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Chinese Roast Pork Recipe
In my cookbook “Easy Chinese Recipes,” I have a Chinese roast pork belly recipe, or siu yuk.
When it comes to Chinese roast pork, one could never have enough of the crispy skinned roasted pork belly. It’s sinfully delicious!
This Chinese Roast Pork recipe is from my good friend Robert Danhi’s Facebook page. Robert and his wife made the roast pork following a recipe gathered from a church in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
This is the PERFECT recipe for Chinese roast pork belly! It’s absolutely mouthwatering.
The recipe is easy, hassle-free and fail-proof. I guarantee you crispy, crunchy, absolutely aromatic and to-die-for pork crackling, melt-in-your-mouth pork belly.
Recipe Ingredients
This simple recipe calls for only four (4) ingredients:
- Pork belly
- Garlic
- Salt
- Chinese five spice powder
How to Make Chinese Roasted Pork Belly?
This is the easiest and best recipe you’ll find online. There is no need to poke the pork skin, there is no no vinegar in the recipe.
There is also no need to par-boil the pork belly before roasting.
The recipe calls for simple and few steps. Please refer to the video embedded on this page to learn how to make Chinatown worthy siu yuk at home.
The end result is very crispy pork crackling. The pork belly is also juicy, tender, with the melt-in-your-mouth pork fat.
The taste is a bit salty and aromatic. The aroma comes from the garlic and five-spice powder.
How Many Calories per Serving?
This recipe is only 446 calories per serving.
What to Serve with This Recipe?
Serve this dish with rice or noodles. For a Chinese meal and easy weeknight dinner, I recommend the following recipes.
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Chinese Roast Pork Belly
Ingredients
- 2 lbs. pork belly
- 6 cloves garlic
- 1 teaspoon five spice powder
- Kosher salt (for layering)
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 350°F (180°C), arrange a pan on the bottom 1/3 of oven rack and fill with water. The pork belly should be roasted using the rack above it.
- Wash and use paper towels to dry the pork belly.
- Make some horizontal slits on the sides of the belly, then rub the meat side with the five spice powder.
- Insert each garlic and push them deep inside the pork belly.
- Layer the top of the pork belly with the salt evenly.
- Place the pork belly on a wire rack. This is how it should look before going into the oven.
- Place the pork belly at the top 1/3 of the oven and roast for 1 hour. While baking, the oil will drip to the bottom pan with water.
- Bake until the salt crust forms, the salt should be hardened. Check water in the pan below and add if needed. This is how the pork belly and salt crust will look like in the oven. You have to insert the garlic deep inside the horizontal slits or else they will be pushed out during the roasting process.
- Remove the pork belly from the oven, pull off the salt crust and discard.
- Raise the heat of oven to 465°F (240°C), place the pork belly back in the oven and roast for another 40 minutes.
- Remove from oven and let set for 10 minutes.
- Cut and serve immediately with some chili sauce and hoisin sauce, or eat as is.
Video
Notes
Nutrition
Notice: Nutrition is auto-calculated, using Spoonacular, for your convenience. Where relevant, we recommend using your own nutrition calculations.
Wonderful, beautiful, EASY crispy-skin pork belly? Yes please. I’ve cooked this several times and it always turns out absolute perfection. I adjust the cooking times to suit the the cut of pork belly I have. I find putting the pork belly under broil (use discretion) will quickly crisp up any stubborn spots on the skin if needed, and can be used to reheat as well (who on earth has leftover crispy pork belly though?). Thank you for sharing this recipe. I’ll be using it the rest of my life :)
Thanks so much for trying my Chinese roast pork recipe and loving it. :)
The first couple of times I did and it turned out nicely. But now it keep failing. The skin doesn’t turn golden and crispy but dark and hard. I’m not sure what I did wrong. I do notice when I remove the salt, the skin look wet in some area. Any thoughts? Thanks!
It means the skin is not dry, if they are not dry, it will fail.
