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...
Carrian says
Yum!! I love making Chinese food at home! This looks so flavorful and delicious!
Dave says
The flavor is outstanding but the sauce was too thin. 🙁 Perhaps more honey?
Rebecca says
Thanks, Dave! I think it sounds perhaps like you might have benefited from reducing the sauce a little longer. Maybe try that next time 🙂
Cathy says
Super quick and easy and so so tasty. Perfect week night meal.
Rebecca says
Thanks so much, Cathy! I am so glad both that you love it and that you were kind enough to review it for me!
Kelldee says
Loved the simplicity of the dish but it was tooooo spicy and overpowered by sriracha. 1 tbsp max if I even cook this again.
Rebecca says
For those of us who love spicy food, that level works beautifully 🙂 For those who are bothered by it, it’s mercifully simple to reduce. 🙂
Ellie Sedgwick says
Found the above recipe on a site for using cold leftover loin of pork – do you think it would work OK?
Rebecca says
Hi Ellie- I haven’t tried it, but quite a few commenters have and have enjoyed it. If you browse through the comments, you might find some insight into how they made it!
Jules mac says
Tasted lovely , many thanks jules
Michael K Pung says
I just made this for lunch using some leftover pork loin. Sauce is great and super easy! So good topped with toasted sesame seeds. Going to make it soon for family dinner using boneless drumstick meat I have in the freezer along with some Asian veggies. Thank you!
Rebecca says
Thanks so much, Michael! I love the idea of using boneless drumstick meat!
Barbara says
this was okay. I don’t like writing negative reviews, but I also rely on others reviews when choosing recipes, so this is a bit negative. I knew it was an “americanized” chinese dish just by the recipe, but it still looked like it might be good. The pork juices don’t seem to be taken into account,- when removing the pork should the juices be left. I removed them with the pork, but even before adding them in I tasted the honey, vinegar, garlic-chili mixture and wasn’t really impressed, nor did it get very thick.. I was glad to find a recipe that used the garlic-chili,( because I had some to use up- my Chinese friends never use it) but it really doesn’t hardly any heat. The sauce mixture had a real vinegar taste even though it was only 1TB with all that honey. I added some rock candy ( could have used sugar too) and since the liquid was so thin. I also added some chinese cabbage. The end result over rice was okay. The sauce could have been thickened with a bit of corn starch but I decided not to. Nothing I would bother making again though.
Rebecca says
Hey Barbara-
I’d like to address some of the issues you ran into with the recipe, because from what you’re saying, I think I can extrapolate a couple of things that went wrong. First, I want to make clear that this is not an authentic Chinese recipe. It’s definitely inspired by Asian cuisine, but is in no way actually a Chinese recipe and I’m pretty sure I was clear on that. And I love certain Americanized Chinese or Chinese Inspired recipes. I don’t think it makes them less worthy of being made, it’s just different.
Second, if you’re working in smaller batches with the pork, as specified in the recipe, there shouldn’t be much in the way of juices building up. If there are enough juices in the pan that you’re simmering the pork instead of browning it, you may have been overcrowding the pan. Next time, try fewer pieces of pork so the juices can evaporate. That said, if your pork has had a lot of brine added to it before purchase, it might throw more liquid in the pan. If this happens, it’s okay, it’ll be taken care of in the next couple of steps. The recipe says to transfer the pork to the plate. You can use tongs for this or slide the contents onto a plate. Again, it’s the all-important reduction of the sauce that will deal with this.
Third, and most importantly, when you whisk together the honey, vinegar, and chili-garlic mixture, it’s not at its finished state and is most definitely going to taste vinegary and odd. Part of the alchemy of the recipe comes in the reduction of the sauce. The recipe does specify to let it boil over high heat until very bubbly and thickened. After that point, the pork is tossed back in and reduced even further into a thick glaze. If you had runny liquid, it was definitely not reduced enough. Having a major flame under it and letting the liquid evaporate will absolutely eliminate any need for cornstarch to thicken it. This is supposed to be sticky glaze, not a thickened sauce. It is going to require a little time and attention.
In short, I believe most of your issues would have been solved if that sauce sat over the heat longer and was allowed to reduce. It would’ve been an entirely different dish if you had. 🙂
Mia says
This is my first time ever comme ting on a recipe, but I HAD to. Absolutely amazing.
Rebecca says
Well, you just made my day, Mia! Thank you so much!!!!
Melisa says
Made this for my family and company tonight. My husband embarrassingly grunted through the entire meal. He would not stop talking about it and said “make sure you keep this recipe”. I served it with basmati m, topped with sesame seeds and scallions and a side of steamed broccoli. Our guest said it was the best Asian food he’s had in a long time. Definitely a keeper!!
Rebecca says
Melisa- Your comment just made my day! I have such a “What About Bob” visual here. 🙂
Christine Conlin says
This was so Good! It was a hit with the whole family! My son is already claiming the leftovers.
Linda Pini says
Well it looked lovely in your images and was very easy, but despite following the recipe and instructions to the letter – the sauce reduces, but doesn’t thicken or get sticky – so the pork doesn’t coat the way the pictures show. Will try again – but can’t see how these ingredients will go to sticky without something, like Arrowroot or Cornflour added? Although it ‘tasted’ good – it was really the authentic, sticky finish that I was after.
Rebecca says
Hi Linda- I wonder if maybe your burner is a little less powerful than the one I cook with. Next time try reducing the sauce some more. Make sure the bubbles are stacking on top of each other and it smells caramely before you add the pork in and toss it to coat. The idea is to have it reduced well before tossing with the meat. I don’t use any arrowroot or cornstarch when I make it.
Joelle Harrison says
From 4 to 38 yrs old, we had 100% approval to this meal!!!!
Rebecca says
Thank you, Joelle! I’m so glad you all enjoyed it. That makes me so happy.
ber says
This is good, but it takes a lot more than 25 minutes… between cutting, peeling garlic, browning the pork… preparing the glaze, thickening the glaze… stirring and tossing the pork in the glaze…
more like 45 min to an hour… as the pork juices make the glaze wetter and not “laquer-like”
diane says
This pork is fabulous on a wild rice! So much flavor!
Rebecca says
Thanks, Diane!! I’m so glad you like it. It’s a stand by for us.
Karla says
the flavors are so fantastic! It’s way better than take out and so easy to make.
Rebecca says
Thanks, Karla! We love it madly, too!
Tab says
Would ground ginger be ok? And how much
Curt Bigelow says
This is going to be dinner tonight, with steamed broccoli and white rice. Can’t wait to cook and eat this dish!
Erin says
This pork is amazing! That sauce is to die for!
Rebecca says
I’m so glad you love it, Erin!
Beth Pierce says
My family love this! Thanks for such an awesome recipe!