Chashu Pork Recipe — Tender Braised Pork Belly for Ramen
If ramen is a symphony, chashu is the soloist. That glossy, caramelized slab of braised pork sitting atop your bowl is far more than a garnish — its sweet-savory braising liquid doubles as the backbone of your shoyu tare, and leftover slices transform weeknight fried rice into something restaurant-worthy. Yet for most home cooks, chashu feels like a restaurant secret. It isn’t.
This guide walks you through every stage: choosing the right cut, rolling and braising pork belly, making a leaner pork shoulder version, and getting the most out of that precious tare. Whether you’re topping a bowl of homemade ramen or building a quick chashu-don for a weeknight dinner, you’ll have everything you need here.
This recipe contains soy (soy sauce) and wheat (soy sauce). Please check labels and substitute with tamari or gluten-free soy sauce if needed. FDA Big 9 allergens: soy, wheat.
- The difference between braised and roasted chashu — and why braised wins for ramen
- Pork belly vs. shoulder vs. loin: which cut to choose and when
- Step-by-step pork belly chashu with metric and imperial measurements
- A leaner pork shoulder version for health-conscious ramen fans
- How to use the tare for shoyu ramen kaeshi, chashu-don, and fried rice
- Safe storage times (fridge 3–4 days, freezer 2–3 months) based on USDA guidelines
What Is Chashu?
Chashu (チャーシュー) is Japanese-style braised or slow-roasted pork, derived from the Chinese char siu (叉焼) but transformed over centuries into something distinctly Japanese. While Chinese char siu is typically oven-roasted over high heat with a sweet, glossy red glaze, Japanese chashu is almost always braised — simmered low and slow in a soy sauce–mirin–sake liquid until the collagen in the meat melts into rich gelatin.
The braised version dominates ramen culture for a simple reason: the braising liquid (called tare or cooking sauce) is far too good to discard. Ramen shops keep a “master stock,” adding fresh soy sauce and mirin to the pot each day and never starting from scratch. At home, you can freeze the tare and reuse it two or three more times before refreshing it, building ever-deeper flavor.
- Braised (煮豚 nikubuta style): Simmer in soy tare 90–120 min → ultra-tender, jiggly fat, deep umami flavor. Best for ramen.
- Roasted (char siu inspired): Marinate then roast at high heat → slightly charred exterior, firmer texture. Better for rice bowls if you prefer a drier slice.
This guide focuses on the braised method.
Choosing Your Cut
The cut you choose determines the final texture, fat-to-lean ratio, and how well the pork holds its shape when sliced. Below is a full comparison of the five cuts most commonly used for chashu.
← Scroll to see full table on mobile
| Cut | Fat Level | Texture After Braising | Ease of Rolling | Best For | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pork Belly (豚バラ) | High | Melt-in-mouth, jiggly layers | Easy — flat slab rolls naturally | Ramen topping, abura soba | The classic choice; most ramen shops use this |
| Pork Shoulder (肩ロース) | Medium | Silky, holds shape well | Moderate — needs a tight roll | Ramen, chashu-don | Budget-friendly; leaner than belly |
| Pork Loin (ロース) | Low | Firm, can dry out if overcooked | Easy | Tsukemen, rice bowl | Reduce braising time to 60 min to avoid dryness |
| Pork Neck (首肉) | Medium-high | Very tender, irregular shape | Difficult — best left unrolled | Jiro-style ramen | Rich flavor; popular for Jiro-inspired bowls |
| Whole Pork Tenderloin (ヒレ) | Very low | Lean, slightly dry | Natural cylinder shape, no rolling | Diet-conscious bowls | Braise only 45–50 min; easy to overcook |
Outside Japan, “pork belly” is widely available at Asian grocery stores and most supermarkets. Ask the butcher for a skin-off slab (sometimes labelled “skinless pork belly”) — the skin stays rubbery even after long braising and is better removed before rolling. Pork shoulder is often sold as “Boston butt” or “pork butt” in North America.
Classic Pork Belly Chashu
This is the recipe most ramen shops use as their base. The pork belly is rolled into a cylinder, tied with kitchen twine, seared until golden, then braised in soy tare for 90 minutes. The result: concentric rings of silky fat and tender meat that slice beautifully and absorb the braising liquid overnight.
