Asian sticky pork belly burnt ends

19 Comments

  1. That looks delicious. Curious if this flavor profile can be used on beef? Had some surgery and the rich, fatty pork belly does not agree with my belly.

  2. Mmmm…. looks awesome…. Been trying to find something to do with my Pork Belly.

    You may want to add a little item to the recipe (your page) like, what wood to use in the smoker. Went to Rib link to find it.

    Cherry or Apple was recommended

    For Pork I typically use use an even mix of Cherry, Apple, Pecan wood/pellets

    1. At the bottom of the post, under the items used, there is a Print Friendly button. Click it and a screen will appear. I suggest changing the images to 0% rather than 100%, which will result in some strange numbers in the post, but will take up less space. We’re trying to think of a better solution to this problem.

  3. Sounds like a wonderful recipe, but Lord have mercy…19 printed pages?! There must be some way of condensing this.

    1. We’re trying to find a good solution for this problem. In the mean time, I understand there is an option on the Print Friendly version that allows you to put images at 0% instead of 100%, then you don’t get the images. Not a perfect solution.

    1. Kim,
      The best way to keep track of those deals is to subscribe to your email list. I don’t know when the next one will be.

  4. So, I THINK this is an absolutely delicious recipe but I cannot be absolutely sure because the flare is real during the grilling phase. The fat dripping onto the grill while set to high resulted in the most flame I have ever encountered on my grill, and pork belly pieces that became something just short of charcoal. Perhaps I needed to go longer on the smoker but they were above 203 when I removed them.

    Anyway, just a word of warning for anyone else trying this. Still tried eating some of it and will definitely try again because there was excellent flavor in there somewhere!

    1. Gregory,

      Maybe have your grill at a lower temp and let them take a little longer to caramelize. I hope it works better next time!

      1. I use my oven broiler to finish my ribs and burnt ends. Easier to manage and takes less time to get a great finish on the meat with the caramelization. If you want to make your life easier use your oven after you put the meat into the sheet pan with the braising sauce. Much less work than keeping your BBQ hot and the heating is more consistent. I tend to do this everything I smoke these days. You get the smokey flavor with the first two hours in the smoker.

    1. Oh absolutely! Cook them on a cooling rack set in a sheet tray at 250°F as recommended, then cover and braise at the higher temp. To glaze/caramelize them, cook them under a broiler, but not too close to it! But if you skip the glazing step and just toss them with the syrupy sauce, they’ll still be great!

  5. Read this on Thursday and planned for an exciting Sunday. Served with rice and extra glaze. We were not disappointed!

  6. Curious as to why the method change from caramelizing the glaze on the cubes in the pan in the original method vs going direct heat and basting glaze in this method? Is there a difference in outcome?

    Looks AMAZING.. cant wait to try it.

    1. In the original, the caramelization wasn’t quite as lacquer-like as we wanted for this recipe. The sheen and slightly bitter burr from the grilling is amazing. I hope you like it!

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