#pork
40 viral recipes tagged #pork.
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Domuz şnitzeli
A pounded-thin pork cutlet in a shatteringly crisp, golden crumb that puffs and ripples away from the meat. The trick is dry crumbs, hot fat, and the gentle pan-swirl that makes the coating souffle.
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Tonkatsu — Japanese Crispy Pork Cutlet
Japan's beloved pork cutlet: a thick loin coated in airy panko and fried to a deep gold that shatters at the bite, sliced and served with shredded cabbage, rice, and tangy tonkatsu sauce.
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Tacos al Pastor — Marinated Pork Tacos
Mexico City's most iconic taco: thin slices of pork marinated in dried chillies, achiote and pineapple, traditionally stacked on a vertical trompo and shaved off crisp. This home version uses the oven or grill to get the same sweet-smoky, slightly charred pork, served on warm corn tortillas with pineapple, onion and cilantro.
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Gyoza — Japanese Pan-Fried Dumplings
Japan's beloved dumplings: thin wrappers stuffed with juicy pork and finely chopped cabbage, garlic, ginger and nira, then cooked the yaki-gyoza way — fried crisp on the bottom, steamed soft on top, finished with a lacy golden 'wing'. Served with a punchy soy-vinegar-chilli oil dip.
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Pozole Rojo — Mexican Hominy & Pork Soup
Mexico's great celebration soup: tender pork and plump hominy simmered in a deep red broth of dried guajillo and ancho chillies, then loaded at the table with crisp shredded cabbage, radish, onion, oregano and lime. Centuries old and endlessly comforting — a pot of pozole means a party.
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Bún Chả — Hanoi Grilled Pork with Noodles
The taste of Hanoi: smoky char-grilled pork patties and slices of caramelised pork belly served swimming in a warm, sweet-sour-savoury dipping bowl of nuoc cham with pickled carrot and kohlrabi. You dunk cool rice vermicelli and a heap of fresh herbs into the bowl, bite by bite. Bright, balanced and irresistible.
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Bigos — Polish Hunter's Stew
Poland's national stew: sauerkraut and fresh cabbage slow-cooked for hours with a mix of pork, smoked kielbasa and bacon, dried mushrooms, prunes and a hint of red wine. Deep, smoky and sour-savoury, bigos famously tastes better each time it's reheated — a true make-ahead winter classic.
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Char Siu — Cantonese BBQ Pork
Cantonese barbecue pork: strips of pork shoulder lacquered in a sweet-savoury marinade of hoisin, soy, honey and five-spice, then roasted until the edges char and the glaze turns glossy and sticky. The ruby-red, caramelised pork you see hanging in Chinatown windows — served over rice, in noodles, or in fluffy bao.
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Żurek — Polish Sour Rye Soup
Poland's beloved sour soup: a tangy broth soured with fermented rye starter (zakwas), rich with smoked sausage and marjoram, and served with a halved hard-boiled egg. Traditionally ladled into a hollowed bread loaf at Easter, it's hearty, gently sour and deeply comforting — Poland in a bowl.
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Sweet and Sour Pork — Cantonese Gu Lou Yuk
The Cantonese classic (gū lōu yuk): cubes of pork coated in a light batter and fried until crisp, then tossed in a glossy sweet-and-sour sauce with pineapple, bell pepper and onion. The contrast of crunchy pork and bright, tangy, glistening sauce is what makes it a takeaway favourite the world over — far better made fresh.
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Gołąbki — Polish Stuffed Cabbage Rolls
Poland's beloved stuffed cabbage rolls: tender blanched cabbage leaves wrapped around a savoury filling of pork (or pork and beef) and rice, then baked low in a tomato or mushroom sauce until meltingly soft. Hearty, homey and a fixture of family gatherings and holidays — even better reheated the next day.
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Hóng Shāo Ròu — Chinese Red-Braised Pork Belly
One of China's most iconic home dishes: cubes of pork belly caramelised in a sugar syrup, then slowly braised with soy, Shaoxing wine, ginger and warm spices until the meat is meltingly tender and lacquered in a glossy, sweet-savoury red glaze. Famously beloved (it was said to be Chairman Mao's favourite), it's deeply comforting over a bowl of plain rice.
