This Braised Instant Pot Pork Belly results in easy, tender, and delicious pork belly, and makes for an easy meal with lots of slow-cooked flavor.
First: The Limitations of an Instant Pot!
Many of you are probably familiar with the the classic Shanghai dish, Hong Shao Rou or Red Braised Pork Belly. This isn’t that recipe.
Because let me tell you a little secret about making Hong Shao Rou in an Instant Pot…it’s not really a good idea.
Now before you call me a Debbie Downer or an Instant Pot hater (I <3 my Instant Pot, trust me), the thing is, you can’t really pull off the same results in an Instant Pot, because the thing about some dishes is that they can’t be rushed!
In fact, I have the failure to prove it. Our Instant Pot Braised Pork Buns were a well meaning attempt to recreate my mother’s beloved Red Braised Pork Belly recipe in the king of all kitchen appliances. It was a failure on account of an overly long cooking time, but perfect for slathering between fluffy steamed lotus leaf buns.
On the other side of that experiment, I realized that Hong Shao Rou is best left out of the Instant Pot equation. We may continue experimenting in the background, and if we unlock the secret, we’ll let you know.
Take it from me, folks—until that day comes, I suggest this recipe: a simple Braised Instant Pot Pork Belly that’s made with a “master stock” or lushui (卤水).
What is a Master Stock, or lushui (卤水)?
A master stock is a sauce/stock mixture that is used and re-used to poach and braise meats, from chicken, to pork, to beef, and more.
We used a Master Stock in our Instant Pot Soy Sauce Chicken Bowls, and this recipe actually uses the same one. It results in tender pork belly with a thin sauce that’s delicious over rice.
For all of you out there who did the smart thing and squirreled away your Soy Sauce Chicken master stock/sauce in the freezer when you first made it a few months ago, this will be doubly easy!!!
Most master stocks begin with soy sauce, sugar, rice wine, and spices like star anise. As the meats are braised in the stock repeatedly, ingredients are replenished and added.
But different meats will take to the flavors of the master stock slightly differently. While braised chicken is delicious, there’s something about the rich, fatty Instant Pot pork belly that takes this idea to new heights.
Re-using Your Master Stock
After you make this recipe, reserve your master stock and transfer it to containers to freeze.
When you need to use it again:
- Let it thaw in the refrigerator
- Add it back to the instant pot
- Add an additional ½ cup Shaoxing wine, ½ cup of soy sauce, ¼ cup of dark soy sauce, 1 teaspoon salt, and 2 tablespoons of sugar to bring it back to the right flavor concentrations.
Pork Belly in an Instant Pot = A Speedy Dinner
A traditional braised meat dish using a master stock can take hours to cook. Doing it in an Instant Pot means preparing your meal in a fraction of the time.
This recipe takes about an hour from start to finish. You just pour the sauces all together in the Instant Pot, drop in the pork belly, press start, and walk away! Ain’t nothin’ better.
When your meal is almost done, or while the pressure is releasing from the instant pot, just cook up some rice and a veggie of your choice, and you have a complete meal.
The pork belly will be close to fall apart tender, and that pork skin? It’s the best part.
Let’s get into the recipe.
Soy Sauce Braised Instant Pot Pork Belly: The Recipe
Grab your Instant Pot. Turn on the sauté setting, and add the oil and ginger. Let it caramelize for about 30 seconds. Then add the scallions and cook another 30 seconds. Add the star anise, rice wine, light soy sauce, dark soy sauce, sugar, salt, and water.
Close the lid of the instant pot, and make sure you have your vent set so it is not venting. Cook for 5 minutes on the high pressure setting.
Safely release pressure, open the lid when safe, and carefully lower the pork belly into the instant pot.
Cook the pork for 20 minutes on the high pressure setting. Allow the pressure to release naturally once the timer has gone off. Once safe to open, retrieve the pork belly, and cut into smaller chunks as desired.
Serve over rice with sauce spooned over the top, along with a stir-fried green veggie of your choice.
Let the braising liquid cool, and store it in containers in the freezer. When you need it again, let it thaw in the refrigerator and throw it back in the instant pot with an additional ½ cup Shaoxing wine, ½ cup of soy sauce, ¼ cup of dark soy sauce, 1 teaspoon salt, and 2 tablespoons of sugar to bring it back to the right flavor concentrations.
Soy Sauce Braised Instant Pot Pork Belly
Ingredients
- 1 tablespoon oil
- 5 slices ginger
- 2 scallions (cut into 3-inch pieces)
- 3 star anise
- 1 cup rose-flavored rice wine (mei kwei lu) or shaoxing wine (240 ml)
- 1 cup light soy sauce (240 ml)
- ¾ cup dark soy sauce (180 ml)
- ½ cup sugar (115 g)
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 5 cups water (1.2 L)
- 2½ pounds pork belly (about 1 kg, buy the large slabs at the butcher counter, and cut them into 5-inch lengths (you don’t want the narrow, pre-cut lengths or slices for this recipe)
Instructions
- Grab your Instant Pot. Turn on the sauté setting, and add the oil and ginger. Let it caramelize for about 30 seconds. Then add the scallions and cook another 30 seconds. Add the star anise, rice wine, light soy sauce, dark soy sauce, sugar, salt, and water.
