Today, I tried making tsukudani using only pork. I added sansho pepper for seasoning.
The finished dish turned out quite spicy. Perhaps the sansho pepper made the flavor too strong, or it might be because I didn’t add any vegetables, leading to an excess of seasoning. It ended up being a flavor that absolutely requires rice (though for tsukudani, a strong flavor isn’t necessarily bad).
Japanese link: Pork Tsukudani Recipe
Pork Tsukudani Recipe (Ingredients)
| # | Ingredients | Grams (g) | Calories (kcal) | Price (yen) |
| 1 | Pork Belly | 1000 | 3860 | ¥1,000 |
| 2 | Sugar | 100 | 387 | ¥30 |
| 3 | Soy Sauce | 100 | 71 | ¥47 |
| 4 | Sake | 100 | 80 | ¥44 |
| 5 | Water | 200 | 0 | ¥0 |
| 6 | Sansho Pepper | 1 | 4 | ¥29 |
| – | (Total) | 1501g | 4402kcal | ¥1,150 |
Calories and prices are approximate values.
Pork Tsukudani Recipe (Instructions)
・This time, I first put all the seasonings into a pot (the scattered bits are sansho pepper powder). Since I didn’t add any vegetables, I added 200g of water to compensate for the lack of moisture from vegetables.

・Next, I added 1kg of thawed pork and started simmering it over low heat.

・After simmering for about 30 minutes. There’s still a lot of moisture left.

・After simmering for about 1 hour. Push the meat aside with a spatula and check the bottom of the pot; it’s done when there’s almost no moisture left.

The finished dish turned out quite spicy. Perhaps the sansho pepper made the flavor too strong, or it might be because I didn’t add any vegetables, leading to an excess of seasoning. It ended up being a flavor that absolutely requires rice (though for tsukudani, a strong flavor isn’t necessarily bad).


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