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蒜香排骨
suàn xiāng pái gǔ

Garlic Spare Ribs

Quick Info

Flavor
Savory and aromatic with a strong garlic punch. A light seasoning of salt, five-spice powder, and white pepper lets the garlic and pork flavors shine through the crispy coating.
Texture
Shatteringly crispy exterior with juicy, tender meat clinging to the bone, coated in fragrant fried garlic bits
Spice Level
Not spicy
Temperature
Served Hot
Cooking
Deep-fried
Main Ingredients
Pork

Ingredients

Pork spare ribs (cut into small pieces)Garlic (minced)CornstarchSaltFive-spice powderWhite pepperShaoxing wineSoy sauceEgg

Allergens

Confirmed

SoyGlutenEggs

The Story

Garlic spare ribs are a staple of Cantonese home cooking and dim sum restaurants alike. Guangdong province’s cuisine emphasizes “镬气” (wok hei, the breath of the wok) and letting quality ingredients speak for themselves. This dish embodies that philosophy — the preparation is simple, but the execution requires skill: the ribs must be marinated, dusted in starch, and fried at the right temperature to achieve a crispy shell without drying out the meat. The generous shower of fried garlic added at the end is the signature Cantonese touch.

What to Expect

A pile of small, bone-in rib pieces with a golden, craggy crust, showered in fragrant bits of fried garlic. Each piece is meant to be picked up and eaten with your hands or chopsticks, gnawing the crispy, juicy meat off the bone. The garlic flavor is prominent but mellowed by frying — sweet and nutty rather than sharp. Often served on a bed of shredded lettuce.

Tips

This is a popular appetizer or shared dish — order it alongside lighter items like vegetables or soup for balance. At dim sum restaurants, you may find a smaller portion version. The crispy coating is best when fresh, so eat it soon after it arrives. Don’t be shy about using your hands — the small rib pieces are meant to be picked up.

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