Shanghai Red Braised Pork
Quick Info
- Flavor
- Sweet, savory, and deeply caramelized. Like a glazed pork belly roast with hints of warm spice — sweeter and richer than Western braised pork.
- Texture
- Impossibly tender pork belly that trembles on the chopsticks, with layers of meat and rendered fat that melt together seamlessly
- Spice Level
- Not spicy
- Temperature
- Served Hot
Ingredients
Allergens
Confirmed
Possible
These ingredients may vary by restaurant. Ask your server to confirm.
The Story
Red braised pork (hong shao rou) exists in many regional variations across China, but the Shanghai version is distinguished by its unapologetic sweetness. Shanghainese cooking is sometimes called “nong you chi jiang” — thick oil, red sauce — and this dish is the ultimate expression of that style. Large cubes of pork belly are braised for hours in a soy sauce and rock sugar mixture until they become impossibly tender and develop a lacquered, mahogany sheen.
This is home cooking elevated to an art form. Nearly every Shanghainese family has their own recipe, passed down through generations, and arguments about whose grandmother made the best version are a local sport.
What to Expect
Glossy, dark-red cubes of pork belly arrive in a thick, syrupy sauce that looks like liquid caramel mixed with soy sauce. Each cube is a perfect square of layered meat and fat, trembling gently on the plate. The color is deep and rich — achieved through a combination of dark soy sauce and caramelized rock sugar.
The first bite is a revelation of texture: the fat has completely rendered into a translucent, jelly-like layer that melts on your tongue, while the lean meat is tender enough to cut with chopsticks. The flavor is intensely sweet and savory, with the rock sugar providing a more complex sweetness than regular sugar. Some restaurants add hard-boiled eggs that have soaked up all the braising liquid, turning them a deep brown with an incredibly savory yolk.
Tips
This dish absolutely requires white rice — scoop pieces of pork over your rice and let the sauce soak in. Eating it alone would be overwhelmingly rich. The fat-to-lean ratio is part of the experience, so try a piece with its full fat layer before deciding to trim. If the sweetness is surprising, that is by design — Shanghai cuisine is the sweetest of China’s regional styles. Order vegetables or a light soup alongside to balance the richness.