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Home ❯ Recipes ❯ Pork ❯ Cantonese Salt and Pepper Pork Chops

Cantonese Salt and Pepper Pork Chops

Bill

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Bill

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Updated: 8/27/2023
Salt and Pepper Pork Chops

Salt and Pepper Pork Chops are a must-order for us at Cantonese restaurants. This is the blog version of our recipe, but we also have a wonderful version in our cookbook!

Chinatown Reminiscenses

Chinese Salt and Pepper Pork Chops are the best! I remember this dish from when I was a chubby kid growing up in the small resort town of Liberty, NY. Every month, my family would make the two hour Saturday morning pilgrimage in our white Chevrolet station wagon to Manhattan’s Chinatown.

Kind of reminiscent of Little House on the Prairie…heading into town on a wagon to buy coffee and a sack of flour from Mr. Whipple at the General Store. Only with more Chinese people.

We’d first have dim sum, and then pay a visit to my grandparents’ tiny apartment, where we would all converge with our aunts, uncles and crazy younger cousins. Sunday morning would be a mad rush to the butcher, Chinese bakery, and fresh vegetable stands.

We’d then head to a tiny mom and pop general store for miscellaneous sundries, where everything was packed wall to wall—cartons and boxes stacked in the narrow aisles, and a good amount of merchandise hanging from the ceiling above our heads.

With the next month’s provisions purchased, it was off to Sunday dinner with extended family before the long ride back to Liberty. At that dinner, we would inevitably have this Cantonese salt and pepper pork chops dish.

Crispy Cantonese Salt and Pepper Pork Chops by thewoksoflife.com

We still love Salt and Pepper Pork Chops, and we order it whenever we go to a good Cantonese restaurant (like the one mentioned in our Stir-Fried Shrimp and Eggs post). This Salt and Pepper Pork Chop version is probably the most common of several variations.

Personally, we like the Cantonese version the best. It’s all about expectations my friends–kinda like you’re expecting a Big Mac, but in a drunken stupor, you end up walking into a Burger King and getting a Whopper. It’s good, but it’s just not what you were expecting, and certainly not the same.

Generally, restaurants serve the pork chops with the bone in, but they have the butcher cut them very thin. At home, we suggest you use thin cutlets of boneless pork, to make things easier. We also suggest a fattier cut of pork like the shoulder. This dish is nothing without a bit of fat.

So here we go with the recipe.

Salt and Pepper Pork Chops: Recipe Instructions

Combine the pork, 3 tablespoons water, Shaoxing wine, salt, sesame oil, and five spice powder (if using) in a large bowl. Use your hands to mix and coat the pork evenly. Let sit at least 15 minutes.

Move the pork to one side of the bowl, add the ingredients for the coating (flour, cornstarch, white pepper, oil, and water). Mix until you get a loose batter. Next, combine the pork and the batter until everything is well-coated, and set aside.

Heat the oil in a small sauce pot to about 250 degrees, or until you put in a piece of garlic and it bubbles a little. Toss in the garlic and cook until it just starts to turn color (30 seconds). Scoop it out onto a paper towel to drain. Be careful not to brown the garlic, or it will be bitter.

Heat the oil to 380 degrees using a thermometer, fry the pork in batches until golden brown, and place on a paper towel to drain.

Once all pieces are done, drain the oil leaving 1 tablespoon in the wok and heat your wok over very high heat until just smoking. Add the long hot green peppers and long hot red pepper, salt, and white pepper to the wok and toss for about 15-30 seconds until fragrant. Turn off the heat, and add the pork chops and the fried garlic.

Crispy Cantonese Salt and Pepper Pork Chops by thewoksoflife.com

You can now practice your pow wok skills to toss everything together.

Crispy Cantonese Salt and Pepper Pork Chops by thewoksoflife.com

Serve your salt and pepper pork chops immediately with white rice, and maybe a little extra salt and white pepper.

Crispy Cantonese Salt and Pepper Pork Chops by thewoksoflife.com

Enjoy this Cantonese Salt and Pepper Pork Chops recipe!

