Spicy Soy Pork Ribs with Shishito Peppers or simply Dwaeji Galbi Jjim 돼지갈비찜 in Korean. Ready in 30 minutes in your Instant Pot!
Spicy Soy Pork Ribs with Shishito Peppers or Dwaeji Galbi Jjim is the latest recipe that I developed for the Instant Pot. I used a lot of shishito peppers because our family have really fell in LOVE with these peppers lately (especially my daughter) and they are in full season right now.
In Korean, we call Shishito Peppers, Kkwari Gochu 꽈리고추. The flavor of this pepper is very mild with almost no heat and yet there’s still that hint of lovely peppery spiciness with a slight sweetness that makes these peppers so addicting. The skin is also thinner and more tender. The other day, I just stir fried it with a little bit of oil and some of my apple lemon soy sauce and it came out really delicious.
A note about its Korean name and Jorim vs Jjim:
Back in 2011, I posted Spicy Soy Braised Pork Ribs with chili peppers and called it Spicy Soy Braised Pork Ribs or Dwaeji Galbi Jorim because that’s what we called it in our family. Many Koreans use the words Jorim 조림 and Jjim 찜 without a lot of distinction and I am certainly guilty of that (as in my post in 2011). However, I feel I need to make a little correction before we go further. Let’s look at the difference of Jorim vs Jjim in more detail.
According to the International Korean Menu Guide (published by Korean Food Foundation) in 2012:
Jjim is called Braised Dishes and defined as “dishes made by slowly braising or steaming seasoned meat, seafood or vegetables in a sauce”.
Jorim is called Glazed Dishes and defined as “meat, fish and vegetables seasoned and simmered over a low flame until sauce is reduced to a glaze”.
According to Wikipedia:
Jjim (찜; Korean pronunciation: [tɕ͈im]) is a Korean cuisine term referring to dishes made by steaming or boiling meat, chicken, fish, or shellfish which have been marinated in a sauce or soup. (source wikipedia)
Jorim (조림) is a simmered Korean dish, made by boiling vegetables, meat, fish, seafood, or tofu in seasoned broth until the liquid is absorbed into the ingredients and reduced down. (source wikipedia)
In my opinion, both of these definitions are not completely correct. Mainly I have 2 issues with these definitions. I know I have used the term Braise to refer to Jjim dishes in the past but I realized after my culinary techniques class that this is not completely correct. The term Braising is a mixed cooking technique of dry heat (searing in pan) and wet heat (boiling with liquid) but in Korean Jjim, meats are never seared before they are cooked in liquid so it’s missing the dry heat part of braising.
Thus, Braising ≠ Jjim.
2nd issue is with Wikipedia defintion of Jjim. Jjim is not just simply steaming or boiling seasoned ingredients in sauce or soup but there is a “slow cooking” element to Jjim. Although the word Jjim literally means “steamed dishes”, it has come to refer to dishes that are SLOWLY boiled/simmered like Galbi Jjim, Suyuk that are cooked to perfect tenderness through the ingredient of time.
So I know this may be too much info for some of you but defining and categorizing properly is just something I like to do. 😝I should remember to include this in my future dream cookbook… haha.
Right, let’s get cooking, shall we?
BTW, in my past non-IP Dwaeji Galbi Jorim recipe, you will see that pork short ribs needs to be cooked for 75 minutes which is fine. But with my instant pot, I was able to cook my Spicy Soy Pork Ribs recipe in just 25 minutes!! And of course, it tasted just as delicious if not better – I know I am saying this for the 3rd time in a row for my Instant Pot recipes but that’s the truth. Recipe is basically the same (reduced water amount) except I added a whole bunch of Shishito Peppers (꽈리고추 Kkwari Gochu) because my daughter is in love with these lately. 😍
If you don’t have an Instant Pot, you should consider getting one. The one I have is the Instant Pot Duo 7-in-1 6 Qt. 🙂 You know that I won’t recommend it unless I really like it. They also have a new 3 qt size if you want a smaller one. Go to my store and look under Cooking Tools for a link.
Spicy Soy Pork Ribs with Shishito Peppers (Dwaeji Galbi Jjim) for IP
Servings: 6 Prep Time: 5 min Cook Time: 25 min Difficulty: Easy
Ingredients – see adjustable recipe card below
- Trim fat from ribs and cut ribs into individual pieces.
- Soak ribs in cold water for 10 minutes.
- Peel and cut fresh ginger into 1/4 inch thick pieces.
- Rinse chili peppers and cut each pepper into 2-3 pieces.
- Rinse shishito peppers and take off the stems but leave it whole.
- In the Instant Pot, add ribs, water, soy sauce, ginger, 3-4 Korean green peppers, black pepper.
- Close the lid and set your Instant Pot to Meat/Stew function but REDUCE time to 20 minutes.