Ingredients
- 500 g (1.1 lb) skinless pork belly, in one flat piece
- Kitchen twine (cotton, food-safe)
Braising liquid (tare):
- 100 ml (7 tbsp) soy sauce
- 100 ml (7 tbsp) sake
- 50 ml (3½ tbsp) mirin
- 2 tbsp granulated sugar
- 200 ml (¾ cup + 1 tbsp) water
- 2 stalks green onion (scallion), roughly chopped
- 3 slices fresh ginger (about 5 mm / ¼ inch each)
- 3 cloves garlic, lightly crushed
If you own a sous vide circulator, try cooking rolled pork belly at 68°C (154°F) for 36 hours instead of braising. The texture becomes extraordinarily silky — almost custardy — while staying completely food-safe. Then torch or sear the outside for color. See the recommended tools section for our top pick.
Step 1 — Roll and tie the pork belly
Lay the pork belly skin-side down on a cutting board. Starting from the narrower end, roll it tightly into a log shape. Secure with 4–5 loops of kitchen twine spaced about 2 cm (¾ inch) apart, tying each loop firmly but not so tightly it cuts into the meat. A tight, even roll ensures uniform rings when sliced.
Before rolling, you can score the inside of the pork belly with a sharp knife (shallow cuts, 1 cm apart) to help the tare penetrate more deeply during braising. Don’t cut through the meat — just open up the surface.
Step 2 — Sear the roll
Heat a heavy-bottomed skillet or Dutch oven over high heat with a thin film of neutral oil. Sear the pork belly roll on all sides — about 1–2 minutes per side — until deeply golden brown. Don’t skip this step: the Maillard reaction here adds a layer of roasty, caramelized flavor that braising alone cannot replicate.
Always wash hands and surfaces after handling raw pork. Use a separate cutting board for raw meat. The USDA and FDA recommend cooking whole cuts of pork to an internal temperature of at least 145°F (63°C) with a 3-minute rest. The braising step well exceeds this temperature, making chashu fully safe when the recipe is followed as written.
Step 3 — Braise low and slow
Transfer the seared pork roll to a snug-fitting saucepan or Dutch oven. Add the soy sauce, sake, mirin, sugar, and water. Add the green onion, ginger, and garlic. Bring to a gentle simmer over medium heat, then reduce to low. Place a piece of parchment paper or a drop lid (otoshibuta) directly on the surface of the liquid to keep the pork moist and ensure even coverage.
Simmer on low heat for 45 minutes, then flip the roll gently and continue for another 45 minutes (total: 90 minutes). The liquid should be at a lazy, quiet simmer — never a rolling boil, which would make the meat fibrous. Check every 20 minutes and add a splash of water if the liquid reduces too much.
Step 4 — Rest and chill overnight
Remove the saucepan from heat and allow the pork to cool in the braising liquid until it reaches room temperature (no more than 2 hours at room temperature for food safety). Transfer the pork and all of the liquid to a zip-lock bag or airtight container. Refrigerate overnight — at least 8 hours, ideally 12–18 hours.
Chilling serves two purposes: the cold fat firms up the roll so it slices cleanly without smearing, and the overnight soak drives the tare deep into the meat, transforming a braised pork into something intensely flavored all the way through.
Leaner Pork Shoulder Version
Pork shoulder (also sold as “Boston butt” or “pork butt” in North America) is the go-to cut for cooks who want a leaner, more budget-friendly chashu without sacrificing the silky, fall-apart texture. Unlike loin, shoulder contains enough intramuscular fat and collagen to stay moist through the braising process, giving you that characteristic melt-in-the-mouth quality — just with less visible fat than belly.
