Easy Garlic Ginger Glazed Sticky Pork is one of my most popular recipes here on Foodie with Family. Read on to see why!
It’s no secret that food is my forever friend. It’s pretty easy to get me to hold forth on the subject in general, obviously.
I am especially passionate about that sub-category of food made of simple recipes using basic ingredients that deliver major flavours with minimal effort. Easy Garlic Ginger Glazed Sticky Pork is all of those things.
I want to clarify for a minute. There are two schools of thought on describing a food as ‘easy’.
Some folks think it’s gauche because using it perpetuates the false notion that somehow good food has to be complicated. I get it, I really do.
At the same time, I think that reminding people that a dish is “easy” is a kindness and a comfort. It’s like having a favourite pair of jeans that you put on when you need to have a good day.
The word “easy” is a reassuring one. It tells you you won’t be chained to the counter for hours upon hours or employing complex techniques that are more suited to angry French chefs who are prone to throwing pots.
For that reason, I’m unapologetic about calling recipes ‘Easy”. Easy, easy, easy, easy, E-A-S-Y. Easy Garlic Ginger Glazed Pork is a perfect example of what I mean.
If I called it sweet and spicy lacquered pork, I’d technically be correct, but I’d also be intimidating the heck out of starter cooks.
And the truth of the matter is that Easy Garlic Ginger Glazed Pork is nuanced enough to keep a sophisticated eater and cook happy, but simple enough that even the most rookie cook can make it happen for a fast dinner. THAT is my happy place.
Tender strips of pork glazed with a sticky, sweet, spicy, garlicky, gingery sauce that is as easy as stirring a few things together in a pan, it’s hard to beat this for a fast, soul-satisfying meal.
What Kind of Honey Should I Use for Sticky Pork?
This is a pretty common question with a very simple answer: use a mild honey.Whichever light coloured honey you like best will serve here.
Whether you choose the stuff in the squeeze bottle shaped like a bear, or a bottle of light amber or golden coloured stuff from your favourite farmer’s market vendor, just go light as a rule of thumb. In other words, put the bamboo honey aside for this dish.
While strong flavoured honeys are delicious on their own or to finish a dish, you’re going to be concentrating the flavour of the honey when you reduce the sauce. A strong, robust honey like bamboo will bring too much of its own flavour to the party.
Which Cut of Pork Should I use for Stir Fry?
Again, this is a matter of personal preference, but I love boneless center cut loin or boneless sirloin steaks for our Easy Garlic Ginger Glazed Sticky Pork. Of the two, I usually reach for boneless center cut loin, because I love the leaner cut.
I don’t advise using a super marbled cut like shoulder because that will require far longer to cook than this recipe provides.
Pork Recipes
While Easy Garlic Ginger Glazed Sticky Pork is one of my favourites, I have many other easy pork recipes for your table, too.
Whether you’re using ground pork in Easy Garlic Ginger Crispy Pork Noodles or Egg Roll in a Bowl or making slow-cooker apple cider pulled pork, we’ve got you covered. If you want to know how to cook pork and which cuts to use, that’s here, too.
If you need help on learning how to cook pork shoulder, it’s all right there for you. Check out all of our pork recipes in our recipe index at your leisure!
Easy Garlic Ginger Glazed Sticky Pork
-As with many stir-fries -and this could be considered one- Easy Garlic Ginger Glazed Sticky Pork relies on the cook having everything prepared and set out before any flame or heat source comes anywhere near the pan. The bulk of the work comes before you ever put one molecule of anything in the pan.
-The goal with cooking the pork is to take it to being 2/3 done. This means that if you cut one strip of pork in half, you’ll be able to see the outer layer is lightly browned, the next 1/3 of it will be pink but opaque and the center should be slightly shimmery and darker pink.
It will continue cooking when the sauce comes into play. If you take the pork too far at this point, it’ll be overdone when the sticky, flavourful glaze is lacquering itself to the pork. See what I did there? I worked in those fancy-pants culinary terms to placate my purists. Who loves you? I do.
-Do not add the pork until you have reduced the sauce. This is the same motivation behind moving the pork to a plate and starting the sauce by itself. Sometimes it behaves a little oddly, and until it reaches a certain point (slightly thickened, bubbly, and smelling slightly caramelized), you don’t want to add the pork.
The pork strips will finish cooking in the sauce, but it’s easier to add a splash of liquid to keep it cooking longer than it is to make the sauce magically evaporate to doneness because your pork is done.