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Cơm Tấm — Vietnamese Broken Rice with Grilled Pork
Saigon's signature plate: fluffy 'broken' rice topped with a smoky, caramelised lemongrass pork chop (sườn nướng), served with a fried egg, pickled vegetables, fragrant scallion oil and a bowl of nuoc cham to pour over. Once a thrifty dish made from fractured rice grains, it's now the beloved breakfast-to-dinner staple of southern Vietnam.
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Kotlet Schabowy — Polish Breaded Pork Cutlet
Poland's Sunday-dinner classic and schnitzel cousin: pork loin pounded thin, dredged in flour, egg and breadcrumbs, and fried golden and crisp. Traditionally served with potatoes and either mizeria (a creamy cucumber salad) or braised cabbage. Simple, beloved and on every Polish home table — the smell of one frying is the smell of a Polish kitchen.
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Cassoulet — French White Bean & Meat Casserole
The great slow-cooked casserole of southwest France: creamy white beans baked for hours with sausage, pork and confit duck until rich and unctuous, under a golden, repeatedly-pressed-down breadcrumb crust. Named after the cassole dish it's cooked in, cassoulet is rustic, deeply savoury winter food — a labour of love that rewards patience.
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Samgyeopsal — Korean Grilled Pork Belly
Korea's beloved tabletop barbecue: thick slices of pork belly grilled at the table until crisp and golden, then snipped into pieces and wrapped in lettuce with garlic, ssamjang, kimchi and a smear of sesame-salt-and-oil. No marinade needed — it's all about the sizzle, the communal grill and building the perfect ssam (wrap) in your hand. Pure, interactive comfort.
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Chả Giò — Vietnamese Fried Spring Rolls
Vietnam's crackling fried spring rolls: a savoury filling of pork, shrimp, wood-ear mushroom and glass noodles wrapped in rice paper and fried until shatteringly crisp and golden. Served with herbs and lettuce to wrap and a bowl of nước chấm for dipping, chả giò (nem rán in the north) is the celebratory roll found at every Vietnamese feast — crunchy outside, juicy inside.
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Pork Souvlaki — Greek Grilled Skewers
Greece's beloved street-corner skewer: cubes of pork marinated in olive oil, lemon, garlic and oregano, threaded onto sticks and grilled hard until charred and juicy. Souvlaki is summer on a stick — eaten off the skewer with lemon, or wrapped in warm pita with tzatziki, tomato, onion and a few fries for the full 'souvlaki me pita'. Simple, smoky and endlessly satisfying.
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Köttbullar — Swedish Meatballs
Sweden's most famous export after flat-pack furniture: small, tender pork-and-beef meatballs fried until burnished, then served in a silky cream gravy with mashed potato, tart lingonberry jam and quick-pickled cucumber. Köttbullar are weeknight comfort and Christmas-table tradition alike — the magic is in a soft milk-soaked breadcrumb panade and a pan gravy built on the browned fond.
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Pozole Rojo — Mexican Hominy & Pork Soup
Mexico's great celebration soup: a deep red, chile-rich pork broth swimming with nubbly hominy corn, simmered for hours and brought to life at the table with a riot of crunchy garnishes — shredded cabbage, radish, onion, lime, oregano and crisp tostadas. Pozole rojo is fiesta food, served at birthdays, holidays and Mexican Independence Day, where the build-your-own bowl is half the joy.
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Xiaolongbao — Shanghai Soup Dumplings
Shanghai's marvel of a dumpling: a delicate pleated wrapper enclosing seasoned pork and a hidden pool of hot, savoury soup that bursts when you bite in. The magic is solidified gelatinous stock folded into the filling, which melts back to liquid as the dumplings steam. Xiaolongbao reward patience and a careful pleat — and the ritual of dipping in black vinegar and ginger, then sipping the soup, is one of the great pleasures of the table.
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Gyros — Greek Pita Wrap
Greece's favourite fast food: spiced pork (or chicken) marinated, stacked and roasted, then shaved into thin, crisp-edged slices and wrapped in a warm, oil-brushed pita with tzatziki, tomato, red onion and a tangle of fries. At home you skip the vertical spit and pan-roast the marinated meat instead — same garlicky, oregano-scented, smoky-savoury wrap that's eaten on every Greek street corner.
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Bánh Cuốn — Vietnamese Steamed Rice Rolls
A delicate Vietnamese breakfast: paper-thin steamed rice-batter sheets rolled around a savoury filling of minced pork and wood-ear mushroom, served with crisp fried shallots, sliced Vietnamese pork sausage (chả lụa), fresh herbs and a bowl of nước chấm. Bánh cuốn is light, silky and slippery — the steamed sheets are an art to make thin and tender — and the contrast of soft rolls, crunchy shallots and tangy dipping sauce is irresistible.
