joyce Lee says
I'm not sure I understand what you mean?
Chris says
Do we have to add oil before browning the pork belly?
Joyce Lee says
Hi Chris,
If you have a non-stick pan/pot, then you won't need to add any oil in, since the pork belly fat will render out and create it's own fat. If your pan/pot is not non-stick, then I would put a little oil, pork belly likes to stick to pans during the initial browning.
Jerry says
So I made this and I noticed a burning smell the sauce burned to the pan, then I read in the comments something about 2 cups of water. Was it supposed to be beer, broth AND water?
Joyce Lee says
Hi Jerry!
Oh no! I'm sorry this didn't turn out for you!😟
Hmmm, the only thing I can think of is your stove must run very hot and evaporated the liquid and thicken the sauce more quickly than 1 hour and 35-minutes.
When you smelled the burning, did the sauce reduce by more than half?
The comments you saw was an old version of the recipe where I used water instead of beef broth. The original recipe also had more beer and less water, which I adjusted and tweaked for a more balanced flavor.
In total, there should be only 4 cups of liquid in there (1 cup of beer, and 3 cups of beef broth. Plus an additional 1/2 cup of liquids from the soy sauce/vinegar/cooking wine)
I have updated the instructions to check on the pot at the 45-minute mark, and if the liquid has reduced by about half, it's ready.
Thanks for getting back to me on this, I really appreciate the feedback a lot!
Joyce
Simon says
Did it last night!!! Really delicious!
Joyce says
Yay!! 😀 So glad you liked this Simon! 😀
LeeAnn Treacher says
I've been trying different pork belly recipes, this one hand's down is my favorite one,and my son agreed. Thank's for this recipe.
Joyce says
Hi LeeAnn!
I am very happy to share and it makes me super happy that you and your son enjoyed this recipe! Happy eats! 🙂
Linda C says
I have a splatter screen that I use when frying foods that splatter. The screen allows the steam to escape and keeps most of the oil/grease from going in all directions.
Joyce says
Hi Linda!
I have seen those! I think I need to pick one up on my next shopping trip! I just need to find space to store it now heehee! Thanks for the tip! 🙂
Carol says
I love the sound of this recipe a definite will make recipe...Thank you for sharing and thank you for the follow 🙂
Joyce says
I'm always happy to share yums! 🙂