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Home Slow-cooked fall-apart

Filipino Pork Adobo

By Nagi Maehashi
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Published13 Aug '25 Updated16 Aug '25
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Pork Adobo is the pride of the Philippines – one bite and you’ll be hooked! Meltingly tender pork is slow cooked until fall-apart in an intense soy-garlic sauce that reduces down to a glaze, then served over steaming rice. This is food so good yet so simple to make, you’ll be shaking your head in disbelief.

Filipino Pork Adobo

The Filipino are genius!

Adobo is the national dish of the Philippines, and they have every reason to be proud of it! It’s a dish comprised of pork chunks braised in a garlic-soy flavoured liquid that reduces down into an intense flavoured glaze-like sauce. The pork is fork-tender, stained a rich mahogany colour, and when it’s served over a pile of hot steamed rice, you’ll understand why this is a national treasure.

At its heart, it’s a simple, homely dish, and therein lies the genius – that something so easy with so few ingredients can be so incredible. It’s a one-pot recipe that’s hands-off, and the sauce just calls for pantry staples – soy, garlic, onion, vinegar, sugar, pepper and bay leaves.

Oh, and pork! 😅

Recipe credit goes to my brother Goh – RecipeTin’s tech wizard and ace of world food recipe development! He’s sacrificed his waistline eating his way through countless Adobos in the Philippines and Sydney, in pursuit of creating our perfect Pork Adobo I’ve been chasing for years.

Filipino Pork Adobo

tell me about filipino adobo!

Adobo is the national dish of the Philippines, and the country’s best-known food export. There are actually many dishes called “adobo” in the Philippines – some have coconut milk, some are soupy while others are dry-style and glazed, like my Chicken Adobo, a long standing reader favourite and probably the type of Adobo most people outside the Philippines are familiar with.

What pork adobo tastes like – The classic and most common adobo is made with the key ingredients of soy, vinegar and a touch of sugar. Like many traditional foods, Adobo is one of those dishes where every household makes it their own way, to their own tastes, and today’s version is how we like it. We prefer Adobo with a more rounded flavour where it’s mostly savoury with just enough vinegar for brightness without being overly sour (some restaurant are so sour!) and not too sweet (again, some restaurants are tooth-achingly sweet!).

The Adobo sauce has an intense flavour which is the way it’s supposed to be: on the stronger side but without being overly salty. The idea is you eat Adobo with plenty of rice and serve with modest amounts of sauce rather than drowning your rice in sauce.

Filipino Pork Adobo
Proof of fall-apart pork!

Ingredients in Pork Adobo

Here’s what you need to make Pork Adobo. I bet you’ve got all the sauce ingredients in your pantry right now! Pineapple is optional – read below for background (yes, some Filipino recipes have it!).

Ingredients in Pork Adobo
  • Pork meat – Pork belly is the most common cut used for pork adobo, but I personally prefer pork shoulder for the same fall-apart-juicy meat but less fatty. Shank/knuckle or forequarter chop meat also works really well. Pork neck/scotch is excellent too but reduce simmering time to 1 hour (it doesn’t need slow cooking as long).

    Cut the pork shoulder into large 6 – 7cm / 2.5″ cubes. Larger is better so they don’t become “fall-apart” too quickly. Longer and slower cook = more tender, juicier meat and better flavour in the sauce.

    Other proteins – Yes, this recipe can be used for other slow cooking proteins. See FAQ! For chicken, use my Chicken Adobo recipe.

  • Soy sauces – The light soy sauce is the primary soy used here which adds salt and umami without an overwhelming soy flavour. The dark soy sauce darkens the colour of the sauce to almost black. Dark soy is quite intense so we don’t need much – only 1 1/2 teaspoons.

    You can substitute the dark soy with more light soy sauce, but don’t substitute the light soy with dark soy sauce because it will too dark and too intense, it will ruin the dish! More about difference soy sauces here.

  • Brown sugar – This provides the sweetness in the sauce. White sugar can be used instead though brown is better because it adds a smidge of caramel-y flavour. Honey can also be substituted but reduce quantity to 2 1/2 tablespoons.

  • Rice vinegar – The addition of vinegar is what makes adobo unique and distinctly Filipino. It adds backbone and sharpens the sauce, but in a rounded way as the long braising softens the acidity. Feel free to use other kinds of vinegar. White wine, apple cider, or plain old white vinegar will all work. Vinegars can vary a lot in their intensity, amongst types as well as even brands. So start with the amount per the recipe, then taste towards the end of cooking. If you prefer a little more sharpness, you can add a teaspoon at a time to taste.

