Are you familiar with Chinese Barbecue Pork {Char Siu}; that flavourful, luscious, sticky-sweet, bright-red pork served in House Special Soup, fried rice, and on skewers at Chinese restaurants? I have a serious fixation on the stuff. I can’t get enough of it. The problem with satisfying my need for it is twofold:
- I don’t live near a Chinese restaurant. No. Really… It’s fifteen miles round trip to the nearest one and the nearest one is not worth driving fifteen miles round trip.
- I’m not super fond of food dyes. They kind of weird me out, honestly… That’s why you don’t see a lot of things calling for food colouring here on Foodie with Family.
With these issues in mind, I started making my own Chinese Barbecue Pork {Char Siu} a while back and I think it tastes vastly superior to what I can get at many restaurants. I use red beet powder because that not only adds a little sweetness, but adds a little red to the party without using food dye. Hey- I like pretty foods as much as the next gal,I just don’t like artificial food colouring! Does anyone else feel like diving face first into that plate?
I had a very pregnant friend visiting when I was plating this Chinese Barbecue Pork {Char Siu}. She happily helped me dispatch of the evidence after I snapped a couple shots. Her daughter -who normally doesn’t love meat dishes- assisted in the effort, too. It didn’t take us much time to make that dish look as clean as it did before I threw a pile of food on it.
Are you wondering what in the world you’d do with four whole tenderloins cooked into Chinese Barbecued Pork {Char Siu}? Aside from slicing them and serving over rice as pictured and serving to your pregnant friends, you can dice them and toss it into fried rice or onto salad, slice thinly and add to your own House Special Soup or put on split rolls with a slaw for Chinese Barbecue Pork Sliders… I’m sure there are other options I haven’t thought of yet. How would you serve these?
Cook’s Notes
- I have to say a couple of words about the ingredients out of which the marinade is made. Don’t skip the Five Spice Powder. I used to think I couldn’t stand the stuff. It turns out -unsurprisingly- that what I hated was the little jars of indeterminate age that I got from the regular grocery store that then languished in my spice drawer for years on end. Homemade Five Spice Powder is a revelation, to say the least. Made of cinnamon, fennel seed, Szechuan (or Sichuan) peppercorn, star anise, and clove, it might sound a little odd to add to a savoury dish, but I tell ya, it does something special to pork. Chances are you’re pretty familiar with all or most of those ingredients. If I were a betting woman, I’d say the ingredient that most people haven’t used is the Szechuan peppercorn. It’s a key flavour in most Szechuan food. Unlike black or white peppercorns, it’s not known to be spicy or hot, but rather, it’s citrusy and numbs the tongue a bit. All in all, after making my own Homemade Five Spice, I have to say that I’ve done a 180° on my stance and I now sprinkle a little bit of it into nearly everything! If you don’t want to make Homemade Five Spice, you can use five spice powder purchased at an Asian grocer or a well-stocked grocery store.
- Don’t marinate your pork for less than 12 hours, but you also don’t want to go too far beyond 24 hours. The marinade will have done all it can do at 24 hours and anything beyond that is not going to do anything good for your pork.
- This is a two part grilling process, but don’t let that intimidate you. You begin them over a low heat portion of the grill and finish them (while brushing with honey) over high heat. This is done most easily by building a bed of hot coals to one side of the grill if using wood or charcoal, or simply having a couple of burners on high and a couple on low in a gas grill.
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Chinese Barbecued Pork (Char Siu), Homemade Five Spice
Rate RecipeIngredients
For Homemade Five Spice Powder:
- 2 teaspoons Szechuan Peppercorn
- 8 whole star anise
- 1 tablespoon fennel seed
- 1 tablespoon ground cinnamon
- 1/2 teaspoon ground cloves
For the Chinese Barbecue Pork:
- 4 good sized boneless pork tenderloins about 4-6 pounds total weight
- 1/2 cup hoisin sauce
- 1/2 cup soju or light rum Korean rice liquor
- 1/3 cup brown rice syrup or honey plus additional for brushing while grilling
- 1/4 cup soy sauce
- 2 tablespoons Sriracha
- 2 tablespoons toasted sesame oil
- 2 tablespoons ground ginger
- 2 tablespoons granulated onion or onion powder
- 2 tablespoons red beet powder can omit or substitute with 1 teaspoon red food colouring
- 1 1/2 tablespoons Homemade Five Spice or purchased five spice powder
- 1 1/2 tablespoons granulated garlic or garlic powder
Instructions
To Make the Homemade Five Spice:
- Put a clean, dry, heavy-bottomed skillet over medium low heat. Add the Szechuan peppercorns and shake the pan back and forth until the peppercorns are fragrant, about 2 to 3 minutes. Immediately add them to a spice grinder with the fennel seed and star anise. Grind until the mixture is as finely powdered as you can make it. Shake it through a fine mesh strainer. Discard what remains in the strainer. Take the sifted spices and stir in the ground cinnamon and cloves. Return this mixture to the spice grinder and grind momentarily to better combine the spices. Store in an airtight container in a dark, cool cupboard. For most potent flavour, use within three months.
To Make the Chinese Barbecued Pork (Char Siu):
- Add everything but the pork tenderloins and the spare honey to a large, resealable, zipper-top bag. Seal the bag and use your hands to gently squish and combine the ingredients until it is evenly mixed. Open the bag and add all of the pork tenderloins. Squeeze as much air out of the bag as you can, reseal it, place it on a rimmed baking dish and refrigerate for 12 to 24 hours, turning the bag halfway through the marinating process.