Adjustments from the pork belly recipe
- Cut: 500 g (1.1 lb) boneless pork shoulder, excess large fat pockets trimmed (small marbling is fine)
- Rolling: Roll tightly and tie with twine the same way as belly; shoulder may be slightly thicker, so use 6–7 twine loops
- Braising time: 90–120 minutes (shoulder is firmer; give it the extra time)
- Liquid ratio: Same as the belly recipe above
- Everything else: Identical — sear, braise, chill overnight, slice cold
The resulting chashu from shoulder has a meatier, slightly firmer chew compared to belly, making it excellent for chashu-don (rice bowl) where you want a slice that holds together rather than dissolving into the broth. Many health-conscious ramen enthusiasts prefer shoulder as their everyday version, reserving belly for special occasions. If you’re short on time, a pressure cooker shortcut works well for shoulder: cook on high pressure for 45 minutes with a natural release, then simmer uncovered for 10 minutes to reduce and concentrate the tare. The texture won’t be quite as silky as a long braise, but it’s very close.
Using the Tare
The braising liquid — rich with rendered pork fat, soy umami, and sweet mirin — is one of the most versatile sauces in a ramen cook’s kitchen. Strain it through a fine-mesh sieve and you have what professionals call a master tare. Here are three of the best ways to use it.
1. Shoyu Ramen Kaeshi
Kaeshi is the seasoning concentrate added to ramen broth at the bowl stage. Chashu tare is already a near-perfect kaeshi — just use 2–3 tablespoons per bowl of broth, adjusting to taste. Taste the tare first: if it’s very salty after long reduction, dilute it slightly with water or more sake before using.
To build a full shoyu bowl: season your chicken or dashi broth with the chashu tare, add a few drops of sesame oil or chicken fat (chiyu), then top with chashu slices, a soft-boiled ramen egg (ajitsuke tamago), menma bamboo shoots, nori, and scallions. The tare can also be frozen in ice cube trays — drop a cube directly into simmering broth for quick seasoning.
2. Chashu-Don (Pork Rice Bowl)
Chashu-don is the simplest way to serve leftover chashu: warm slices of pork over freshly steamed short-grain white rice, drizzled with the concentrated tare. Finish with sliced scallions, a halved ramen egg, and a few drops of sesame oil. The tare works as both a sauce and a glaze — spoon 1–2 tablespoons over the rice and let it absorb for 30 seconds before eating.
3. Chashu Fried Rice (Chahan)
Dice leftover chashu into 1 cm (½ inch) cubes and stir-fry over high heat in a hot wok or skillet until the edges caramelize. Add day-old cooked rice (cold, separated grains work best), crack in two eggs, and toss rapidly. Pour 1–2 tablespoons of the chashu tare down the hot sides of the wok — it will flash-reduce instantly, coating every grain with a thin, savory glaze. Finish with sesame oil and scallions. Serves 2.
Storage & Shelf Life
Chashu keeps well and actually improves after the first day as the tare continues to penetrate the meat. The guidelines below are based on USDA Food Safety and Inspection Service recommendations for cooked pork.
← Scroll to see full table on mobile
| Storage Method | Container | Duration | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Refrigerator (0–4°C / 32–40°F) | Airtight container or zip-lock bag in tare | 3–4 days | Keep submerged in tare; flavor improves over 24–48 hours |
| Freezer (whole roll) (−18°C / 0°F) | Vacuum-sealed or double zip-lock bag | 2–3 months (best quality) | Freeze before slicing for best texture; thaw overnight in fridge |
| Freezer (pre-sliced) | Individual slices wrapped in cling film, then zip-lock bag | 1–2 months (best quality) | Grab one slice at a time; reheat in broth or microwave at low power |
| Tare (braising liquid) | Glass jar in fridge, or ice cube tray in freezer | 1 week fridge / 3 months freezer | Bring to a full boil before reusing; skim off excess fat |
| Frozen tare cubes | Ice cube tray → zip-lock bag | 3 months freezer | Freeze tare in cube portions; drop 1–2 cubes directly into simmering broth to season a bowl instantly |
Refrigerate cooked pork within 2 hours of cooking (1 hour if the ambient temperature is above 32°C / 90°F). Never thaw frozen chashu at room temperature — always thaw in the refrigerator overnight. Reheat to an internal temperature of at least 74°C (165°F) before serving. Source: USDA FSIS Leftovers and Food Safety.
FAQ
Q: Can I make chashu without sake or mirin?
A: Yes. Sake can be substituted with dry sherry or Chinese Shaoxing wine at a 1:1 ratio. If you can’t find either, use an equal volume of water plus a pinch of sugar. Mirin can be replaced with 1 tablespoon of granulated sugar dissolved in 1 tablespoon of water (for every 50 ml of mirin called for). The flavor won’t be quite as layered, but it still produces excellent chashu.