    Some adobos are deliberately quite tangy, but we prefer a gentler acidity. We use just enough to bring brightness without being overly sour. We sampled some from restaurants that were so sour, we found it was too much and difficult to eat!

  • Black peppercorns – Whole peppercorns are traditional but not essential in my view. If you don’t like biting into whole peppercorns (I personally love the spicy pops!), you can either add a good pinch of ground black pepper, or leave it out.

  • Pineapple – Dear Filipinos, I know, I know. This is NOT a very common ingredient in traditional pork adobo. However I saw it included in a few modern versions and frankly, after trying it I fell in love with it as an addition. It provides a delicious sweet and fresh counterpoint to the richly-flavoured pork and sauce, not to mention some welcome colour to what is otherwise a uniformly brown dish (no shade at brown dishes, of course!!)

    If you can get your hands on freshly cut pineapple of course that’s best. Otherwise, canned pineapple does a perfectly acceptable job and is what I use. I like bigger chunks cut from rings, but smaller pre-cut pieces will also do fine if that’s all you have.

  • Bay leaves – You wouldn’t think of bay leaves as having a place in South East Asian cooking! This is a legacy of the Spanish colonial influence on Filipino cuisine. They’re optional if you don’t have any. Fresh is better if you can (it’s an excellent low-maintenance plant, if you want to grow your own!), else dried is fine.

  • Water – Not shown. Sorry. Because I know you’ve got some! (I’m talking regular tap water here, not a fancy hard-to-find Filipino water!)


How to make pork adobo

It’s an incredibly low-effort recipe. More national dishes need to be this hands-off! 😁

How to make Pork Adobo
  1. Sear – Using a large heavy based pot, sear the pork in two batches over high heat until nicely golden all over. Take about 4 minutes to do each batch, turning as needed to sear each side and get some nice golden colour on it. Remove to a bowl and reserve residual fat in the pot.

  2. Sauté the onion until it softens, adding the garlic towards the end.

How to make Pork Adobo
  1. Braising liquid – Add the water, soy sauces, vinegar, sugar, bay leaves and peppercorns. Return the pork and any meat juices accumulated in the bowl to the liquid. Bring it to a boil, then lower the heat so the liquid is simmering gently (ie. a few slow-ish bubbles, not rapid small bubbles). More gentle heat = more gentle cooking = more succulent meat.

  2. Slow cook 1 1/2 hours – Partially cover the pot with a lid – by this, I mean place the lid on off centre to leave a crack about 2cm / 1″ – and simmer gently for 1 1/2 hours or until the pork is tender and can easily be pried apart. If it’s still not tender, keep simmering until it is!

How to make Pork Adobo
  1. Proof of fall apart pork!

  2. Remove the pork with a slotted spoon (it’s ok if the onion stays).

How to make Pork Adobo
  1. Reduce sauce – Then increase the heat and boil the sauce to reduce down to about 1 1/2 cups (375 ml), about 8 minutes. The exact time this takes will vary, it depends on how much liquid you start with, strength of stove etc.

    Adobo sauce thickness and flavour – It should be like a thin syrup, it won’t thicken, with an intense flavour – this is the way it’s supposed to be. The idea is you eat adobo with plenty of rice and serve with modest amounts of sauce rather than drowning your rice in sauce.

  2. Serve – Add the pork and pineapple into the reduced sauce and stir for a few minutes just to heat through. Then over jasmine rice, garnished with green onions!

Filipino Pork Adobo

How and what to serve with Pork Adobo

With Pork Adobo, the idea is: lots of steaming rice on your plate, a modest amount of that intense flavoured sauce, and pieces of pork that you break so it “falls apart” before scooping up with a spoon for maximum flavour in every bite. In the Philippines, fork-and-spoon eating is the norm – perfect for Adobo eating!

I’ve used plain jasmine rice here, but any rice works, and garlic fried rice (sinangag) is a popular upgrade – – here’s my garlic rice recipe, not strictly Filipino but similar flavour.

Add something fresh to cut the richness – smashed cucumbers is always a winner, plain undressed tomato and cucumber wedges (very South East Asian), my trusty Asian Side Salad or a crunchy Asian Slaw (the freshness of the mint would be lovely with Pork Adobo!).

