• Home
  • About
  • Recipes
    • Savory
    • Sweet
    • Tinned Fish
  • Contact Me
  • Nav Social Icons

  • Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Day With Mei

Chinese-American pantry recipes

Savory · November 21, 2024

Salt Fried Pork 盐煎肉

Jump to Recipe Print Recipe

Salt Fried Pork is a flavor-packed Sichuan dish perfect for weeknights, since it takes just 10 minutes to make. Juicy pork, aromatic green garlic, douchi, and Pixian douban are fundamental flavors of Sichuan cuisine: deeply complex but simple to enjoy,

Salt Fried Pork closely resembles the well-known Twice Cooked Pork, which shares near identical ingredients. The key difference lies in how the pork is cut and cooked: Salt Fried Pork removes the skin and skips the boiling step in Twice Cooked Pork. Salt Fried Pork flavor is centered around douchi, whereas Twice Cooked Pork leans more heavily on Pixian douban. The resulting dishes have different mouthfeel and different flavor.

The Ingredients

Green Garlic – Also called “spring garlic” or “young garlic”, this is simply immature garlic. The plant has firm green leaves and a white or purple bulb. Think of it as a milder, brighter version of garlic that’s perfectly suited to stir-fries. 

Pork Rump – This recipe calls for a cut of pork with a roughly 40/60 proportion of fat to lean meat. The cut traditionally used for this dish is called 二刀肉 (second cut meat), which comes from the rump (back leg). Pork belly makes an acceptable substitute, look for a cut with that 40/60 proportion of fat. 

Neutral High Smoke Point Oil – The high heat nature of the cooking method causes lower smoke point oil to burn and take on bitter flavors, so avoid extra virgin olive oil and butter. I recommend Peanut, canola, rapeseed, avocado, and grapeseed oil for wok cooking. 

Pixian Doubanjiang – Doubanjiang is a fermented chili bean paste from Sichuan, a core component of the cuisine. Pixian refers to its provenance— a protected designation, the Champagne of doubanjiang if you will. Look for Pixian douban to ensure the traditional mix of ingredients and methods for Sichuan cuisine. Other types of doubanjiang tend to have added sugar or soy that will drastically change your result.

Douchi – These little fermented black soybeans are found through numerous Chinese regional cuisines. Black soybeans are heavily salted and fermented for an umami-rich flavor perfect in noodles, stir-fries, and sauces alike. 

Dark Soy Sauce – As the name implies, it’s the typical light soy’s deeper colored cousin. Dark soy sauce tends to be lighter in taste, used primarily for adding color. Light soy sauce can be substituted in a pinch.

Sugar – Any white granulated sugar will do in this recipe. 

A few tips for wok cooking

Mise en place – Cut, portion, and prepare all your ingredients before putting the wok on heat. Once the cooking process starts, the steps go by quickly with just seconds in-between. 

Use a high smoke point oil – The benefit of a wok is quick, high-heat cooking, so you’ll need a fat that can keep up. Peanut, canola, rapeseed, avocado, and grapeseed oil are all suitable choices with smoke points over 400°F. Low smoke point fats like extra virgin olive oil or butter will burn and take on bitter flavors.

Hot wok, cold oil (热锅冷油) – Begin heating the wok with nothing in it to ensure even, high heat. The wok is sufficiently hot when almost smoking or a drop of water evaporates immediately once it hits the pan. From here, add your oil and get to stir frying. 

Dry your ingredients – After washing and slicing your produce, pat them dry or let them air dry. Excess water will quickly lower the wok’s temperature and extends the cooking process. Water and oil also don’t get along, increasing risk of splatters and grease flames licking up. 

