Traditional Chinese Canadian Sweet and Sour Ribs: A Retro Recipe (2024)

Developed by the ancestors of those who built our railroad

Traditional Chinese Canadian Sweet and Sour Ribs: A Retro Recipe (1)

MMMMmmmm! Don’t these Sweet and Sour Spare Ribs look finger lickin’ good? Have you ever made them? Did your mom every make them when you were a child (you can only answer this if you are in your golden years!)? This was a staple recipe in our house when I grew up, but I haven’t made it for years and years and years. I can still hear the excitement and anticipation in my dad’s voice when he came home to the smell of these ribs baking in the oven. But, the ribs were the little button ribs, in those days. That was just how it was, then. This Canadian Chinese recipe for Sweet and Sour Spare Ribs was developed by the ancestors of the Chinese who build our Canadian railway from east to west. When the Canadian appeal of the traditional sweet dipping sauce was discovered, a recipe for ribs morphed into sweet and sour ribs by Chinese Restaurant owners; their traditional recipes were tweaked considerably to appeal to our palate and a whole new cuisine was born: Canadian Chinese Food. You will not find the old “Traditional Chinese (Canadian) Recipes” we have grown up with on the Canadian prairies, and from coast to coast, anywhere in China. Sweet and Sour Ribs is definitely a foreign food to our Chinese visitors. It is difficult for most to find a restaurant that serves food they would authenticate as true Chinese.

Sweet and Sour Ribs: Browning the Ribs

Traditional Chinese Canadian Sweet and Sour Ribs: A Retro Recipe (2)

I am so fortunate to have my outdoor kitchen! Making these Sweet and Sour Spare Ribs is as simple as ABC or 123, but it can be very messy to brown the ribs. I just step outside for these messy bits! A little time consuming, but I get so excited with the process and the art of browning to perfection that I actually get lost in time. I don’t find it laborious at all. Ribs washed and patted dry, butter and oil on medium-high, seasoned flour: it’s that simple. Turn, turn, turn. Many of our favourite Chinese oldies: that giant heavy deep fried egg roll with plum sauce, the chowmeins and chop sueys as served only in Canada, chicken balls, almond chicken, cashew chicken are most definitely Canadian-Chinese. Yet, this is the authentic Chinese food of my childhood. The old Club Cafe in Red Deer was the place to go for a Chinese feast. It was a given that sweet and sour ribs would be the first dish dad ordered. The ribs were golden and gooey in those days, just like mine. Not the artificial bright cherry red translucent sauce that this “new era” sweet and sour ribs float in. A simple sweet and sour sauce: vinegar, sugar and water. That’s it. Pineapple was added sometime after, on occasion.

Traditional Chinese Canadian Sweet and Sour Ribs: A Retro Recipe (3)

We buy our pork from Nature’s Green Acres. Some years a whole Tamworth pig, some years a half, but good “know-your-farmer pork” is the best base for any sweet and sour pork rib recipe. Just look at those succulent golden crispy ribs! How could anyone see frying up a batch of these as work? It is such a pleasure.

Traditional Chinese Canadian Sweet and Sour Ribs: A Retro Recipe (4)

In the Canadian prairie homes of my childhood this was a staple recipe. Definitely a treat. Most often the meal consisted of a tossed green salad, white rice with soya sauce on the side and these ribs. Fancying it up some would mean toasting sesame seeds to top it off with. Yet, often enough, there was an entire Chinese menu when the ribs were made: stir fried vegetables, a stir fried rice, a chowmein dish, and maybe more. Homemade Canadian Chinese food was considered a rare treat. I recall coming home one day to the house filled with smoke smelling like an old greasy spoon. Mom was experimenting with making battered deep fried shrimp. Deep frying anything was scary to any prairie housewife, so she was really going out on a limb for dad. Deep fried battered shrimp was his ultimate Chinese food treat. She did onion rings at the same time. Not sure why. Maybe just killing two deep fried birds with one stone? Both were absolutely delicious. She never made either one again. The house smelled for days.

Traditional Chinese Canadian Sweet and Sour Ribs: A Retro Recipe (5)

Done. I am excited. It didn’t take long to brown these ribs. The look divine. It has been so long since I have made or tasted this dish that I am salivating at the thought and finding it difficult to contain my excitement. This is our Sunday dinner. Mom, Ragan and Vanja will be so surprised. The flood of memories and sensations pulsing through my brain motivate and inspire as I begin to prepare the Sweet and Sour Spare Ribs sauce.

Traditional Chinese Canadian Sweet and Sour Ribs: A Retro Recipe (6)

Of course, heading out for Chinese food “back in the day” was also a very special treat. It was an event. A special occasion. One would go to the restaurant owned by a friend, or friend of a friend. Not just anyone. The owner would greet us and treat us like royalty. Every customer was treated that way. Toasted sesame seeds and soya sauce were on the table with a plate and small bowl on the side. That was my favourite appetizer! We put the toasted seeds on the plate and the sauce in the little bowl, dipped our forks in the sauce and then in the toasted seeds which would cling to the sauce on the fork. MMMMmmmm. I didn’t care if I got any food. These toasted seeds were so addictive. Working at getting the most seeds on the least sauce was the challenge. Chewing every single seed was the next challenge. There was so much flavour in every seed. Dangers of double dipping was an unheard of issue. We all double dipped our forks in that sauce bowl.

