My cheat's 48-hour ramen. Chicken frame stock, char siu pork belly and soy eggs, all built around a packet of Shin Ramen. Two days, one incredible bowl.
Char Sui Pork Packet Ramen
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Category
Lunch
Servings
1
Prep time
24 hours
Cook time
3 hours
This is my take on a classic 48-hour ramen, with one key shortcut: I use a packet of Shin Ramen as the broth base rather than building everything from scratch. The stock is still made from chicken frames simmered low and slow, and the pork belly is braised in a proper char siu marinade overnight, but the ramen seasoning packet adds a layer of depth and convenience that means the whole thing comes together better than you might expect from a recipe that starts with instant noodles.
Look, it is a two-day process but if you have some time this week, maybe give it a try? Day one you make the stock, braise the pork and prep the soy eggs, then refrigerate everything overnight. Day two you bring it all together in about 15 minutes. The result is a bowl that punches well above its weight: properly seasoned broth, sliced char siu pork, soy eggs, spring onion. It’s the kind of bowl you’d pay good money for at a ramen shop, built around a packet of instant noodles.
Ingredient Notes
Chicken frames: Chicken frames are the carcasses left after the breasts, legs and thighs have been removed. They are dense with collagen and bone marrow, which gives the stock a rich, gelatinous body that a whole chicken or stock cube can’t match. Your butcher will have them at very low cost. Ask for raw frames, not roasted. Or, buy a whole chicken and use the meat for another dinner and keep the frames for this.
Pork belly: You want a piece with a good fat-to-meat ratio. The fat renders down during the braise and keeps the meat moist throughout the long cook. Rolling and tying the belly into a cylinder with butcher’s string means you get even, uniform slices when you cut it after chilling. The pork goes into the fridge in its braising liquid overnight, which firms it up and makes slicing clean and easy.
Mirin, sake and soy sauce: These three together are the foundation of the char siu braising liquid. Mirin is a sweet Japanese rice wine, sake is a drier rice wine, and combined with soy they produce the classic sweet, salty, deeply savoury char siu flavour profile. If you can’t find sake, dry sherry is the closest substitute. Don’t swap the mirin for sugar as the flavour won’t be the same.
Equipment
- Chopping board
- Chef’s knife
- Large saucepan with lid (for stock)
- Ovenproof saucepan or dutch oven with lid (for pork)
- Butcher’s string
- Sieve or fine-mesh strainer
- Large jug or airtight container (for stock)
- Heavy-based frying pan
- Protein press or heavy pan lid
- Medium saucepan
- Serving bowl
Ingredients
-
soy sauce eggs (see my recipe)
Stock
- 4 raw chicken frames (approx 1kg/2.2lbs)
- 2 tsp olive oil
- 130g pkt Shin Ramen Black (or packet of your choice)
- 1 spring onion, thinly sliced, white and green parts separated
Char sui pork
- 1 piece pork belly, approx. 30 x 20cm (12 x 8 inches)
- 3 spring onions, cut into 5cm (2-inch) batons
- thumb-sized piece of fresh ginger, sliced ½ cm (¼ inch) thick
- 3 cloves garlic, crushed
- 120ml (4 fl oz) soy sauce
- 120ml (4 fl oz) mirin
- 120ml (4 fl oz) sake
Directions
Make the stock
Place the chicken frames in a large saucepan and cover with water. Place over a medium high heat and bring to a simmer.
- Simmer for 15 minutes, then strain, discarding the water and return the chicken frames to the saucepan. Cover with fresh water again and bring back to a simmer.
- Reduce the heat to a gentle simmer and cook for 3 hours.
- Strain off the stock into a large jug or container and refrigerate until ready to use.
Prep the Char Sui pork
Roll the pork belly into a tight cylinder and tie it with butcher’s string, securing it 7 or 8 times to maintain its shape.
- Place the pork in an oven-proof lidded saucepan or dutch oven, so that it fits snuggly, with the spring onion batons, ginger slices, garlic cloves, soy sauce, mirin, and sake.
- Cover and cook in a preheated oven at 160°C fan forced (320°F) for 1½ hours.
- Remove from the oven, uncover and turn the pork over in the liquid, then allow to cool to room temperature before refrigerating.
Make the soy sauce eggs
See my recipe for soy sauce eggs and make these the day before serving.
Prepare your ramen (the next day)
Cut the pork into slices, approximately 1cm thick. Heat the oil in a heavy based frying pan over medium-high heat.
- Cook the pork slices for 2 minutes on each side, weighted down with a protein press, until well browned on both sides.
- Meanwhile, heat 500ml of the stock in a medium saucepan over high heat until boiling. Add the seasoning packets and mix through, then add the noodles and spring onion whites. Cook for 2 minutes.
- To serve, transfer the noodles and the broth to a serving bowl. Slice one of the soy sauce eggs in half. Place the pork and egg on top and garnish with the green of the spring onions.
Recipe notes
Cook support
For this recipe, you'll need my soy sauce eggs recipe.
Chef Tips
Blanch the chicken frames before making the stock
Step 1 covers the frames in water, simmers for 15 minutes and then discards that first water entirely. This is blanching and it pulls out the blood, impurities and grey scum that would otherwise make your stock cloudy and give it an unpleasant flavour. Do not skip this step. The second round of fresh water is what becomes your stock, and it will be noticeably cleaner and better because of it.
Refrigerate the pork before slicing
After the pork braises and cools to room temperature, refrigerate it overnight in the braising liquid before you slice it. The rolled cylinder needs time to firm up completely so you get clean, even rounds when you cut it. Warm pork straight from the oven will fall apart. Cold pork straight from the fridge slices perfectly.
Storage
Store the components separately. The stock, pork and braising liquid keep in airtight containers in the fridge for up to 4 days. The broth actually improves overnight as the flavours continue to develop. Soy eggs keep in their marinade for up to 5 days in the fridge.
FAQs
Can I make this ahead of time? Yes, and the recipe is designed for it. The stock, pork and soy eggs are all made the day before and refrigerated overnight. Everything comes together on the day you want to eat it in about 15 minutes. The overnight rest actually improves both the pork and the broth.
Can I make it vegetarian? Not easily in its current form. The stock is built from chicken frames and the char siu is a pork dish. You could use a kombu or dashi stock and substitute firm tofu for the pork, but it would be a quite different bowl.
Can I use a different ramen packet? Yes. Any instant ramen with a bold, savoury soup base works here. I use Shin Ramen Black for its depth, but any ramyeon-style packet will do. Just add the seasoning sachets to the stock as directed and follow the same method.
Can I make this in a shorter time? If you want to reduce the time, you can make everything on the same day however it won't have the same depth of flavour.