I’m planning to make this dish for about 20 people tomorrow. I’m hosting a dinner at my friend’s apartment though, so I thought I would bake them in my oven first until the salt forms and then continue the last 40 mins baking at my friend’s apartment, do you think it will be okay? I’m afraid it will continue cooking as I drive to my friend’s place and become overcook.
Also, another question, I saw some recipes using baking soda but you omit this step, will it give the same crispy result?
I think should be OK no need baking soda the most important thing is the skin is very dry.
Not sure which step was wrong because my pork belly is really hard especially the skin. Too bad I do not know how to attach tge picture to show. T..T
Maybe you over roasted it.
… or your oven temp was quite right? Well. Was the case on my part.
But awesome recip .
Thank you so much for sharing =)
Irish/Korean Californian couple residing 2 hrs north of Toronto since beginning of the year and no real selection as far as good asian restaurants.
It’s great that my husband loves all food but I love making the Californian faves.
Yes temperature is correct. Thanks Linda for trying my recipe.
Awesome simple recipe … Loved it. Tried it once and it turns out rather well. I am impressed with my culinary skills … Lol … Thank you so much.
LOL, glad that you nailed it.
I tried this recipe over the weekend and gotta say it is easy to make and clean up is a breeze; taste is also pretty good. The fat didn’t get rendered as much as frying so it feels heavier on the mouth. Is this your experience as well?
I thought the crackling was really crispy…
Oh the crackling was really crispy, it’s so good that’s all you hear as you’re eating them =) I mean the fatty part of the pork belly didn’t get as rendered as when you fry it.
I can’t wait to make this again during our family get together, with jelly fish on the side =)
I tried this recipe for the 2nd time (didn’t do it too well the first time) and it came out beautifully succulent on the inside and nice crackle on top. It is such an easy recipe and much prefer it to buying from the shops!
Awesome Jun.
Hi Bee-where do you buy a pork belly? the regular grocery stores like pavilions and ralphs don’t cary them :-(
You’d have to go to an Asian market, like 99 Ranch, SF (Shun Fat), or HK Market.
Bee, would this work using a turbo broiler?
Just a quick question about the salt….did you just use regular table salt or was it a flakier or bigger chunks of salt? Curious how the salt stays on as a crust if its just regular table salt? Thanks for any info!
Table salt is fine.
Oh Bee…… I have done a couple of times making Chinese Roast Pork ( Siu Yok ) , the recipe was given to me by a Chinese Roast Pork seller, and looking at your recipe I think you have missed out an important step in the preparation to get the crispiness of the skin :). Can you update this recipe please to your ‘die-hard’ followers-thank you!
The method is what it is I didn’t miss any steps. There are many ways, scald the skin, poke holes, etc. This is the easiest method.
Missed something………..how rude. I think it is amazing and so do all the people I have cooked it for. Keep your wonderful recipes coming, I really enjoy your site. Thank you.
I used regular table salt. I couldn’t understand this step but I followed as written and it worked like a charm. The salt will sit on the skin and somehow will bake into a salt “cracker”. The skin and meat will shrink and the salt sort of protects the skin from becoming hard and burnt. The skin cooks perfectly. My chinese mother in law couldn’t belive that I, not chinese, could cook it the same as you would buy at the wet markets in Hong Kong.
Hi Scott, that’s amazing, I am so glad that you had a great success with this Chinese roast pork recipe and your mother in law is impressed. :)
I always serve it with 60/40 golden syrup and black treacle, delicious!
Wow, interesting idea. Thanks for sharing!
jeannetoyota@yahoo.com
Hi Bee, I couldn’t but pork belly with skin but want to try your recipe. So do i skip putting salt on top? Or iis it ok to follow all the steps through by layering the fat top with salt as you would on the skin part? And I notice that you don’t put foil wraps all around the meat like a pan, will it nor burn the sides of the meat during baking?
If you have no skin, then you are not really making Chinese roast pork as the skin is what “makes” it roast pork, know what I mean. The fat part won’t get crispy even if you put salt. You can put a bit of salt for the salty flavor.