Chinese Roast Pork

4.54 from 265 votes
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Chinese roast pork or siu yuk. Save yourself a trip to Chinatown and use this easy recipe for the best and crispiest Chinese roast pork belly at home.

Chinese roast pork, ready to serve.
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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.

Chinese Roast Pork

Why You’ll Love This Recipe

Crispy Chinese roast pork belly sliced into pieces.

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 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.


Ingredients

Ingredients for Chinese roast pork.
  • Pork belly
  • Five spice powder
  • Garlic
  • Kosher salt

See the recipe card for full information on ingredients.


How To Make This Recipe

Water being poured into a baking tray.

Step 1: 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.

Pork belly being pat dry with a paper towel.

Step 2: Wash and use paper towels to dry the pork belly.

Horizontal slits are made on the sides of the pork belly using a knife.

Step 3: Make some horizontal slits on the sides of the belly, then rub the meat side with the five spice powder.

Garlic is being inserted into the horizontal slits of the pork belly.

Step 4: Insert each garlic and push them deep inside the pork belly.

Kosher salt is layered evenly on top of the pork belly.

Step 5: Layer the top of the pork belly with the salt evenly.

Pork belly covered in kosher salt is placed on a wire rack on top of a baking tray with water.

Step 6: Place the pork belly on a wire rack. This is how it should look before going into the oven.

Pork belly covered in kosher salt in an oven.

Step 7: 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.

Pork belly with salt crust on a wire rack in an oven.

Step 8: 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.

Salt crust on the pork belly is removed using tongs.

Step 9: Remove the pork belly from the oven, pull off the salt crust and discard.

Pork belly in an oven.

Step 10: Raise the heat of oven to 465°F (240°C), place the pork belly back in the oven and roast for another 40 minutes.

Chinese roast pork on a wire rack.

Step 11: Remove from oven and let set for 10 minutes.

Chinese roast pork is being cut using a cleaver.

Step 12: Cut and serve immediately with some chili sauce and hoisin sauce, or eat as is.


Frequently Asked Questions

How many calories per serving?

This recipe is only 446 calories per serving.

Chinatown Chinese roasted pork belly or siu yuk.

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.

I hope you enjoy this post as much as I do. If you try my recipe, please leave a comment and consider giving it a 5-star rating. For more easy and delicious recipes, explore my Recipe Index, and stay updated by subscribing to my newsletter and following me on FacebookPinterest, and Instagram for new updates.


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4.54 from 265 votes

Chinese Roast Pork Belly

Chinese roast pork or siu yuk. Save yourself a trip to Chinatown and use this easy recipe for the best and crispiest Chinese roast pork belly at home.
Prep Time: 15 minutes
Cook Time: 1 hour 40 minutes
Additional Time: 10 minutes
Total Time: 2 hours 5 minutes
Servings: 6 people
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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

  • Bake until the salt crust forms, the salt should be hardened.
  • Check water in the pan below and add if needed. 
  • You have to insert the garlic deep inside the horizontal slits or else they will be pushed out during the roasting process.

Nutrition

Serving: 6people, Calories: 446kcal, Carbohydrates: 1g, Protein: 35g, Fat: 33g, Saturated Fat: 12g, Polyunsaturated Fat: 19g, Cholesterol: 127mg, Sodium: 495mg

Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

Please rate and comment below!

About Rasa Malaysia

Bee is a recipe developer and best-selling cookbook author, sharing easy, quick, and delicious Asian and American recipes since 2006. With a strong following of almost 2 million fans online, her expertise has been featured in major publications, TV and radio programs, and live cooking demos throughout the United States and Asia.

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Recipe Rating





292 Comments

  1. Melisa says:

    5 stars
    Hi Rasa,
    Can I use a pork rack instead of belly for this? How will this change the cooking time?

    1. Rasa Malaysia says:

      I think you can, but the reason Chinese roast pork has to be pork belly is because of the crispy and bubbly skin. Does pork rack has skin?

  2. Jimmy says:

    4 stars
    Tried it this CNY. At the end of baking, the pork skin didn’t have that bubbly effect, so I baked it longer than what was recommended in the recipe. My pork turns out tough — perhaps I overbaked it. I feel like trying again, but 2 lbs of pork is a bit too much to repeat. Can I halve this recipe? Do I have to change the time or temperature if I do so?