Trust me. If there was a way to abracadabra the sauce to doneness, I’d be all over it.
But this bears repeating: This sauce is meant to be reduced until it is already thick BEFORE you add the pork back in. If you do that, you won’t end up with too much sauce or a soupy mess.
When the sauce is boiled until it has evaporated down to a thick, sticky, shiny, state, you add the pork in and toss it. It’s worth the little bit of wait.
-You can serve Easy Garlic Ginger Glazed Sticky Pork any which way you wish; over rice, with green vegetables, on noodles, or with toothpicks as finger foods. My personal preference is with steamed or Spicy Asian Roasted Broccoli over rice.
Use this to make Easy Garlic Ginger Glazed Sticky Pork
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Easy Garlic Ginger Glazed Sticky Pork
Rate RecipeIngredients
- 1 1/2 pounds boneless center cut pork loin cut into 1/4-inch thick slabs, then 1/4-inch thick strips, about 3 inches long
- 1 teaspoon Kosher salt
- 1/2 teaspoon black pepper
- 1 tablespoon canola or peanut oil plus extra if necessary
- 5 cloves garlic peeled and minced or pressed through a garlic press
- 2- inch knob of fresh ginger grated
- 1/2 cup mild honey
- 2 tablespoons to 1/4 cup sriracha or chili garlic sauce
- 1 tablespoon rice wine vinegar or white wine vinegar
Instructions
- In a liquid measuring cup or a small mixing bowl, whisk together the mild honey, sriracha, and rice wine vinegar. Set aside.
- Pour the oil into a heavy-bottomed skillet over medium high heat and swirl to coat. Let it heat until it is shimmering. While the oil heats, sprinkle the pork strips with kosher salt and black pepper then toss with your hands to distribute it evenly. Carefully add the pork to the pan, working in batches to avoid overcrowding the pan. Let the first side brown, flip the pieces with tongs or a spatula, and brown the second side. Transfer the pork to a plate.
- Return the pan to the heat and add in the garlic and ginger. Stir until fragrant, about 30 seconds.
- Raise the heat to high and pour in the sauce mixture and bring to a boil, stirring frequently. When the sauce is very bubbly and thickened like warm honey, toss the pork back in and toss constantly to coat everything and reduce the sauce to a thick, sticky glaze on the pork. This can be served immediately over rice, noodles, or as finger food, or can be allowed to cool and be eaten cold.
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.
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This post was originally published July 22, 2015. Updated April 2017 with video and improved Cook’s Notes. Republished January 1, 2021.
Reader's Thoughts...
Nicol says
this looks amazing. I only have pork chops, do you think that would work?
Rebecca says
Hi Nicol- I’m sure the glaze would be delicious on pork chops. I can’t tell you how long it will take to cook the chops, but I’d say cook them how you like them, then glaze as directed!
Theliz says
We sliced our chops up and it worked well
Rebecca says
That is excellent to hear. Thank you!
Gail Russell says
Why no calorie count??
Rebecca says
Hi Gail- I do not include calorie counts on my recipes as a rule. Both because I think serving sizes are unrealistic, and because I am uncomfortable calculating calories because of my tendency to over-control them when I do that. If you’d like to determine the calories for your own purposes, there are many free online calorie calculators available where you can plug in the recipe and get calorie counts. Best wishes!
Cathy says
This was so delicious! I used leftover roast pork loin, warmed it slightly in the skillet, and removed it to a plate. Then I proceeded as directed. It would be a hit with children without the hot pepper sauce. I will definitely try this again, maybe with chicken breast next time. Thanks for a great recipe.
Leah @ The Frugal South says
Looks perfect for serving with some veggie fried rice tonight! Thanks!
Rebecca says
That’s the truth!!! Sounds delicious!
Annette Friedl says
HI Rebbeca – this recipe looks fantastic! I have some left over pork tenderloin that grilled to medium…do you think I could use that to make this recipe, and if you think it would work can you suggest how to use the pork tenderloin so that it doesn’t get too dry while recooking? Thank you!
Annette
Rebecca says
Hi Annette- I think if you make the glaze and boil it to being super thick, you could slice the grilled pork and toss it in to coat! Of course, I haven’t tried this personally, so it’s just a guess. Let me know how it works if you try it!
Emily says
I did just this, used leftover roast pork loin sliced into strips. With about 1 Tbsp chili-garlic paste instead of sriracha (little kids that don’t do spicy yet), it was delicious over jasmine rice.