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Sinigang — Filipino Sour Tamarind Soup
The Philippines' beloved sour soup: pork (or shrimp, fish or beef) simmered in a broth made mouth-puckeringly tangy with tamarind, loaded with vegetables like water spinach, radish, eggplant and long beans. Sinigang is comforting, savoury and bracingly sour — the national craving on a rainy day — and the level of asim (sourness) is a matter of fierce personal pride, eaten with plenty of steamed rice and a saucer of fish sauce.
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Lechon — Filipino Crispy Roast Pork Belly
The king of the Filipino fiesta table: pork roasted until the skin blisters into shattering, glassy crackling while the meat stays juicy and aromatic with lemongrass, garlic and bay. While the whole spit-roasted pig (lechon baboy) is the celebration showpiece, this home version — a rolled, stuffed pork belly (lechon belly) roasted to crisp-skinned perfection — delivers the same crackle and flavour from a regular oven. Served with a tangy liver-based lechon sauce or spiced vinegar.
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Choripán — Argentine Chorizo Sandwich with Chimichurri
The undisputed king of Argentine street food and the opening act of every asado: a juicy grilled chorizo, butterflied for maximum char, tucked into crusty bread and slathered with vibrant, garlicky, herby chimichurri. Choripán (chori + pan) is simple, smoky and gloriously messy — the thing everyone eats while the rest of the barbecue is still cooking. The chimichurri is non-negotiable, and the bread should be sturdy enough to soak up all the juices.
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Schweinebraten — Bavarian Roast Pork with Crackling
Bavaria's beloved Sunday roast: a joint of pork (often shoulder) with a scored rind, roasted slowly with onions, carrots and caraway and basted with dark beer until the meat is tender and the skin crackles into glassy crackling (Kruste). The flavourful pan juices become a rich, dark gravy. Schweinebraten is the centrepiece of the beer garden and the family table, traditionally served with bread or potato dumplings (Knödel) and sauerkraut or a cabbage salad.
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Jjajangmyeon — Korean Black Bean Noodles
Korea's ultimate comfort takeout: chewy wheat noodles smothered in a glossy, savoury-sweet black sauce of fried chunjang (Korean black soybean paste), pork and diced vegetables, topped with slivers of fresh cucumber. A Korean-Chinese classic born in the port of Incheon, jjajangmyeon is the dish of moving days, celebrations and lazy nights in — rich, salty-sweet and deeply satisfying. The secret is frying the chunjang first to mellow its bitterness into deep umami.
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Locro — Argentine Hearty Corn & Bean Stew
The hearty, slow-simmered national stew of Argentina (and the Andes): white hominy corn and beans cooked for hours with squash, several cuts of pork and beef, chorizo and tripe until thick, creamy and deeply savoury. Locro is the dish of cold days and national holidays — above all May 25th and July 9th — ladled into bowls and crowned with a spicy quiajillo-and-paprika oil (salsa de grasa colorada). It's communal, warming, frugal cooking that turns humble ingredients into a feast.
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Katsudon — Japanese Pork Cutlet & Egg Rice Bowl
Japan's ultimate comfort bowl: a crisp panko pork cutlet (tonkatsu) simmered briefly with sliced onion in a sweet-savoury dashi-soy-mirin broth, blanketed in just-set egg, and slid over a bowl of hot rice. Katsudon is the donburi that students eat the night before exams (its name puns on 'katsu', to win) and a staple of every Japanese diner. The magic is in the contrast — the crunchy cutlet softening into silky egg and savoury broth over fluffy rice. It comes together in minutes once the cutlet is fried.
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Dongpo Pork — Chinese Red-Braised Pork Belly
A glistening masterpiece of Hangzhou cuisine, named for the Song-dynasty poet Su Dongpo: thick squares of pork belly slow-braised in Shaoxing wine, soy sauce and sugar with ginger and scallion until the meat is meltingly tender and the fat turns silky and jelly-like. The cubes emerge mahogany-glazed and so soft they can be cut with chopsticks, balancing rich and sweet, savoury and aromatic. Cooked low and slow until the sauce reduces to a glossy syrup, Dongpo pork is a celebrated banquet dish — the very definition of luxurious, melt-in-the-mouth red-braised pork.