Enjoy! – Nagi x

FAQ – Pork Adobo

Yes – this is a traditional pork adobo. It uses the classic core ingredients you’ll find in the most common Filipino versions: pork, soy sauce, vinegar, garlic, onion, sugar, black pepper, and bay leaves. The method is also authentic – browning the meat, then slow-braising it until tender while the sauce reduces to a glossy glaze.

However, we do opt to use pork shoulder which, though used in the Philippines, is not as common as pork belly. And our version also includes pineapple which isn’t strictly old-school traditional though you do see it in some modern versions (we tried it with and without and there’s no question – we love it with pineapple!).

Yes. The method in this recipe is ideal for any slow-cooking cut of meat and is easy to adapt – just braise per the recipe until the meat is fork tender, take it out, then reduce the sauce. I think pork is the best for the sauce flavour, though beef would also be lovely and actually, I think it would be nice with lamb too – the strong meat flavour will hold up to the intense flavoured sauce quite well!

If you’re thinking chicken, use my Chicken Adobo recipe – it cooks much faster, in a pan instead of a pot.

Not recommended for this one unfortunately. It’s such a simple sauce, and watery one at that, so getting the flavour relies on the caramelisation you get during the slow cooking stage on the surface and edges of the liquid which then intensifies when the sauce is reduced. I know that in a slow cooker this would really lack depth of flavour.

This recipe was created by my brother Goh – RecipeTin’s resident tech wizard and, unofficially, our king of world food recipe development. While he’s the brains behind everything IT for RecipeTin Eats and RecipeTin Meals, he’s equally obsessive about food. He’s the kind of person who will try his hand at Thomas Keller’s butter-poached lobster, tediously pick crab meat for from-scratch ravioli, can read and understand menus in 12 different languages, and famously spent most of his twenties saving to dine at a fancy restaurant once a year.

His favourite sport is hunting down Sydney’s best hole-in-the-wall joints (his live food map is a thing of legend) and he’s also the guy who unapologetically balances all that appreciation of beautiful food with an equally profound appreciation of the Golden Arches and Colonel Sanders.😅

When it comes to traditional Asian recipes, Goh is my go-to for fact-checking, tasting, or developing recipes entirely from scratch – as with this Pork Adobo. Knowing I’d been wanting to share “our perfect Adobo” for years, he ate his way through countless versions when he recently visited the Philippines, then more here in Sydney (some so unappealing they were almost educational – sauces too thick, too sour, too sweet, meat too dry). Those less-than-perfect meals shaped exactly what we didn’t want, and it didn’t take long for Goh and JB to nail a version that was everything we did want – savoury, balanced, fall-apart tender pork, and a sauce just intense enough.

The real fun was in the development process – heated WhatsApp debates, shuttling samples between houses, rushing over a freshly made batch because “you have to try it while it’s hot!”, and lengthy arguments about sauce reduction (“Can a sauce be too intense?” – yes there is such a thing, we decided). It’s that mix of Goh’s technical precision, culinary curiosity, and love of flavour that made this Pork Adobo working with JB and I that led to this recipe – the perfect Pork Adobo I’d always dreamed of sharing!

Much of the recipe was created based our general knowledge we’ve garnered over the years about Adobo and from the Chicken Adobo I shared some years ago. As a mention in the above FAQ, it’s not a hard recipe (there’s not that many ingredients in Adobo!), it’s just about balancing the flavours to achieve the perfect balance.

Whenever we share particularly traditional recipes, we do extensively scour the internet to see “what others are doing”, more out of general interest and observe common themes. The recipes we mostly referenced are:

  • Book – “I Am Filipino, This Is How We Cook”

  • Pork Adobo Recipe from Panlasang Pinoy

As noted above, we also got samples from Sydney restaurants but I don’t want to name them because neither were very good, I’m sad to report.

Goh also tried adobos from various locations in Manila, including street markets and popular traditional Filipino restaurants.


Watch how to make it

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Filipino Pork Adobo

Pork Adobo

Author: Nagi
Prep: 10 minutes mins
Cook: 2 hours hrs
Main
Filipino
4.92 from 24 votes
Servings4 – 5 people
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Recipe video above. Pork Adobo is the pride of the Philippines – one bite and you'll be hooked! Pork braised until meltingly tender in an intense soy-garlic sauce that reduces down to a glaze, served over steaming rice, this is food so good yet so simple to make, you'll be shaking your head in disbelief.
Our adobo sauce has a well rounded flavour, intensely savoury but not overly salty or too sour (some restaurants make it really sour), and not too sweet. The sauce is meant to be thin so a little goes a long way on your rice.
Slow cooker not recommended, sorry, see Note 6.

