Char Siu Pork Belly (Cherry Smoke)

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lav25

Smoke Blower
Original poster
Aug 28, 2011
81
34
Osaka, Japan
I love some good char siu (her in Japan pronounced "cha shew"), especially in a bowl of ramen. I've got my ideal dinner planned out, with gyoza (pot stickers) from Ohsho, ramen from Hanamichi, and fried rice from a little mom and pop place in my old neighborhood, but until then, I figured I'd learn to make char siu pork belly.

I used this recipe from bbqpitstop which calls for a marinade made from:

  • 7 tablespoons honey
  • 7 tablespoons soy sauce
  • 5 tablespoons oyster sauce
  • 5 tablespoons rice vinegar
  • 3 tablespoons dark sesame oil
  • 3 tablespoons hoisin sauce
  • 3 tablespoons chopped ginger
I wasn't able to get any hoisin sauce locally, so I made my own, but once I had, I realize that most of the ingredients were the same as in the marinade, so next time I'll just bash up some fermented black beans and add them and a bit of garlic and hot sauce to the main mix.
It also calls for a dry rub of brown sugar, white pepper, and five-spice.

A pork belly from the local butcher, about 1kg (2.2 lbs):

20180211_202752.jpg


Dry rubbed:



I only used about half the dry rub, saved the rest for the next day. I cut the belly into two pieces because there was a marked difference in thickness, so it was going to cook at vastly different speeds. Turned out to be a wise decision. Put the rubbed belly into a ziplock bag that I "vacuum" sealed using the partial immersion method and left it in the fridge overnight. This morning, I heated the MES-30 up to 250F, and put in a block of cherry smoke wood (compressed sawdust for smoking, roughly equivalent to using an Amaze-N-Smoker).

Took the meat out of the bag and dusted it with the remaining dry rub.

20180212_115022.jpg


Separating the meat was a good idea, the thinner section hit 158 after only about an hour, when the thick piece was still at 100 or so. Since the sugar hadn't really carmelized yet, I put in under the broiler (Japanese fish grill) for about two minutes.

20180212_125139.jpg


Sliced into it:

20180212_125446.jpg


Missus and I had it with cheese and crackers as an afternoon snack while the thick chunk was still cooking.

20180212_125441.jpg


That took about two hours, wasn't paying attention and let it get up to 160, but it looks fine.

20180212_133438.jpg


It tasted great, nice and sticky and crispy on the outside. Had a definite five-spice flavor to it, but now that I know the basic concept works, I'm thinking about some other options. Mexican char siu anyone?

Thanks for looking!

-val
 
Last edited by a moderator:
It looks delicious Val!
I had to unlink your link to the other BBQ site, we don't allow that on here.
Al
 
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Looks good and something different.

Point for sure.

Chris
 
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