Servings | Prep Time | Cook Time |
4 | 10minutes | 1 hour,5 minutes |
Servings | Prep Time |
4 | 10minutes |
Cook Time |
1 hour,5 minutes |
- Combine the pork, garlic, water, tamari (soy sauce), bay leaves and peppercorns in a pot.
- Bring to a boil, lower heat to medium and continue to boil covered, allowing steam to escape. Cook until the pork is tender and the liquid has reduced to almost half (approximately 45 minutes)
- Stir in the vinegar and continue to boil until the liquid is reduced to a thick oily sauce (approximately 20 minutes).
- Serve hot with steamed rice or quinoa.
Traditional Filipino adobo is made with pork belly (liempo) which is fatty and wonderfully flavourful. If you're like me and don't want to minimize the amount of animal fat you consume, you can use pork butt/shoulder, pork loin, pork ribs or a mix of meaty and fatty cuts. Note that the sauce comes out thicker with a richer flavour if you use fatty pork.
You can also use this recipe to make chicken adobo. Reduce the amount of water you add to 1/2 cup or omit the water. Reduce boiling time to 20-30 minutes total for chicken.
Boiling the pork without vinegar in the beginning of cooking procedure makes the tenderization process faster, but you can easily throw all ingredients into the pot and boil everything together from the beginning for a one step recipe.