- Preheat oven to 375°F. Place the tenderloins on a rimmed baking sheet and roast for 20 minutes. While the tenderloins are roasting, begin preheating a grill, using high heat on half of the grill and low heat on the other half. When the tenderloins have roasted for 20 minutes, transfer them to the HIGH heat side of the grill. Drizzle honey over the tops of the tenderloins and use a heat-proof pastry brush to distribute the honey. When the bottom of the tenderloin has good colour, about 4 minutes, flip it over, drizzle it again with honey and brush to distribute. The second side should colour up more quickly than the first as it was brushed with honey. When that has nice colour and a couple of charred bits, transfer it to the LOW heat side of the grill, flipping it over in the process. Continue drizzling with honey, brushing, and grilling until the internal temperature of the thickest part of the tenderloin measures at least 145°F (medium rare). Transfer the cooked tenderloins to a clean, rimmed baking dish and lightly tent with foil. Allow them to rest for at least 3 minutes before slicing or chilling.
To Serve Immediately:
- Slice or dice the pork -hot, warm, or room temperature- and serve over rice, in soup, or on sandwiches or salads.
To Freezer for Later Meals:
- Chill the cooked Chinese Barbecue Pork (Char Siu) before wrapping tightly in a double layer of plastic wrap and then a layer of foil. Place the wrapped pork on a baking sheet and put into the freezer. When the pork is frozen firmly, place the wrapped pork in a labeled, resealable zipper top bag and freeze for up to 6 months.
To Reheat:
- For best results, remove the desired number of cooked tenderloins from the freezer, remove the foil and double layer of plastic wrap, and thaw in the refrigerator overnight. Reheat in a 350°F in a foil covered rimmed baking dish until heated all the way through, about 15-20 minutes.
- If you're in a hurry, remove the foil and one layer of plastic wrap, then defrost gently in the microwave. Remove the last layer of plastic wrap, place in a rimmed, microwave safe dish, cover the dish with plastic wrap, venting one corner, and reheat on medium temperature until hot all the way through. The timing of this will depend on the strength of your microwave.
Nutrition
Nutritional information is an estimate and provided to you as a courtesy. You should calculate the nutritional information with the actual ingredients used in your recipe using your preferred nutrition calculator.
did you make this recipe?
Make sure to tag @foodiewithfam on Instagram and #hashtag it #foodiewithfamily so I can check it out!
Here is a list of marginally difficult to find ingredients available for purchase on Amazon.com:
- Hoisin Sauce
- Szechuan Peppercorns
- Whole Star Anise
- Fennel Seeds(Pssst. You can make THIS DELICIOUSNESS with your extra fennel.)
- Brown Rice Syrup
- Red Beet Powder
- Toasted Sesame Oil
- Sriracha Hot Chili Sauce
This post was originally published on June 17, 2013.
Reader's Thoughts...
Emiko says
With 5 kids I could do all kinds of stuff with an iPad. Teaching, cooking, organizing…
RebeccaC says
I need a laptop replacement!
Kate S says
To be honest??? I’d probably use it as a recipe book that I could prop up on my kitchen counter and reference all these awesome recipes–without having to worry about spilling flour, sugar, or sauce into my keyboard (I do that more often than I care to admit) OR worry about having paper to print it off. Also, I would probably cave to the inevitable requests for doggy videos from my one-year-old, and possibly My Little Pony (don’t judge me ;p) from her big sister.
Laura D says
I would use it in the kitchen to show great recipes!
robin says
I would use it to do what I’m doing now, surfing blogs instead of cleaning!
Thomas Chappell says
I would use it to track my new baby’s growth.
Carrie says
I love pork tenderloin, and they are on sale at my local store this week!
Laurel says
We made this the other night with some fresh-off-the-stalk sweet corn that one of our farmer-friends gifted to us. It was delicious! I liked how sweet it was. My Handsome has requested that next time, I try to make it a little more savory by making the jalapeno substitution for the red pepper and also trying red onion for the sweet onion. Looking forward to having some for lunch today. Also, tried it as a topping on my burger and it was delicious! 🙂
Laurel says
oops – that was supposed to go on the street corn post. lol
Darryl says
Games, email, web, the usual.
Sheri Ann Richerson says
I’m going to BlogHer’13 for the first time this year. I would love to win an iPad to take with me! I have a fresh pork tenderloin in the freezer I bought at the farmers market this week, I may just try the recipe – and the bacon jam one too!
jeri says
I always make an extra pork tenderloin or two. Once they chill, you can slice them super thin for sandwiches.
Rachel D. says
This is a pretty great contest. And that food looks amazing too.
Ellen Renee says
Reading books and blogs, & deciding what new recipe to try!
Conrad says
Talk about luck! Here I sit with two pork tenderloins wondering what to do with them… This recipe sounds really good and is scheduled ASAP when I can find the Szechuan Peppercorn. This recipe goes into my recipe file to join over 100 others attributed to you, Rebecca.
With regard to the iPad: Yeah, I’d like to win it but I’m afraid to do so because I’d have a device smarter than me!!
Jenn says
Such a delicious recipe, and such an awesome giveaway! I’d use an iPad for baking and cooking.
Esther McCurrry says
I keep a family blog and it seems like an iPad would make updating that so much easier! Especially since we just had our second baby 8 days ago. 🙂
Yasmin says
I have a two-month old and we’ve already started tinkering with the idea of homeschooling. It sounds like an iPad would be handy!
Yee Lin Tan says
read and watch movies with it 🙂
BethD says
I have 6 kids and can think of so many ways we’d use this, but I personally would use it the most in the kitchen!
BethD says
I have 6 kids and can think of so many ways we’d use this, but I personally would use it the most in the kitchen! I’m always hauling our laptop into the kitchen when trying out new recipes and it’s just too bulky!