I had the same issue as a previous commenter, lighter in colour sauce (could be due to not using a pile of sriracha) that did not reduce very well (gas stove, on medium-high heat) and perhaps I could have waited longer but we were hungry! I wonder if it’s the kind of honey used. Mine frothed a lot, but didn’t seem to reduce much over 10 minutes.
Rebecca says
Hi Emily- I’m so glad you liked it a lot! Frothing is the first step in the sauce reducing. I’ve edited the instructions of the recipe to clarify how to get it to reduce faster. If you bump the heat up to high, it should reduce far faster, you just have to watch it more carefully to prevent scorching. Thank you for your excellent feedback.
Kari says
I thought it was delicious but it never got sticky and was much lighter in color than the picture. It was a little too spicy with using 1 TBSP of Sriracha sauce so I would cut back the next time. It is definitely a keeper.
Rebecca says
Thanks, Kari! If it was lighter and not sticky, it sounds like maybe your burner on your stove wasn’t throwing enough heat. Is it an electric stovetop? Sometimes that can do it!
robert says
Glad I read the comments. I had the same problem with sauce not sticking and was using electric range. Used a little corn starch. The dish was delicious. Will be making it again.
PIP says
Could you please tell me would this work if I chucked it all in a slow cooker? Wanting to make it tomorrow do you think it will be ok?
Rebecca says
Hi PIP- I’m afraid I don’t think it would work out really well to do that. It definitely wouldn’t form the same sticky ginger glaze in the slow-cooker that it does in a pan on the stovetop.
Jacqueline says
Hello Rebekka I am doing this for my family what would you suggest I serve it with there quite big eaters would
Rice or noodles work
Rebecca says
Hi Jacqueline! I love to serve it with rice and roasted broccoli! That helps really fill people up!
Nancy Bell says
Loved it. Followed recipe exactly. It was fantadtic
Linda says
This recipe has traveled far and wide. I am making it tonight in South Africa. So glad that I had all of the ingredients at hand. No shopping list required. I am having it with rice and broccoli as image shows. Looks delisb. Hope hubby will enjoy this something from nothing asian inspired dish. Thank you for posting.
Anisa says
Making this now! Can’t wait. Trying to decide what to eat with it.
Random Guy says
I suggest fried rice or a sticky rice.
Lauren says
Just made this recipe and it was DELICIOUS. So simple and quick to make. My hubby also gave it 2 thumbs up. Will be making again for sure!
Nancy @ HungryEnoughToEatSix says
I wish I hadn’t just ordered a pizza because this sounds incredible!
Rebecca says
Oh my goodness. What a sweet thing to say.
Renee @ Awesome on $20 says
Easy and delicious recipes are definitely the best. I love good food, but I don’t have a ton of time and energy. Easy is best! This recipe looks great.
Kathleen S says
This was nothing short of fabulous. Every member of my household LOVED it! Thanks for another winner!
Scot McPherson says
This is a good recipe, and the explaination about reducing the sauce before you add the pork is key, very good for including it.
Fabulous taste
Alyssa Wiegand says
Yum! This looks amazing. Pinned for later!
I agree: some recipes are just easy, and some ARE NOT. I like to know what I’m getting myself into. I’ve clicked through a recipe link so many times before to find ingredient lists with 30 different items, some that have to be special ordered, etc. Nothing wrong with calling something easy 🙂
Robby says
Hands down you are my best source for “easy” delicious Asian influenced dishes. I really want this for dinner tomorrow night, Would chicken thighs work reasonably well here? We have had enough pork in the last week that the natives have become restless, but I hate to wait for this one.
Rebecca says
I would say chicken thighs would be delicious, but you’re going to have a little different result, obviously. You’ll want to adjust the cooking times, as the thighs are more juicy, as a rule, too!
Rie says
I haven’t completed reading the whole blog and I’m already in…..Yum….
Amy @Very Culinary says
ohmygoodness, yes. So much YES to this.
Rebecca says
HIGH FIVE!!!! This is my dinner wheelhouse!
Melissa says
“nuanced enough to keep a sophisticated eater and cook happy, but simple enough that even the most rookie cook can make it happen for a fast dinner.”
That is my happy place, too. I love food and cooking and always will, but as the years have gone on, and my passions have multiplied, I find that I want most of my meals to be of this kind. They are more often than not the BEST meals. 🙂
(also, yes, I need to make this one!)