Ingredients

  • 1 kg/ 2 lb pork shoulder (the parts ribboned with fat not lean parts), skinless, cut into 6cm/2.5" cubes – or belly (Note 1)
  • 2 tbsp vegetable oil , or any other neutral flavoured oil
  • 1 large onion , cut in half then 0.8″ / 1/3″ wedges
  • 8 cloves garlic , finely sliced
  • 3 cups water
  • 1/2 cup light soy sauce , sub regular/all-purpose soy (Note 2)
  • 1 1/2 tsp dark soy sauce (Note 2)
  • 1/4 cup rice vinegar (sub regular white vinegar)
  • 3 tbsp (tightly packed) brown sugar
  • 1 1/2 tsp black peppercorns , can omit (Note 3)
  • 5 bay leaves , preferably fresh, dried ok too

Optional pineapple (Note 4):

  • 6 pineapple rings , each cut into 8 pieces, from canned pineapple in juice not syrup, or 2 cups fresh pineapple pieces
  • 2 tsp vegetable oil , or any other neutral flavoured oil

Garnish/serving:

  • 1 green onion , finely sliced
  • 2 batches jasmine rice , or any other rice of choice (garlic rice would be amazing!)
Prevent screen from sleeping

Instructions

ABBREVIATED:

  • Brown pork, remove, sauté onion and garlic, add everything else. Return pork, bring to boil, slow cook 1 1/2 hours until fall-apart. Caramelise pineapple pieces. Remove pork, reduce sauce to 1 1/2 cups (375 ml), stir in pork and caramelised pineapple until warmed. Serve over rice!

FULL RECIPE:

  • Sear pork – Heat the oil in a large heavy based pot over high heat. Sear half the pork until golden all over – about 4 minutes – then remove into a bowl. Repeat with remaining pork, add to the bowl.
  • Sauté – Reduce heat to medium. Add the onion, cook for 2 minutes. Add garlic and cook for another minute until the onion is softened.
  • Braising liquid – Add water, soy sauces, vinegar, sugar, peppercorns and bay leaves. Stir. Add the pork back in, including any juices accumulated in the bowl.
  • Slow cook 1 1/2 hours – Bring to a boil, then partially cover with a lid (leave a 2cm / 1" crack) and reduce the heat to low/medium low so the liquid is simmering very, very gently. (Note 4) Simmer for 1 1/2 hours or until the pork is fall-apart tender (keep simmering if not tender).
  • Caramelise pineapple – While pork is simmering, heat the oil in a non-stick pan over medium heat. Spread the pineapple out in one layer and cook each side until golden, about 4 minutes each side (I use spatula + tongs to turn). Remove onto plate until required.
  • Reduce sauce – Remove pork with a slotted spoon (onion etc doesn't matter when it's in or out). Increase heat to high and boil to reduce the liquid down to 1 1/2 cups – it will be a very thin syrup (it's not supposed to be thick), about 7 to 10 minutes.
  • Coat pork – Reduce heat to low. Add the pork and pineapple pieces, plus any juices in the bowl. Stir gently to coat in the sauce and warm the pork through again.
  • Serve over jasmine rice, garnished with green onion if using.

Recipe Notes:

1. Pork meat – Pork belly is the most common cut used for pork adobo and can be used, but I personally find it a little too fatty in this dish, I prefer shoulder for the same fall-apart-juicy meat but less fatty. Make sure to use the parts of the shoulder ribboned with fat, not the lean fat-free areas. Shank/knuckle or forequarter chop meat also works really well. Poor neck/scotch is excellent too but reduce simmering time to 1 hour (it doesn’t need slow cooking as long).
Other proteins – Other stewing cuts will work great, see FAQ for directions. For chicken, see Chicken Adobo.
2. Soy sauces – Light soy provides the salt and a touch of dark soy makes the sauce a beautiful rich dark brown colour. You can substitute the dark soy with more light soy sauce, but don’t sub the light soy with dark soy sauce because it is so intense, it will ruin the dish!
3. The peppercorns are a bit spicy when you bite into them, though the spiciness dials down quite a bit during the slow cooking time. Some people are bothered by them, I love them! You can omit if you want, or sub with 1/4 tsp ground black pepper added towards the end.
4. Pineapple isn’t strictly traditional – it’s possibly a modern variation – though it is included in Filipino recipes. We LOVE the visual interest, and the refreshing and sweet element it adds to balance the salty/sour flavours and fatty meat, so we included it but it’s entirely optional.
5. Simmering strength – The bubbles should be small and gentle, not rapid and large. The more gentle the simmer, the slower the pork cooks, the more tender and juicy it is!
6. Slow cooker not recommended for this recipe unfortunately, it will lack flavour as you won’t get any surface caramelisation during slow cooking stage. 
Leftovers will keep for 4 days in the fridge, or 3 months in the freezer.
Nutrition per serving assuming 5 servings, excluding rice. Assumes all sauce is consumed.