    1. Rasa Malaysia says:

      Hi Jimmy, I am not sure why your roast pork didn’t bubble, I think it’s not dry enough? Did you buy the salt like the video? You don’t have to change time or temperature if you half the recipe.

  3. Michael says:

    A little bit curious, if I use 1 lbs instead of 2 lbs pork belly, do i need to cut half of the cooking time or just go as the recipe?

    1. Rasa Malaysia says:

      Same time.

  4. Mike says:

    I had a first go at this tonight and it turned out great! I had a little less pork belly than the recipe called for so I tried to improvise on the spices and the time. I got the salt crust just like the recipe said. I might have overcooked the pork just a smidge after removing the salt though. The skin was a little tough but could still eat it. Flavor was great and the meat/fat was perfect!

    Knowing how good and easy this is, I will get a larger cut of pork belly. I had 1.5 lbs on this go.

    Thank you for sharing!

    1. Rasa Malaysia says:

      Thanks Mike for trying my Chinese roast pork recipe.

  5. Paul says:

    5 stars
    This works exactly as described! Perfect recipe! Served with rice and stir fried baby Bok Choy with garlic and onion.

    1. Rasa Malaysia says:

      Hi Paul, sounds like a great meal. I am so happy that you like this Chinese Roast Pork recipe.

  6. EasyRoasted5 says:

    Chinese roast pork is a favorite in our house I love how easy this sounds and this looks like something my family will love!Thanks a ton for the recipe.

  7. Monica says:

    Hi bee. I just tried the recipe. It turns out good and crispy, but the crispiness is hard to crack, sicnce the skin is thick, how do we make the skin thinner? Imagine biting into thick crispy skin vs thin crispy skin. The thinner would be better wont it? Please do advise. Thank you

  8. Marwari Mehndi says:

    5 stars
    Oh this looks good!

  9. Lydia says:

    5 stars
    Hi! Thought I’d share some information over here since reading the other reviews helped me get this dish right.

    I was really worried I’d fail because I didn’t have a big enough wire rack. I used my oven’s grill tray, the kind that’s got a groove running right along the bottom parameter and the middle raised so the oil collects in the groove. Not sure if these are the right terms but it’s the way I’d describe it. This means none of my fat dripped into the bath.

    So I put my enormous slab of pork belly in and followed the instructions. Thing was, my pork belly was really huge, so it overcrowded the top third of my oven, and it leant to one side so only one vertical half of the skin was crispy-looking. After an hour in the oven I took it out before I proceed to the ‘cook in 240 deg C’ step so as to adjust the position of the pork. I put the oven on preheat (to 240 deg C), took a small-ish wire rack to prop up the side of the meat, and because it was still falling over my husband jammed a fork in the meat and let the handle rest between the wires of the rack, effectively forming a lever that made the meat stay up.

    We put it in again for the prescribed 40 minutes, this time in the second third of the oven, right above the bath. Our pork belly was touching the ceiling of the oven in the top third, so I decided second would be better. I was so worried that the non-crispy half of the skin wasn’t going to cook, or that the proximity to the bath would ruin everything, but it didn’t! It still came out beautifully!

    This means, if you don’t have a wire rack, or if you decided to put the meat lower (at least, after the first hour), your roast pork would still turn out awesome.

    Thanks, Bee!

    1. Rasa Malaysia says:

      Thanks Lydia for your very insightful comment.

  10. j says:

    5 stars
    i hardly write comments on recipes i find online but i really need to for this one.
    there are many other recipes with baking soda/vinegar, pre boiling or letting meat sit in the fridge overnight but its not necessary.
    this crackling came out PERFECT. everyone raved about it at christmas lunch!!

    the supermarket sold pork belly with its skin and fat already scored, i tied twine around the top portion of the pork belly to maintain its shape (otherwise it will fan out) and also not let the salt crust leech into the meat below.
    i doubled the recipe easy (2kg of pork belly) and added ginger powder and white pepper to the spice mix and it worked really well (inspired by another recipe online).
    used only 1.5c of coarse salt for my doubled recipe. i tried to pack it on, but a small portion of the sides kept falling off – its ok. turned out well. i think as long as you have liberal amounts of salt on the skin it will dry out the skin enough to produce the great crackling.

    thank you so much for the recipe!!

    1. Rasa Malaysia says:

      Hi J thanks so much for trying my Chinese roast pork recipe. I am so glad that you enjoyed it. Yes, the sand ginger powder and white pepper will enhance the taste. :)