Chinese Pork-stuffed Peppers

Appetizers, Home Cooking, Mains & Sides, Pork, Vegetables

This Chinese pork-stuffed peppers recipe is a new one for My Chinese Home Kitchen today as we have never posted a recipe like it before. This time we use pork and fresh peppers, very common ingredients, but instead of chopping them up and frying them in the pan, we need to mince the pork into a puree, stuff it into the peppers, and then we braise the stuffed peppers.  

Chinese pork-stuffed peppers
Image credit: Chen Jing for My Chinese Home Kitchen, 2023.

Pork-stuffed green peppers can be used as a home-cooked dish, or as a dish for entertaining friends. It even makes an appearance on some family dinner tables during Chinese New Year. Oh, sounds like a versatile dish, suitable for all kinds of scenarios. I cut the pork into small pieces and quickly minced it into a puree with a knife, but a meat grinder is really handy if you have one. Ground pork can also be used.

Let’s enjoy cooking together!

Cooking notes

  • The mild peppers used in this pork-stuffed peppers recipe have a slight heat after cooking.
  • If you make too much meat, there will be leftover after the peppers are stuffed. Don’t worry, we don’t waste it! We can flatten it and fry it into patties or roll it into little meatballs. We can use it for frying or soup. In every cooking, we must use the ingredients reasonably, so that each ingredient can bring out its maximum value and nothing is wasted.
  • Making the meat sticky and coating the insides of the peppers with cornstarch keeps the meat from coming out of the peppers while cooking. 
  • Use a chopstick to poke 1-2 holes in the green pepper or the meat before simmering in broth. This allows the inner meat to receive more heat during cooking. 
Chinese pork-stuffed peppers

Pork-Stuffed Peppers

This recipe is a new one for My Chinese Home Kitchen, as we have never posted a recipe like it before. Pork-stuffed green peppers can be used as a family dinner, or as a dish for entertaining friends. It even makes an appearance on some family dinner tables during Chinese New Year. I cut the pork into small pieces and quickly minced it into a puree with a knife, but a meat grinder is really handy if you have one. Ground pork can also be used. The mild peppers used in this recipe have a slight heat after cooking. If you make too much meat, there will be leftover after the peppers are stuffed. Don't worry, we don't waste it: we can flatten it and fry it into patties or roll it into little meatballs, we can use it for frying or soup. Let's enjoy cooking together!
4 from 1 vote
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 10 minutes
Total Time 20 minutes
Course Appetizer, Main Course
Cuisine Chinese Home Cooking
Servings 4
Calories 268 kcal

Equipment

Ingredients
 
 

For the stuffed peppers:

  • 150-200 g minced pork 70% lean
  • 2 green peppers narrow peppers, such as Anaheim or Hatch
  • 1 red pepper
  • 1 green onion
  • 2 g fresh ginger
  • 20 ml water
  • 20 g corn starch
  • 3 ml salt
  • 30 ml oil

For the broth:

For finishing the sauce:

Instructions
 

Preparation:

  • Peel the green onions, ginger, and garlic, then wash. Wash the peppers. Slice the garlic. Slice the ginger and set aside 3 grams with the garlic. Slice one green onion into sections about 3 cm (1.25 in) long and set aside with the garlic and ginger.
    mild peppers, green onion, garlic, ginger, and pork for pork-stuffed peppers
  • Trim the pork, and mince together with 1 green onion and 2 g ginger. Place the minced meat in a mixing bowl.
    150-200 g minced pork, 1 green onion, 2 g fresh ginger
    Mince together the ginger, green onion and pork
  • Add 3 ml salt and 20 ml water, mix with the meat and work into the meat in the bowl until it forms a sticky ball.
    3 ml salt, 20 ml water
    Mix the pork, water, salt, ginger and green onion
  • Cut the peppers into sections about 3cm (1.25in) long, and remove the inner flesh and seeds.
    2 green peppers, 1 red pepper
    Cut the peppers into 1.25 inch sections, remove the seeds and pulp
  • Spread a thin layer of cornstarch on the inside of each pepper section.
    20 g corn starch
    coat the inside of the peppers with corn starch
  • Next, pack each pepper section with meat level with the cut ends then dip the ends in the cornstarch and set aside.
    fill the pepper sections with the pork mixture and coat the ends with corn starch

Cooking:

  • Add 30 ml of oil to the wok, put the peppers in the wok with the meat side down. Cook over low heat until browned on both sides.
    30 ml oil
    Pork stuffed peppers
  • Take the peppers out and set aside.
    Set aside the stuffed peppers after browning
  • Add 15 ml of oil to a clean wok over medium heat, then add the reserved ginger, green onion, and garlic. When you smell the aroma, add 30 ml of water, and season with dark soy sauce, light soy sauce, oyster sauce, sugar, and salt to taste.
    15 ml oil, 1 green onion, 3 g fresh ginger, 3 cloves garlic, 5 ml dark soy sauce, 10 ml light soy sauce, 7 ml sugar, 30 ml water, 10 ml oyster sauce
    Season the oil with ginger, green onion, and garlic
  • Add the peppers to cook in the broth for 2-3 minutes on medium-low heat. Use a slotted spoon or skimmer to remove the peppers and put them on a serving plate. Leave the broth in the wok.
    Simmer the stuffed peppers in the broth
  • Slowly add starch water to the boiling broth, stirring quickly to thicken into a sauce. Next add 10ml of oil, stir to combine. Pour the sauce over the peppers and it’s done.
    10 ml starch water, 10 ml oil
    braised, pork-stuffed peppers

Notes

  • Making the meat sticky and coating the insides of the peppers with cornstarch is to keep the meat from coming out of the peppers while cooking.
  • In cooking step 3, if you are worried that the meat inside the green pepper is not cooked, use a chopstick to poke 1-2 holes in the green pepper or the meat. This allows the inner meat to receive more heat during cooking.

Nutrition

Calories: 268kcalCarbohydrates: 13gProtein: 7gFat: 21gSaturated Fat: 4gPolyunsaturated Fat: 4gMonounsaturated Fat: 12gTrans Fat: 0.1gCholesterol: 27mgSodium: 684mgPotassium: 181mgFiber: 1gSugar: 4gVitamin A: 170IUVitamin C: 21mgCalcium: 17mgIron: 1mg
Keyword fresh peppers, garlic, ginger, oil, soybean, oyster sauce, Pork Recipes, salt, scallions, soy sauce, dark, soy sauce, light, sugar, white, Vegetable Recipes
Tried this recipe?Let us know how it was!

Do you enjoy My Chinese Home Kitchen?

We enjoy sharing these authentic home recipes with you. My Chinese Home Kitchen is a labor of love.
Please tell your friends about us!
Learn more about My Chinese Home Kitchen at our About page.

Please leave a comment, or SUBSCRIBE to our newsletter.

For more of our original videos, visit My Chinese Home Kitchen on YouTube and Rumble.

4 from 1 vote (1 rating without comment)

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

Recipe Rating




My Chinese Home Kitchen does not accept paid endorsements of products or participate in affiliate marketing. Products or brands listed are those we actually use ourselves. Opinions about those products are entirely our own, free of commercial influence. We are also ad-free. All of our support comes from private sources and the generous contributions of readers like you.