Sweet and Sour Ribs: Making the Simple Sweet and Sour Sauce

Traditional Chinese Canadian Sweet and Sour Ribs: A Retro Recipe (7)

Vinegar, sugar, water and cornstarch are the ingredients for this famous recipe. Oh, now people add soya, and ketchup or other special flavour enhancers, but not then. This was fancy enough,

Traditional Chinese Canadian Sweet and Sour Ribs: A Retro Recipe (8)

The best flavour enhancer being the drippings in bottom of the pot. We always start there. Add the sugar, water, vinegar and cornstarch: stir, stir, stir.

Traditional Chinese Canadian Sweet and Sour Ribs: A Retro Recipe (9)

I do believe I doubled the recipe for this batch.

Traditional Chinese Canadian Sweet and Sour Ribs: A Retro Recipe (10)

Season with salt and pepper.

Sweet and Sour Ribs: Putting it all Together

Traditional Chinese Canadian Sweet and Sour Ribs: A Retro Recipe (11)

To be sure there are no cornstarch lumps, I always strain the sauce through a sieve over the ribs.

Traditional Chinese Canadian Sweet and Sour Ribs: A Retro Recipe (12)

Toss them all well in the sauce…

Traditional Chinese Canadian Sweet and Sour Ribs: A Retro Recipe (13)

(Now that’s a money shot for Canadian Chinese Sweet and Sour Spare Ribs!)

Traditional Chinese Canadian Sweet and Sour Ribs: A Retro Recipe (14)

… until completely smothered.

Sweet and Sour Ribs: Baked Ribs

Traditional Chinese Canadian Sweet and Sour Ribs: A Retro Recipe (15)

Then bake for 30-40 minutes just before serving until bubbly, hot, sticky and ooey gooey. Serve over a bed of rice with extra sauce and a tossed salad on the side. If you want to go truly retro, offer up Kraft Thousand Island Dressing with the salad. Anyone with me on this? Let’s hear your memories of homemade sweet and sour ribs!

Traditional Canadian Sweet and Sour Ribs

This is a traditional Canadian Chinese recipe for Sweet and Sour Ribs that was made in home kitchens all over the Canadian prairies from the 1950's to 1970'. It is finger licken' good and easy as pie to make!

CourseMain

CuisineCandian

Prep Time 40 minutes

Cook Time 40 minutes

Total Time 1 hour 20 minutes

Servings 8 servings

Author Valerie Lugonja

Ingredients

Ingredients for the ribs:

  • 1k ribs, individually sliced, washed and patted dry
  • 1-2cupsflour, seasoned with salt and pepper (1/2 teaspoon salt, freshly ground black pepper)
  • 1/4cupbutter, used in smaller portions
  • 1/4cupoil, used in smaller portions

Ingredients for the Sauce:

  • 1cupvinegar
  • 1cupsugar
  • 1cupwater
  • 3tablespoonscornstarch

Instructions

Instructions for the ribs:

  1. Divide ribs into 4 batches; flour 1/4 of the ribs thoroughly

  2. Heat 1 tablespoon of butter and 1 tablespoon of oil in heavy saucepan, medium to medium high heat; brown ribs on each side, about 2-3 minutes per side

  3. Set aside on paper towel, as each batch is done; repeat 4 times until all ribs are golden

  4. Place ribs in casserole dish; set aside

Instructions for the sauce:

  1. Pre-heat oven to 350F

  2. Drain fat from pan, retaining all brown bits; mix corn starch with the sugar and stir into brown bits

  3. Add water and vinegar; season with salt and pepper

  4. Cook for 4-6 minutes until bubbly and thick; pour over ribs in casserole dish, tossing until completely covered

  5. Bake for 30-40 minutes until hot and bubbly, serve immediately

Recipe Notes

Ribs can be prepared and smothered in sauce a day in advance; bake 40 minutes before mealtime (if cold from fridge) and serve immediately

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Traditional Chinese Canadian Sweet and Sour Ribs: A Retro Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What is the red stuff on Chinese ribs? ›

The characteristic red hue of char siu comes from red food coloring, which you can add to the marinade if you'd like, but I prefer to go au natural. It's plenty pretty on its own. Hoisin sauce—a fermented soy bean-based sweet and savory barbecue sauce—is the primary flavoring agent in the marinade.

What is sweet and sour ribs made of? ›

Combines soy sauce, sugar, vinegar, dry mustard, garlic, as well as a few other simple ingredients to make a delicious sauce for cut ribs. Great over rice, too — some say rice with this sauce is their favorite food! A Lechner family tradition.

