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
Connect with Foodie with Family
facebook | pinterest | instagram|twitter
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.
did you make this recipe?
Make sure to tag @foodiewithfam on Instagram and #hashtag it #foodiewithfamily so I can check it out!
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...
Max says
This is absolutely fantastic. Made original recipe with pork last month. Last night made with chicken and snap peas. My young grandson said it was amazing.
Rebecca says
Thank you so much, Max! I am so glad your grandson loved it and I really appreciate you taking the time to tell me!
Mike says
I can’t imagine making this with 1/4 cup of the chili garlic sauce. I only used 2 tbsp and it was almost too hot. Otherwise it was great. I’m making it again right now but will only be using 1 tbsp of the chili garlic sauce.
Rebecca says
Ha! It’s a good thing that’s pretty easily adjustable! My kids wish I made it with more than 1/4 cup! To each their own spice level. 🙂
Anon says
Made this today, loved it! Thanks
Enily says
I don’t have siracha. Can we skip it? Will it still taste good?
Rebecca says
Hi there! I think you’re going to want either sriracha or chili garlic sauce… without one of those, it’ll be awfully sweet!
Vdodt says
Too much honey.
Rebecca says
Hi there- You can always reduce the honey, but it will necessarily reduce the sticky, shiny glaze.
Bonique says
Can i use sesame oil instead of peanut oil?
Rebecca says
Hi Bonique- Sesame oil has a lower smoke point than peanut oil, so it might smoke a bit more if you try it.
Diana says
Did not do this right 1st time.
Next time googling similar recipe this came up again and again. I watched your video and read the potential pitfalls. It came out fantastic! Best recipe ever for a special take out. Soo good! Thank you! My non Asian family loves it!
Rebecca says
I’m so glad you love it, Diana! Thanks for the feedback and rating!
Exotic Fruit says
Omg! This looks so good! I love stir fry so I will have to get this recipe!
Karen says
This was delicious and EASY!!!! Thanks.
Rebecca says
Thank you so much for letting me know you loved it, Karen! That makes my day!!
Cheryl says
Thanks so much for posting this recipe! I followed it for the most part, substituting some ingredients based on what I had on hand. I, unfortunately, only had a marbled, fatty pork roast, but it still turned out great! I simply drained the excess oil between batches and also paper towel lined the plate where I set the cooked pork aside. Also, I only had raw honey (which was very crystallized), so I added about 1 Tablespoon of water. My hubby isn’t too fond of spice, so I added a little soy sauce (about 2 teaspoons) as well to tone down the heat. The end result was a smokey, sweet & sticky crispy pork. Sooo good! I will definitely be checking out your other recipes!
Sheryl Ellis says
I’ve been cooking for over 50 years and have to say this was NOT an easy recipe. My sink is full of dirty dishes and the sauce for the pork tastes burned. The recipe says to reduce on high heat, which I thought was too hot. Thank goodness I had leftover pork and Kikkoman sweet and sour sauce in the frig and had something to serve for dinner. I won’t be making this again. Sorry.
Rebecca says
Hi Sheryl- I’m sorry you didn’t trust your own instincts on how far down to reduce the sauce. If you scroll through the other comments, you’ll find quite a few people who under reduced the sauce, and it sounds like (as you said it tasted burned) in your case it was the opposite and went a little too far or maybe wasn’t stirred thoroughly enough to prevent scorching. But I’m can’t help you with the dirty dishes issue! By my count, this recipe uses one cutting board, one knife, one plate (for the pork), one spatula, one measuring cup, measuring spoons, and one whisk; that’s pretty modest for many recipes. 🙂 I guess easy is in the eye of the beholder, but my goodness, 50 years of cooking is an impressive amount of time! I’ve only got 40 so far, but I do stand behind calling this one easy.
kitemkat says
Quick and delicious as advertised! I didn’t follow the recipe exactly, due to lacking certain ingredients and feeding spice-averse children but it turned out just about perfect anyway (powdered ginger, taco sauce instead of sriracha, leftover pork). Two out of three kids had seconds. Love all the negative reviews by people who don’t understand how reducing works. I’ll be keeping this one!
Rebecca says
I’m so glad you loved it! And it seems that the biggest problems people encounter is either under or over reducing the sauce! It really is easy, though, once you nail that. 🙂
Lois Hoffer says
Thank you SO much for this recipe!! I just love chinese style food, but it’s always so complex, with special ingredients (hoisin sauce?!), or true smoking-oil level wok cooking, thât I’ve never dared to make it at home. I was lookrng for something to do with thin pork loins when I saw this “easy” recipe. It’s wonderful! I can DO this level of recipe, and I can see how one can shape it to one’s own tastes, just by changing the honey or vinegar, usind a different spicy sauce, etc. You can beat simple, garlic and ginger are my favorites too. This is tomorrow’s lunch!
Rebecca says
I am so glad you love it, Lois! I have some other great Chinese style recipes on here that scratch the itch for those flavour combinations, too. Try the Cheater Sesame Chicken and Cheater Sesame Beef! There’s also Easy Spicy Broccoli Beef and Ginger Sesame Green Beans among others!
WK says
Need to double the honey.
Rebecca says
Feel free to do that if you’d like, WK, but it is plenty sweet for my tastes as it is when the sauce is properly reduced. 🙂
Vanessa says
I love your info. Recently retired and trying to branch out in cooking. Thank you for this recipe…on tomorrow night’s table!
Rebecca says
Congratulations on your retirement, Vanessa! I hope you love this!
Niki says
Loved this last night but l’m afraid the leftovers were a victim of their own success. The author said this was delicious cold so, around lunchtime, l thought l’d give them a little nibble. End result, by the time dinnertime actually arrived l’d eaten the lot over the course of the afternoon. Can categorically say this is most definitely delicious hot or cold. Unfortunately will now have to clever up something else for dinner.
Rebecca says
HAHAHAHA. Oh Niki, you made my day. I’m so glad you loved it!
Niki says
Just made this and it was lovely. Didn’t have sriracha so substituted it with Thai sweet chili sauce. Used slightly less honey to compensate for the extra sugar in the sauce and balsamic vinegar instead of white wine vinegar to add a bit more depth of flavour. Served it with green beans and steamed rice. Putting sriracha on my shopping list cos l’ll be making again for sure.
Rebecca says
That’s so great, Niki! I’m glad you loved it!
Laura says
Very good recipe but mine did not come out sticky…is there a secret?
Rebecca says
Hi Laura- Yes indeedy! The trick is to reduce the sauce enough to make it super sticky! 🙂
Cat says
I made this tonight and Oh My Word! it was so easy and way better than take out and it took me no time. My 3 yr old had 5 servings, my daughter ate until she couldn’t fit anymore food in her, and my husband was loving it. I was hoping for leftovers but no such luck, next time I’ll have to make double. Thank you so much for the recipe.
Rebecca says
Oh, I am so glad to hear that!!! Thanks for letting me know, Cat!
Glenna says
This was so delicious, and just so easy! I followed the recipe exactly and it was so well received by the family that I kind of want to make it every night now…
Thank you for this dish, I can’t recommend it highly enough.
Rebecca says
Thanks so much, Glenna, for your feedback! I’m so glad you love it.