Q: My chashu came out dry and tough — what went wrong?
A: The most common causes are too-high heat during braising (it should be a lazy simmer, not a boil), insufficient braising time (shoulder especially needs 90–120 min), or using a very lean cut like loin without adjusting the time down. If the liquid reduced too quickly and the pork spent time above the waterline, it may have steamed unevenly. Try a tighter-fitting pot or add a parchment drop lid next time to keep moisture in.
Q: Do I need to roll and tie the pork belly?
A: Rolling is traditional and gives you the classic spiral cross-section when sliced, but it’s not strictly necessary. You can braise a flat, untied pork belly slab and slice it as a rectangle — many home cooks prefer this for simplicity. The key difference: a rolled log holds its shape better in the pot, stays submerged in the tare evenly, and slices more attractively. If you skip the rolling, flip the pork every 20 minutes to compensate.
Q: Can I use the chashu tare to marinate ramen eggs?
A: Absolutely — this is one of the best uses for leftover tare. Peel 6-minute soft-boiled eggs (6 minutes in boiling water, then ice bath) and place them in the strained tare, diluted 1:1 with water if the tare is very concentrated. Marinate in the fridge for at least 4 hours (overnight is ideal). The result is the classic ajitsuke tamago you find in ramen shops — see our dedicated ramen egg guide for the full method.
Recommended Tools
You don’t need special equipment to make excellent braised chashu — a heavy pot and kitchen twine are enough. But if you want to take your chashu to the next level, these three tools make a measurable difference.
The gold standard for home sous vide chashu. Set to 68°C (154°F) for 36 hours and the pork belly becomes impossibly silky — no monitoring required. Pairs with any large pot or container. Compact enough to store in a kitchen drawer.
Price range: 10,000円台〜 / $80s–$90s
Anova Culinary Sous Vide Precision Cooker Nano 3.0 (ASIN: B0BQ93XGWC)
Vacuum-sealing chashu before freezing eliminates freezer burn completely and extends quality life to 2–3 months. Also works with the sous vide method above — seal the pork with its marinade, then drop the bag directly into the water bath.
Price range: 5,000円台〜 / $40s–$50s
FoodSaver FM2000 Vacuum Sealer Machine (ASIN: B01D5TMBE0)
Heavy-duty 2.4mm cotton twine that’s oven-safe and food-safe — exactly what you need to tie a pork belly roll that holds its shape through 90 minutes of simmering. 500 feet is a lifetime supply for home cooks.
Price range: 1,000円台〜 / under $10
Regency Wraps Butchers Cooking Twine 500ft (ASIN: B002NU6HOI)
This article is a spoke in the Complete Guide to Homemade Ramen — covering all 11 ramen styles, tools, and ingredient substitutions in one place. Related spokes:
📝 About this recipe: This recipe was independently developed by the HowToCook.jp editorial team based on widely known cooking techniques and ingredient combinations. It is not an official recipe from any specific chef, cookbook author, or restaurant. Sources listed below were consulted for cooking technique and food safety information.
Sources & References
- Just One Cookbook — Chashu (Japanese Braised Pork Belly) — Detailed recipe and overnight marinating technique.
- Sudachi Recipes — Japanese Chashu Pork (Braised Pork Belly for Ramen) — Step-by-step method with braising times and tare reuse guidance.
- USDA FSIS — Leftovers and Food Safety — Guidelines for safe refrigerator storage (3–4 days) and freezer storage of cooked pork.
- USDA — Cooking Meat? Check the New Recommended Temperatures — FDA/USDA recommendation of 145°F (63°C) with 3-minute rest for whole cuts of pork.
- FoodSafety.gov — Cold Food Storage Charts — Authoritative refrigerator and freezer storage duration guidelines for cooked meats.
- DadCooksDinner — Instant Pot Chashu Pork Shoulder — Pressure cooker timing and pork shoulder texture notes.
- Caroline’s Cooking — Chashu Chahan (Japanese Fried Rice with Pork Belly) — Tare reuse for fried rice and wok technique.
情報の最終確認日 / Last verified: February 2026