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Bossam — Korean Boiled Pork Belly Wraps
A celebrated Korean dish of pork belly gently boiled with aromatics — doenjang, ginger, garlic, scallion, sometimes coffee or onion — until meltingly tender, then sliced and served to be wrapped at the table. You take a leaf of napa cabbage or perilla, lay in a slice of warm pork, a dab of pungent ssamjang or salted shrimp (saeujeotgal), a piece of spicy radish salad or fresh kimchi, and eat the whole bundle in one bite. Lean yet luscious, savoury and fresh all at once, bossam is festive, communal food — the centrepiece of gatherings and traditionally made during kimchi-making season (kimjang).
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Sisig — Filipino Sizzling Chopped Pork
The undisputed king of Filipino bar food (pulutan): pork — traditionally pig's head and ears, plus liver — boiled, grilled and then finely chopped, sizzled on a screaming-hot cast-iron plate with onions and chilli, brightened with calamansi and sometimes bound with a touch of mayonnaise or a cracked egg on top. The result is a riot of textures — crisp, chewy, tender — and flavours — savoury, sour, spicy, rich. Born in Pampanga, the country's culinary capital, sisig arrives still spitting and sizzling, made to be eaten hot with cold beer and a mound of rice. It's loud, addictive and utterly Filipino.
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Cao Lầu — Hoi An Pork & Noodle Bowl
The singular noodle dish of Hoi An, found almost nowhere else: thick, chewy, faintly smoky noodles — traditionally made with water from a particular ancient well and ash lye, giving them their unique bite and tawny colour — topped with slices of five-spice marinated char siu-style pork, fresh herbs and bean sprouts, crunchy croutons of fried noodle, and just a little intense broth pooled at the bottom. Cao lầu is dry-ish, not soupy, mixed together before eating — a study in texture and balance, with Chinese, Japanese and Vietnamese influences reflecting Hoi An's history as a trading port. It's one of Vietnam's most distinctive bowls.
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Slow Cooker Pulled Pork
A whole pork shoulder rubbed with brown sugar and spice, cooked low and slow until it shreds under a fork and drinks back its own concentrated cooking juices. This is the forgiving, hands-off version that turns out juicy, smoky-sweet pulled pork with fifteen minutes of real work.
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Cuban Sandwich
A Cuban sandwich layers citrus-marinated mojo roast pork, sweet ham, Swiss cheese, yellow mustard, and dill pickles inside crisp Cuban bread, then presses the whole thing flat until the crust shatters and the melted cheese turns to glue. The contrast of tangy pork, salty ham, sharp mustard, and cool pickle is the entire point, and pressing it under a weight gives you that classic griddled crunch with no special equipment.
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Baby Back Ribs
Oven-baked baby back ribs that come out tender enough to pull cleanly off the bone, coated in a brown sugar–smoked paprika rub and lacquered with a quick homemade barbecue sauce. Wrapping the racks tightly in foil traps their own juices so they gently steam-roast at a low temperature, then a short blast under the broiler caramelizes the sauce into a sticky, glossy crust. No smoker required — just a baking sheet, foil, and patience.
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Kalua Pork
Kalua pork is the smoky, salty centerpiece of a Hawaiian luau: pork shoulder cooked low and slow until it collapses into silky shreds. This oven version stands in for the traditional imu (underground oven) with three honest shortcuts — coarse alaea sea salt, a spoonful of real liquid smoke, and a tight banana-leaf-and-foil wrap that traps steam so the meat braises in its own juices. The result is deeply savory, fall-apart pork with just three core ingredients and almost no hands-on work.
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Pork Fried Rice
Takeout-style pork fried rice built on chilled day-old rice, tender marinated pork, soft-scrambled egg, and scallions, all tossed in a savory soy-oyster sauce. The secret is dry, cold rice and a screaming-hot pan: cooking each element separately, then combining at the end, keeps the grains distinct and lightly crisped instead of gummy. A quick cornstarch-and-soy marinade means the pork stays juicy even over high heat.
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Homemade Italian Sausage
Bulk Italian sausage made from scratch: cold ground pork kneaded with toasted fennel, garlic, paprika, and a splash of red wine vinegar until it turns springy and tacky. A short cure in the fridge lets the salt and spices penetrate, so every bite tastes like good salumeria sausage instead of seasoned ground meat. No casings, no stuffer — just a bowl, your hands, and a hot skillet.
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