- Close the lid of the instant pot, and make sure you have your vent set so it is not venting. Cook for 5 minutes on the high pressure setting.
- Safely release pressure, open the lid when safe, and carefully lower the pork belly into the instant pot.
- Cook the pork for 20 minutes on the high pressure setting. Allow the pressure to release naturally once the timer has gone off. Once safe to open, retrieve the pork belly, and cut into smaller chunks as desired.
- Serve over rice with sauce spooned over the top, along with a stir-fried green veggie of your choice.
- Let the braising liquid cool, and store it in containers in the freezer. When you need it again, let it thaw in the refrigerator and throw it back in the instant pot with an additional ½ cup Shaoxing wine, ½ cup of soy sauce, ¼ cup of dark soy sauce, 1 teaspoon salt, and 2 tablespoons of sugar to bring it back to the right flavor concentrations.
nutrition facts
Hello, I was wondering if I could substitute the sugar and some of the soy sauce with (Indonesian) Thick Sweet Soy Sauce? Thank you
That should work, Yeyen!
Made this tonight. VERY tasty! Family really enjoyed it. Don’t know how it can feed 8 when my family of 4 ate it all up, no leftovers. 👍. Thanks for sharing another great recipe.
Hahaha…just don’t eat it too often :-)
How many times can you reuse the braising liquid?
Hi Verna, as long as you are freezing it, you can continue using it as your “master sauce’ and replenish it with spices, soy sauces and wine. Extra care has to be taken to properly freeze it and strain the impurities out using a fine mesh strainer. After the first use, it is basically a meat-based sauce, which is why it gets tastier every time you use it ;-)
Hi, love this site. I’ve used quite a bit of some recipes here and they all worked great! You guys are awesome!
I made this dish and was wondering how I can incorporate the leftover braising liquid to make 卤肉面汤??
Hi Jeanne, in this case, I’d mix some braising liquid with some homemade stock as the soup base that you are talking about. Also, just know that you can freeze the braising liquid for next time. You can use it to braise tofu, eggs and other meats like Braised beef shank.
It was delicious but it doesn’t have that thick glazed dark look. What am I doing wrong? Should I cook it uncovered for another 20 minutes to thicken the sauce?
Hi Moloyama, because this is cooked in a pressure cooker, it’s going to be more liquidy rather than glazed, which is what my sister was referring to in the post when she said that this recipe was different from traditional hongshao rou. To get the glazed look of traditional braised pork belly, make my mom’s stovetop recipe here: https://thewoksoflife.com/shanghai-style-braised-pork-belly/.
Hi all, the recipe is awesome ! Made it a few Times are ready. My question is if I make it with a master stock either on the stove or instant pot, is it supposed to be non-glazed because it is more of a liquidy kind of stock? I saw the referred post to the red braised meat were you reduce the liquid and that one is glazed because it was first cooked on the stove then it was liquid reduced. If the master sock recipe is made on the stove would also have a glaze? I’m guessing not because lu shui It’s supposed to be watery right?
Hi Cynthia, there is no glaze for this recipe, just liquid.
Hey folks, the initial recipe calls for 5 cups water. However, your instructions for topping up the master stock after defrosting don’t mention adding any water at all. I just wanted to check that this is correct?
I’ve made this recipe 3 times and it’s delicious!
Hey folks, was there any luck on finding an answer to this?
Hi Lucas, you can use the master sauce a couple of times before adding more water, sauces and aromatics. At that point, you are the chef. You decide how much of each to add and adjust accordingly.
I was wondering if you can add mui choy into the instant pot with the pork belly and cook it at the same time? I want to make pork belly with mui choy uisng an instant pot method instead of steaming it on the stove.
Hi Louise, my concern is that the mui chou might dissolve into nothing. But then again, I have not tried that.
If I am reusing the master stock, do I still cook it in Ipot for 5 minutes before putting the pork in?
Hi Susan, I read some of the older comments and it does say to do steps 1 and 2 if you’re reusing the master stock. Yes, do the 5 minutes before putting in the pork and make sure to Re-add some of the ingredients as stated in their instructions. I read that the 5 minutes before putting in the pork is to intensify the flavor.
If i halve the recipe, do i need to adjust the cooking time?
No, Anna, the cooking time should be the same.
Thanks! My husband requested the Sichuan Three Pepper Pork Belly Stirfry for his father’s day dinner (and LOVED it!) and I’m going to make this with the leftovers.
Well, well, came across this recipe and seemed the most authentic one I could find using an instant pot. I used yellow rock sugar (Pearl River Brand) in place of regular sugar and pretty much followed the instructions and measurements like for like.
Absolutely fantastic taste, great first attempt! Bonus is I can use the master stock again for chicken next! Thanks for sharing this recipe, this kind of food is in my roots and what I grew up eating. Was a winner for my wife and son too :)
We are so glad! Thank you for leaving us a comment.
That looks delicious. I was just curious about something. In the past when making similar recipes, I’ve always been told to boil the pork first to “wash out impurities”. Is that something you usually do? If so, is it on the side? Or is it something that is pressure cooked out?