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Crispy Taiwanese Pork Cutlets

Sliced pork cutlet on a plate
Photo by Alex Lau, Prop Styling by Beatrice Chastka, Food Styling by Lillian Chou

Flattening pork chops with the dull edge of a cleaver or heavy knife gives the surface an almost fluffy texture and helps the potato starch coating adhere.

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Ingredients

8 small servings

4 (½"-thick) boneless pork loin chops (about 1 lb.)
⅓ cup soy sauce
⅓ cup unseasoned rice vinegar
2 Tbsp. soy paste
2 tsp. granulated sugar
½ tsp. freshly ground black pepper
¼ tsp. freshly ground white pepper (optional)
¼ tsp. ground cinnamon
1½ cups Chinese sweet potato starch
Vegetable oil (about 3 cups; for frying)
Gochugaru (fine Korean red pepper powder; for serving; optional)

Special Equipment:

A deep-fry thermometer
  1. Step 1

    Working one at a time, place pork chops on a cutting board and use the back of a cleaver or heavy chef’s knife to pound meat, moving knife back and forth across the surface, to ⅛"–¼" thick. The surface will be jagged and textured.

    Step 2

    Whisk together soy sauce, vinegar, soy paste, sugar, black pepper, white pepper (if using), cinnamon, Five-Spice Powder, and ⅓ cup water in a large bowl. Add pork chops and turn to coat well. Cover and chill at least 2 hours and up to 6 hours.

    Step 3

    Remove pork from marinade and pat dry. Place sweet potato starch in a large shallow dish. Working one at a time, dredge pork in starch to coat well on both sides; shake off excess and transfer to a plate.

    Step 4

    Clip thermometer to the side of a large skillet or pot and pour in oil to come ½" up sides. Heat over medium-high until thermometer registers 350°F. Working in batches, fry pork until just golden, about 30 seconds per side. Transfer to a wire rack set inside a rimmed baking sheet and let drain.

    Step 5

    Repeat process, frying pork a second time until deep golden brown, about 30 seconds per side. Return to rack and let cool slightly.

    Step 6

    Transfer pork to a cutting board; slice into strips. Arrange in a single layer on a platter; sprinkle with gochugaru if using.

Ingredient Info

Soy paste is a Taiwanese soy sauce–based condiment and can be purchased onlinehereorhere, or found in Chinese markets.

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