What is the history of sweet and sour pork ribs? ›

But one thing is for sure and that is that the dish originated in China, took a journey around the world and came back to Hong Kong stronger than ever. “It actually evolved from a dish made with spare ribs braised in sugar and vinegar. It was a Shanghainese dish that used to be served to the emperor.

What is the Chinese name for pork ribs? ›

猪排 : pork ribs, pork... : zhū pái | Definition | Mandarin Chinese Pinyin English Dictionary | Yabla Chinese.

Are Chinese ribs healthy? ›

Worst: Barbecue Spare Ribs

No bones about it, these are a high-fat choice. At Chinese restaurants, they're coated in a salty-sweet barbecue sauce. One order can pack in 1.5 times the sodium you should get in a day, along with 64 grams of fat. They also can have more sugar than a can of soda.

Why are Chinese ribs pink? ›

Well, it turns out that Char Siu, even though it sounds like charcoal, is not grilled or smoked. It is roasted in a special oven, usually gas fired. And most of the time it gets its ruddy tone from red food coloring (some chefs use a red bean paste, or beets, but that's not common).

What does brown sugar do to ribs? ›

Indeed, the perhaps surprising amount of brown sugar will form a crust of the ribs making them especially tender. The sweet to salty ratio is perfectly balanced for succulent bbq ribs, no extra toppings needed. Simple enough that you always have the necessary ingredients, this bbq ribs recipe won't disappoint.

Why put mayo on ribs? ›

Mayonnaise really works,” said Meathead Goldwyn, founder of the popular website, AmazingRibs.com and author of “Meathead: The Science of Great Barbecue and Grilling.” “It sticks really well to the food, helps release food from the hot grill surface, and gets a beautiful golden color.”

Why cook ribs in vinegar? ›

The trick is so good, she says, she sometimes does it even with really fresh, beautiful ribs. Essentially, the vinegar solution "cleanses" the meat and makes the flavors shine through without any "gamey" flavor.

Is sweet and sour a real Chinese dish? ›

Sweet and sour pork is a Chinese dish particularly popular in Westernised Cantonese cuisine and may be found worldwide. Several provinces in China produce various dishes that claim to be the ancestor, including a traditional Jiangsu dish called “pork in a sugar and vinegar sauce” (糖醋里脊; pinyin: táng cù lǐjǐ).

Where did sweet and sour pork originate from in China? ›

Image of Where did sweet and sour pork originate from in China?
China, officially the People's Republic of China, is a country in East Asia. With a population exceeding 1.4 billion, it is the world's second-most populous country. China spans the equivalent of five time zones and borders fourteen countries by land.
Wikipedia

What is sweet and sour pork in China? ›

The sweet and sour pork in China is quite different from the American version, though. The takeout style is usually heavily battered, deep fried, and swamped in a pool of very sugary sauce. On the other hand, in the Chinese version the pork is cut into thin strips, lightly coated with a batter and fried until crispy.

What animal do Chinese ribs come from? ›

Free-Range Pork Ribs

Our chinese pork spare ribs come from rare-breed Saddleback and Gloucester Old Spot outdoor reared pigs that have taken longer to mature and carry the essential extra fat that produces really succulent, flavoursome meat.

What animal are Chinese BBQ ribs from? ›

These ribs are a slow cooking special with the bold flavours of the glaze complementing the rich and savoury pork which tenderises as it cooks. The on-the-bone pork ribs are ideal for barbecues.

What is shredded pork called in Chinese food? ›

Yuxiang shredded pork (simplified Chinese: 鱼香肉丝; traditional Chinese: 魚香肉絲; pinyin: yúxiāng ròusī; sometimes translated as fish-flavored pork slices, or more vaguely as shredded pork with garlic sauce) is a common dish in Sichuan cuisine. Yuxiang is one of the main traditional flavors in Sichuan.

What is the red dye on Chinese pork? ›

Think of a French wine based stew, but instead of a bottle of Burgundy, the meat is braised in a deeply savory, umami rich mix of soy sauce, shaoxing wine, cinnamon sticks, and star anise. The bath in soy sauce gives the meat a deep red color.

What is the red coloring in Chinese food? ›

Soy sauce (usually a mix of light and dark soy sauce), fermented bean paste, red fermented tofu or rock sugar is commonly used to both flavor and impart a reddish brown hue to the items being cooked. Food coloring is sometimes added for a more intense red coloration.

Is there red dye in Chinese food? ›

In 1996, China banned food manufacturers from using Sudan I red dye to color their products. China followed a number of other developed nations in banning the dye due to its links to cancer and other negative health effects.

What makes meat red in Chinese food? ›

The red-cooking technique involves cooking ingredients – pork and other meats, chicken, tofu, eggs and vegetables – in light and dark soy sauce, Shaoxing wine, sugar, and spices, such as star anise and Sichuan peppercorns, resulting in a red-brown colour and a unique rich, caramelised flavour.

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