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Sake-and-Soy-Braised Pork Belly

4.3

(6)

SakeandSoy Braised Pork Belly in a white bowl
Photograph by Isa Zapata, food styling by Pearl Jones and Thu Buser, prop styling by Sean Dooley

For sweet and sticky glazed pork belly, start with caramel. Melting dark brown sugar with a splash of water creates the thick, bittersweet foundation of a braising liquid (loosely inspired by the flavors of Japanese kakuni) that reduces to syrupy perfection while the pork belly becomes shreddably tender and moist. There’s no need for an initial sear on the meat either; that sauce packs more than enough umami flavor. Soy sauce, earthy-sweet sake, and a trio of aromatics—ginger, chile peppers, and garlic—add balance with just the right amount of heat.

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What you’ll need

Recipe information

  • Total Time

    2 hours 45 minutes

  • Yield

    4 servings

Ingredients

½

cup (100 g; packed) dark brown sugar

2

cups low-sodium chicken broth

1

cup sake

½

cup soy sauce

1

3" piece ginger, scrubbed, sliced ¼" thick

4

red Thai chiles (optional)

4

garlic cloves, finely chopped

2

lb. skin-on pork belly, cut into 2" cubes

Thinly sliced scallions and/or cooked white rice (for serving; optional)

Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Cook ½ cup (100 g; packed) dark brown sugar and 3 Tbsp. water in a medium Dutch oven or other heavy pot over medium-high heat, stirring often, until big bubbles form then settle down and mixture is slightly darkened in color and hardens into a thin thread when drizzled from a spoon back into pot, 5–7 minutes. Gradually pour in 2 cups low-sodium chicken broth, 1 cup sake, ½ cup soy sauce, and ½ cup water, stirring constantly (be careful; mixture will bubble up quickly), then add one 3" piece ginger, scrubbed, sliced ¼" thick, 4 red Thai chiles (if using), and 4 garlic cloves, finely chopped. Bring to a simmer and cook until any hardened sugar is dissolved, about 4 minutes.

    Step 2

    Add 2 lb. skin-on pork belly, cut into 2" cubes (try your best to submerge cubes). Reduce heat to medium-low, partially cover pot, and braise, rotating pork and skimming fat from surface every 20 minutes, until meat shreds easily (it should be tender enough for a fork to pierce with no resistance but still have some bounce) and sauce is reduced by three fourths (it should look thick and syrupy), 2–2½ hours. (If sauce is too sticky and has reduced too quickly by the time the pork is done, add ¼ cup water at a time as needed, bringing to a simmer between additions, until desired texture is reached. If sauce is not thick enough, remove lid and transfer pork belly to plates. Simmer sauce over medium, stirring constantly, until thickened, then spoon over pork.) Divide pork belly among plates; top with thinly sliced scallions. Serve with cooked white rice if desired.

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