Crispy Cantonese Salt and Pepper Pork Chops by thewoksoflife.com
Crispy Cantonese Salt and Pepper Pork Chops by thewoksoflife.com

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Recipe

Salt and pepper pork chops
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4.77 from 21 votes

Salt and Pepper Pork Chops

Salt and Pepper Pork Chops is a favorite favorite Cantonese dish and always a hit with the kids. Salt and Pepper pork chops is an easy-to-make dish at home!
by: Bill
Serves: 4 to 6 servings
Prep: 25 minutes mins
Cook: 25 minutes mins
Total: 50 minutes mins

Ingredients

For the pork and marinade:
  • 1 pound pork shoulder (sliced about 1/3 inch thick into pieces about 4 to 5 inches across)
  • 3 tablespoons water
  • 1 ½ tablespoons Shaoxing wine
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1 teaspoon sesame oil
  • 1/8 teaspoon five spice powder (optional)
For the coating:
  • ¼ cup all purpose flour
  • 2 tablespoons cornstarch
  • 1/8 teaspoon white pepper
  • 1 1/2 tablespoons oil
  • 3 tablespoons water
And everything else:
  • 3 cups peanut oil (for frying)
  • 3 cloves garlic (thinly sliced)
  • 3 long hot green peppers (sliced crosswise into thin rounds)
  • 1 long hot red pepper (sliced crosswise into thin rounds)
  • ½ teaspoon coarse sea salt
  • 1/8 teaspoon coarsely ground white pepper

Instructions

  • Combine the pork and marinade ingredients in a large bowl and use your hands to mix and coat the pork evenly. Let sit at least 15 minutes.
  • Move the pork to one side of the bowl, add the ingredients for the coating, and mix until you get a loose batter. Next, combine the pork and the batter until everything is well-coated, and set aside.
  • Heat the oil in a small sauce pot to about 250 degrees, or until you put in a piece of garlic and it bubbles a little. Toss in the garlic and cook until it just starts to turn color (30 seconds). Scoop it out onto a paper towel to drain. Be careful not to brown the garlic, or it will be bitter.
  • Heat the oil to 380 degrees, fry the pork in batches until golden brown, and place on a paper towel to drain.
  • Once all pieces are done, drain the oil leaving 1 tablespoon in the wok and heat your wok over very high heat until just smoking. Add the green and red peppers, salt, and white pepper to the wok and toss for about 15-30 seconds until fragrant. Turn off the heat, and add the pork chops and the fried garlic. You can now practice your pow wok skills to toss everything together. Serve immediately with white rice!

Nutrition Facts

Calories: 465kcal (23%) Carbohydrates: 14g (5%) Protein: 15g (30%) Fat: 38g (58%) Saturated Fat: 7g (35%) Cholesterol: 46mg (15%) Sodium: 750mg (31%) Potassium: 281mg (8%) Fiber: 1g (4%) Sugar: 2g (2%) Vitamin A: 105IU (2%) Vitamin C: 21.5mg (26%) Calcium: 14mg (1%) Iron: 1.4mg (8%)
Nutritional Info Disclaimer Hide Disclaimer
TheWoksofLife.com is written and produced for informational purposes only. While we do our best to provide nutritional information as a general guideline to our readers, we are not certified nutritionists, and the values provided should be considered estimates. Factors such as brands purchased, natural variations in fresh ingredients, etc. will change the nutritional information in any recipe. Various online calculators also provide different results, depending on their sources. To obtain accurate nutritional information for a recipe, use your preferred nutrition calculator to determine nutritional information with the actual ingredients and quantities used.
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Bill

About

Bill
Bill Leung is the patriarch of The Woks of Life family, working on the blog alongside wife Judy and daughters Sarah and Kaitlin. Born in upstate New York, Bill comes from a long line of professional chefs. From his mother’s Cantonese kitchen to bussing tables, working as a line cook, and helping to run his parents’ restaurant, he offers lessons and techniques from over 50 years of cooking experience. Specializing in Cantonese recipes, American Chinese takeout (straight from the family restaurant days), and even non-Chinese recipes (from working in Borscht Belt resort kitchens), he continues to build what Bon Appétit has called “the Bible of Chinese Home Cooking.” Along with the rest of the family, Bill is a New York Times bestselling cookbook author and James Beard and IACP Award nominee, and has been developing recipes for over a decade.
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Sarah, Kaitlin, Judy, and Bill cooking together

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