Nutrition Information:

Calories: 357cal (18%)Carbohydrates: 25g (8%)Protein: 28g (56%)Fat: 16g (25%)Saturated Fat: 4g (25%)Polyunsaturated Fat: 3gMonounsaturated Fat: 9gTrans Fat: 0.03gCholesterol: 82mg (27%)Sodium: 1502mg (65%)Potassium: 642mg (18%)Fiber: 2g (8%)Sugar: 20g (22%)Vitamin A: 80IU (2%)Vitamin C: 11mg (13%)Calcium: 68mg (7%)Iron: 3mg (17%)
Keywords: filipino food, pork adobo
Did you make this recipe?I love hearing how you went with my recipes! Tag me on Instagram at @recipe_tin.

Life of Dozer

Ah. So this is what it feels like to be dethroned by your own darn dog.😅 Row, Row, Row (with Monsters) featuring Dozer takes over my own cookbooks in the charts – go Dozer, go!

For those who missed the exciting announcement on Friday, Dozer is starring in a children’s book written by Adam Simpson called Row, Row, Row your Boat (With Monsters). Pre-orders were announced last Friday, the book lands in stores (or on your doorstep!) on 11 November 2025, and the author is donating all his royalties to a food charity. 🥰 You understand now why it was an easy YES! when the author asked if I’d like to be involved!

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106 Comments

  1. Suzanne Mellick says

    August 21, 2025 at 8:16 pm

    Hi Nagi, i made the pork adobe I thought I followed to a T.it was salty and very dark in colour. I used pork belly and forequarter chops. will try again w shoulder.? made the chicken Adobe a great success. love your recipies.

    Reply
  2. Suzanne Mellick says

    August 21, 2025 at 3:30 pm

    Nagi, I have had lots of success with your recipies. I dont know what happened with this one but mine looks VERY dark and is salty? i have read all the reviews. I used pork belly but didnt have enough after cutting some of the fat off. i couldnt get pork shoulder and sub with forequarter .

    Reply
  3. SF says

    August 20, 2025 at 6:38 pm

    This was so tasty and easy….did it with your amazing garlic rice. Only question is….how do you make it look like your Pic? Mine didn’t look thick, glazed and sticky like yours, the sauce was real thin as your recipe states (but yours looks thicker?)…..but definitely can’t complain about the taste!

    Reply
  4. Erika says

    August 20, 2025 at 2:23 am

    5 stars
    Delicious! I made this without the pineapple because I didn’t have it on hand, but next time I’ll try it with. While the dish was a huge hit, I do feel that the pineapple would have added even more. Yum yum yum! I paired it with Nagi’s cucumber salad and it was all perfect!

    Reply
  5. Claire says

    August 19, 2025 at 2:45 am

    So great! I didn’t know I could have fall apart goodness in only 2 hours!! More recipes like this please, Nagi.

    I had the leftover chunks of meat and pineapple in lettuce wraps with cilantro and crushed peanuts. SO good.

    Reply
  6. Young says

    August 19, 2025 at 1:30 am

    5 stars
    I cooked this for my party, and it was a huge hit. No leftovers left! I cooked for about 2 hours on the stove, and reduced the sugar slightly less than it’s asked. It was extremely flavorful and yummy. Thanks, Nagi, for another repeated recipe!

    Reply
  7. Dave says

    August 18, 2025 at 11:39 pm

    5 stars
    Any chance of getting a weight in grams for garlic use? My current locally-grown garlic is four times the size of what is available/imported during our Canadian winter. I usually double any recipe’s call for garlic. First tastes of this adobo are pretty good.

    Reply
  8. Bec says

    August 18, 2025 at 8:18 pm

    5 stars
    OMG – soooo delicious and easy!
    The whole thing was devoured!
    I used Slow Cook Scotch Roast and chopped it into chunks before searing. I’ll leave out the peppercorns next time as not a fan of those.

