Make a Pig of Yourself With Beijing's Best Pork Dishes
We're rounding up Beijing's best and porkiest dishes. From bangers to ramen, this list has all your porcine cravings covered.
Jiro-Kei Ramen, Yume Wo Katare
This unassuming joint in the "Ichiban Street" strip of Japanese restaurants at Maizidian serves Beijing's best – and only – Jiro-style ramen: homemade noodles in a long-stewed broth rich with pork fat, topped with braised pork tenderloin, bean sprouts, garlic, and rendered fatback. Mixed together, the whole thing is incredibly unctuous and stridently porky. The ramen comes in several different sizes but we recommend starting off small.
Pulled Pork, Home Plate
Homeplate is the OG of American-style barbecue restaurants in Beijing. From the original branch at Sanyuanqiao to the barn-sized Sanlitun branch, Homeplate is rightly famous for its smoked meats, particularly the pulled pork (although the beef brisket is also a favorite). Order your pork in a sandwich, on top of a burger, or just by itself with some of their country-style sides. They also do a pretty great roasted pork belly, a relatively recent addition to the menu.
Andy’s Craft Sausages
As many Brits will attest, getting a good banger in Beijing is not always the easiest thing in the world, so when our need for sausage and mash becomes too great we usually turn to Andy’s Craft Sausages. A fixture on Beijing’s artisanal food scene for years now, Andy sells a wide variety of different flavored sausages – our favorites are the spicy Italian and the Cajun andouille. Try it in person at 3 Little Pigs or order via JSS.
Jingjiang Rousi (京酱肉丝)
This dish of shredded pork sautéed in sweet bean paste is a classic of Beijing cuisine. The pork, which should strike a balance between sweet and savory, is served with sheets of dried tofu skin and shredded leeks and cucumber to be wrapped up almost like a Peking duck pancake. Most Beijing-style or homestyle Chinese restaurants around the city serve this dish; we're partial to the citywide chain Jing Wei Zhai, which has branches everywhere from Zhongguancun to Jinsong.
Northeastern Thai-style sausages, Pak Pak
Pak Pak serves great Thai classics but for something a little different we turn to the northeastern Thai-style sausages or sai krok Isan. These pungent little bites, which are a popular street food from the northeastern provinces of Thailand, are served with lettuce leaves and herbs for wrapping and to help cut through their whack of chili. They pair particularly well with a pint of Jing-A or one of Pak Pak's Thai-inspired cocktails.
Roast pork knuckle, Paulaner Bräuhaus at Kempinski Hotel Beijing Lufthansa Center
It seemed remiss to make a list of Beijing's best pork dishes without including at least one German dish so we settled on the majestic schweinshaxe, or roasted pork knuckle. A good pork knuckle should be roasted long and slow until the meat is falling off the bone and the skin is tooth-shatteringly crisp. We favor Paulaner Bräuhaus for their traditional take on German classics such as this, but honorable mention must go to Groovy Schiller's and Brotzeit, too.
Pork belly sandwich, Great Leap Brewing
All of GLB's burgers are indulgent (try getting through one of their cheeseburgers without at least some juices/grease dripping down your chin) but when we want to go all out we plump for the pork belly sandwich. A slab of melt-in-the-mouth braised pork is stuffed in a sesame bun with spicy mayo and a heap of crunchy coleslaw for that essential health boost. If that doesn't soak up the results of a boozy session, we don't know what will.
Homemade charcuterie, Bistrot B
This one is cheating slightly since it's more a collection of dishes than a single dish but if you want charcuterie (which is, let's face it, usually mostly pork-based) in Beijing, then it doesn't get much better than Bistrot B. Most of Bistrot B's charcuterie and excellent pâtés are made in-house by chef Jarrod Verbiak, who trained under and worked with acclaimed Chef Daniel Boulud. Try the crispy pork belly rillons with honey-dijon.
Read this if you've ever wondered what it really means to call somebody a pig in Chinese.
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Photos: Uni You, Robynne Tindall, Andy's Craft Sausages, Dazhong Dianping (sai krok Isan, roujiamo), Karaiya Spice House, Home Plate, Wikimedia Commons, Great Leap Brewing, Transit, Bistro B