Pork is one of the staples of the Chinese diet. The Chinese people consume more than half of all the pork eaten worldwide each year. The traditional Chinese character for house included the symbol for pork. All of the low-carb Chinese pork recipes listed here have less than 20 grams of carbohydrate per serving.
Two of these recipes are fried. One, fried pork tenderloin, can be pan-fried in a small amount of olive oil for a quick snack. However, the other is deep-fried. Though it is our single-most popular recipe, year after year, and it is low in carbohydrate and high in protein, you should probably limit this dish to special occasions.
The list of low-carb Chinese pork recipes on My Chinese Home Kitchen
We will periodically update this list as we add new, low-carbohydrate pork recipes, so please check back with us often.
Stir-fried Pork with Snow Peas
Stir Fried Diced Pork and Vegetables
Fried Pork Tenderloin
Deep-fried pork tenderloin can be used as a snack, and if you want to share the snacks you make for your friends, then it’s a good choice. This dish requires very few ingredients, the whole process is simple, and it does not take you too much time. It’s a low-carbohydrate dish, but if you follow the recipe precisely, it is deep-fried, adding fats. If you are avoiding seed oils in your diet, you can pan-fry the tenderloin in a small amount of olive oil and get similar results.
Pork Belly with Garlic Purée
This is a low-carbohydrate recipe that uses no oil in the cooking, and only a small amount of sesame oil and chili oil in the sauce. It is easy to make your own chili oil at home, using ground chilies and olive oil (if you want to avoid seed oils), and the chili oil will store in the refrigerator in a sealed container for a long time. This recipe uses pork belly, which, unlike bacon, is not cured. The finished dish has a texture similar to chewy bacon, without all the salts and nitrites, and the delicious, slightly spicy flavor of garlic-infused chili oil.
Chinese Deep-fried Garlic Pork Ribs
This is our most popular recipe, year after year. It’s simple to make, and full of flavor. Very low in carbohydrates, and high in protein and animal fats, this is also a good source of potassium. However, it’s high in sodium, and is deep-fried, so save this recipe for special occasions and parties, when you need delicious finger food and snacks to serve.
Jing’s Fried Pork Belly with Chili
My mother was from the Zhuang ethnic group, and she liked to stir-fry pork belly with vegetables. The Hakka people like to fry the pork separately. Simple ingredients only need simple cooking methods, which preserves the flavor of the pork. This is a delicious and popular recipe, that yields a flavorful sauce from the fat in the pork. The sauce is great for “sending” rice, that is, it flavors the rice when served over rice. However, you can eat this without rice, or use a par-boiled or whole rice if you prefer, depending on your carbohydrate allowance.
Guangxi Steamed Pork (Kou Rou 扣肉)
Kou Rou is blanched with water, ginger, star anise and wine, then coated with dark soy sauce and browned in hot oil. Our recipe deep-fries the pork chunks in hot oil, but you can brown them in a small amount of olive oil instead. Other kou rou recipes use this approach. Kou rou can be eaten as is, or you can steam it with garlic or other ingredients. You can also use it with preserved mustard greens to make mei cai kou rou. Pork belly is a good source of nutrients, and, since it’s not cured like bacon, it’s free of nitrites and other preservatives.
Home Style Twice Cooked Pork
Twice Cooked Pork is a classic Sichuan dish. It is relatively easy to make, loaded with flavor, vitamin A, protein, and potassium. A single serving does have 13 grams of carbohydrate, so a single portion is within the carb limits of many low-carb diets. Though most Chinese dishes are served over rice or noodles, this dish tastes just fine without the rice.
Braised Minced Pork and Green Peppers
Harbin Red Sausage and Green Pepper Stir-fry
Harbin Red Sausage and Green Pepper is a simple dish, stir-fried at medium temperature. Just like its name, the main ingredients are green pepper and sausage, with garlic and soy sauce to increase the flavor. The sausage I used in the recipe is the red sausage from Harbin, China. The dish is very low in carbohydrates, but all sausages are cured, so if you are following a keto diet or keto-Mediterranean diet, you’ll want to limit your intack of cured and processed meats.
Pork-Stuffed Peppers
If you like stuffed peppers, this delicious low-carb dish deserves your attention. This is easy to make, but you want to use peppers of small diameter, such as Anaheim or Poblano peppers. Typical bell peppers are too wide in diameter for the pork to cook through completely.
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