Salt Fried Pork 盐煎肉

No ratings yet
Print Recipe Pin Recipe
Prep Time:5 minutes mins
Cook Time:5 minutes mins
Total Time:10 minutes mins
Servings: 2

Ingredients

  • 250 g fatty pork rump skin removed
  • 2 sprigs green garlic sub 1 medium leek
  • 2 Tbsp neutral high smoke point oil
  • 2 tsp Pixian doubanjiang
  • 1 Tbsp douchi
  • 1/2 tsp dark soy sauce
  • 1/2 tsp sugar

Instructions

  • Slice the green garlic or leek on the bias into 1 inch segments. Reserve the white and green parts separately.
  • Slice the pork thinly into 2in (5cm) rectangles, making sure each piece has a both fat and lean meat.
    Tip: Use a sharp knife and slice the pork immediately after pulling from the refrigerator. You can also freeze the pork for 30 minutes to firm up for cleaner slicing.
  • Heat a wok over high heat until almost smoking then add 2 Tbsp oil. Heat oil until shimmering, then add sliced pork. Stir fry until pork is lightly browned, about 3 minutes.
  • Add 1 Tbsp douchi and stir fry for 10 seconds. Reduce heat to medium.
  • Add 2 tsp Pixian doubanjiang to the pooled fat in the pan and stir fry for 30 seconds, stirring constantly so it doesn’t burn.
  • Add 1/2 tsp sugar and 1/2 tsp dark soy sauce, stir immediately to coat pork evenly.
  • Add white parts of green garlic and stir fry for 1 minute. Add remaining green parts and stir fry for 10 seconds more, until just starting to wilt. Taste for seasoning, adding a pinch of salt if needed.
  • Remove from heat and serve immediately.
I pride myself on transparency, so know this page may include affiliate links. When you click and make a purchase I earn a small commission, at no extra cost to you. This supports me in writing free recipes.

Posted In: Savory · Tagged: Sichuan

You’ll Also Love

Fava Bean and Tofu Skin Salad with Mala Vinaigrette
Silkie Chicken Soup
Mushroom “Rice” with Yacai Stir-Fry 菌米芽菜
Next Post >

Tofu Skin, Celtuce, and Wood Ear Mushroom Salad

Primary Sidebar

About Photo
Hi! I'm Mei, a Chinese-American recipe developer seeing familiar foods from a new perspective.

Search

Popular Posts

Trending Now

daywithmei

cooking to change your mind
💫 2x james beard & iacp nominated
📨 mei@daywithmei.com 📍nyc
👇 recipes and links

Tinned Fish Talk 🎣 King Salmon Cheeks from @wildfi Tinned Fish Talk 🎣 King Salmon Cheeks from @wildfishcannery 

King salmon cheeks are a cut you can’t get anywhere else in a can, it’s rare to even find at a fishmonger, much less a restaurant. Fish cheeks are rare because they are so small and labor-intensive to harvest. There’s only two per fish so you can imagine how much it takes to fill a single can.

The good news: this is one of the most uniquely pleasurable experiences I’ve had from a tin of fish. The bad news: there is a very limited quantity that sells out almost immediately each year (sorry!) For transparency, they sent me this tin ($44) but know i’ve been a continued customer and all opinions are my own.

I chose to warm up the unopened tin in hot water so the natural fat and collagen are even more luxurious—like a fatty, unctuous scallop. King salmon has a relatively mild flavor and richer texture compared to sockeye or coho. Wildfish Cannery is a one-of-a-kind operation here in North America with a tight-knit supply chain that hand-packs fish caught locally in Southeast Alaska. I hold a special respect for their culinary approach, the cannery is a direct opposition to the category’s commodity reputation.
2 weeks later, we have Sichuan larou! In the pre 2 weeks later, we have Sichuan larou! 

In the previous video, I cured pork belly in salt and spices for several days then set it outside to dry. I smoked it with apple wood pellets and cooked off a piece to taste.
How do you keep traditional foods alive? Sichuan How do you keep traditional foods alive?

Sichuan bacon season is back! Larou (Sichuan bacon) is a cured pork belly process similar to pancetta. It’s first seasoned with spices and salt in an equilibrium cure, hung outside to dehydrate, then (optionally) smoked. The earliest records of this wind-cured meat date back to the Zhou Dynasty roughly 3000 years ago. 

In Sichuan you can buy larou everywhere. In the US no one really makes it at scale. I grew up in the US making it with my family every winter season out of that necessity. Funny enough I’m the only one from my generation still carrying it on, and I’m the one farthest from home.
saved the best for last the suburbanite mall rat saved the best for last

the suburbanite mall rat in me is clawing to get out help me
Follow on Instagram
  • Privacy

Copyright © 2026 Day With Mei · Theme by 17th Avenue

Rate This Recipe

Your vote:




A rating is required
A name is required
An email is required