    Reply
  9. Eva says

    August 18, 2025 at 7:23 pm

    4 stars
    Turned out great, thanks for another dinner winner, Nagi and bro! Beautiful flavours. The only thing I tweaked was an extra tbsp of brown sugar (personal preference) and used cracked black pepper instead of whole black pepper corns. My time-saving tip: caramelise the pineapple rings whole! Much easier flipping 6 rings, than flipping 48 pieces of pineapple to brown both sides 🙂

    Reply
  10. Jo Butler says

    August 18, 2025 at 7:11 pm

    5 stars
    This was so good. I cooked it for my family and friends, including a person who doesn’t like pork. She went back for seconds. I love the addition of pineapple. Absolute winner that will be going into our regular rotation.

    Reply
  11. Dragon Feast says

    August 18, 2025 at 6:49 pm

    5 stars
    Hi Nagi, Just wanted to let you know that I made this wonderful dish on Saturday Night and my partner said when are you making this again. Wonderful praise indeed

    Reply
  12. Dave Kwon says

    August 18, 2025 at 12:44 pm

    5 stars
    Great recipe! Added some minced ginger for some added flavor and freshness. Sauce had perfect balance!

    Reply
  13. KrisB says

    August 18, 2025 at 7:33 am

    5 stars
    Made this for dinner. Only change to recipe, I marinated the pork with some of the sauce ingredients for ~6hr. Served it with your Garlic Butter Rice and Smashed Cucumber w Garlic-Herb Vinaigrette. So yummy! So satisfying. So easy! Before I retired, I worked with a bunch of Filipino nurses and many pot luck lunches/dinners included various Adobos. This brought back lots of great memories. Thanks! Think I will make Pancit for dinner tomorrow. Praying for Dozer like he’s my own.

    Reply
  14. Evia says

    August 18, 2025 at 2:34 am

    Your Chicken Adobo recipe is already a regular in our house, but this just might be even better (without the pineapple because lazy)!

    Reply
  15. Lauren says

    August 18, 2025 at 12:02 am

    5 stars
    I love eating pork and my husband is usually on the fence- but after making this he said it was the best dinner we’ve had in a long time! Win-win 😆

    Reply
  16. Andrea AM says

    August 17, 2025 at 9:29 pm

    5 stars
    Loved it! So easy to follow and it delicious!

    Reply
  17. Nicole Naylor says

    August 17, 2025 at 5:27 pm

    5 stars
    I don’t understand all the comments saying Nagi’s recipe ‘should not have this’, ‘this is not traditional’. Nagi makes every recipe her own through practice, practice, practice and that’s why they are so popular – they never fail! And she makes very clear that not everything done is traditional if you read the recipes in full. Relax and enjoy the work she does on our behalf!

    Reply
  18. Jill Mortimer says

    August 16, 2025 at 4:58 pm

    I made this strictly as recipe (halved). Used a pork shoulder chop. The pork was very tender and delicious. I haven’t had an Adobo before, so found it very soya/salt heavy. Would not have enjoyed if it wasn’t for the pineapple! At the end – Coat pork stage – I used about half the sauce, and put the rest into a jug to be added separately for those who like the strength of it. Personally I found the sauce overpowering, and husband didn’t think there was enough sauce. The actual flavour was nice, so I might try your Chicken Adobo.

    Reply
  19. Colleen KING says

    August 16, 2025 at 3:02 pm

    4 stars
    I made this today in my multipot. It took a long time to cool to a simmer and was never quite a slow simmer. I used boned pork shoulder which I got for a steal from Woolworths. It was well and truly cooked within an hour but I left it another 15 minutes, just in case. Didn’t need to as I lost a bit much liquid and it made the sauce too salty. I will add some more liquid to the leftovers, maybe the pineapple juice (apologies to those who don’t add fruit or sugar). I substituted the black pepper with Szechuan Pepper as suggested by Panlasang Pinoy but I could not taste it. I only used 1 tsp so will use more in the future. Apart from being a salty I loved it. I ate it with garlic rice and beans because that’s what I had on hand. My house smelled like a night market while it was cooking. Yum.

    Reply
  20. Denny Dodge says

    August 16, 2025 at 7:37 am

    5 stars
    This smells so darn good already! I did take the liberty of adding a small can of mandarin oranges, at the very end for color and already had them open. Pineapple a HIT!

    Reply
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