- When it is done, let off steam to open the lid. Add rest of chili peppers and all of shishito peppers.
- Close Instant Pot again, set it to manual – 5 minutes at low pressure. Open when the pressure has been released.
- One last step is to skim the fat from the finished Dwaeji Galbi Jjim as you will see quite a bit of fat that has accumulated on top.
- Serve warm! And use the warm function of IP to keep it warm.
Instant Pot Soy Pork Ribs (Dwaeji Galbi Jjim)
Ingredients
- 2 lb pork ribs (St. Louis Style)
- 195 ml soy sauce (jin ganjang 진간장 - good quality)
- 1 1/2 cup water
- 7 shishito peppers or more to taste
- 1 oz fresh ginger
- 1/8 tsp black pepper
- 3 Korean green chili peppers or Jalapeno peppers (but 30% less amount) - optional
Instructions
- Trim fat from ribs and cut into individual pieces.
- Soak ribs in cold water for 10 minutes.
- Peel and cut fresh ginger into 1/4 inch thick pieces.
- Rinse chili peppers and cut each pepper into 2-3 pieces.
- Rinse shishito peppers and take off the stems but leave them whole.
- In the Instant Pot, add ribs, water, soy sauce, ginger, 3-4 Korean green peppers, black pepper.
- Close the lid and set your Instant Pot to Meat/Stew function but REDUCE time to 20 minutes.
- When it is done, let off steam and open to add rest of chili peppers and all of shishito peppers.
- Close Instant Pot again, set it to manual 5 minutes at low pressure. And voila! You are done.
Tips & Notes:
- Optionally, add 12-16 shishito peppers for extra flavor without adding much spiciness.
- garnish with some daikon sprouts for nicer presentation.
Nutrition Information:
Tips
- Skimming fat from top of Spicy Soy Pork Ribs –
- method 1 – just use a spoon or ladle to skim off fat
- method 2 – let it cool in fridge until fat hardens and then take if off. See my Galbi Jjim post for details.
- method 3 – pour off all the liquid into a glass jar. fat will rise to top, keep pouring and the fat will spill over
- Serve with rice, kimchi and something creamy like a Korean kabocha salad or sauteed string potatoes with mayonnaise.
- Leftovers can be stored in fridge and reheated. Add a little water every time you reheat.
ENJOY!!
XOXO ❤
JinJoo
Cindy says
If I do not have an Instant Pot, can this be cooked in a slow cooker or Dutch oven? If so, what changes (i.e.-temperature, cooking time, etc.) need to be made? This sounds delicious, and would love to try it!
JinJoo says
Sure, it can totally be cooked in the slow cooker or Dutch oven. I’m sorry I don’t have exact times or temps for those but for the slow cooker try about 8hrs or so and add more liquid (maybe about 1 more cup of water). The great thing about this dish is that you can’t overcook the meat so slow cooker will work fine – just taste the meat along the way and adjust the sauce a bit. Hope that works!
Serena says
This recipe is so easy and really amazing! Impressed even my hard to please Korean mother (who is a fabulous cook).
JinJoo says
I love hearing that!! Soo happy to hear that your family enjoyed it. Thank you!!
Chelsea says
This has quickly become one of my favorite instant pot recipes. My toddler (who is very picky when it comes to meat) loves this dish. Actually, every person I’ve made this for has been delighted.
I bulk prepare the ribs by cooking each pound for 10 minutes. So, for example, if I have 8 lbs of ribs, I will cook them for 80 mins the first half and about 20 mins for the second half. Delicious! Also, if you cannot find shishito peppers, I’ve found Anaheim peppers are a nice substitute when cut into slivers. As for the spicy peppers, I’ve only ever used jalapeños.
Serve with short/medium grain white rice, and you have a tasty dinner that’s sure to impress anyone!
JinJoo says
Wow! Your toddler definitely has adult taste buds!! That’s amazing. And yes, Annaheim peppers are great substitute. Don’t you just love it! If my husband wasn’t allergic to pork, I would make this every week! Also, thanks for the 5 star rating!!
Diana Hanson says
Hello JinJoo,
I’m so glad you have Instant Pot recipes. There are days I just don’t want to stand at a stove cooking. As always your stories and recipes are wonderful. I was wondering if you plan on adding sous vide cooking to your blog. I recently made a modified version of your chicken bulgogi. I did a sous vide with the chicken garlic, ginger and black pepper for 90 minutes ( the say not to use salty or acidic marinades as it causes the meat to tighten, defeating the purpose of cooking sous vide). I then sauteed the chicken in the marinade and everyone raved the taste and tenderness.
Please continue with you wonderful stories and recipes.
Kind regards,
Diana
JinJoo says
Oh wow – I am so happy that you tried sous vide with my marinade. I have been thinking about it but haven’t really gotten myself to get into it but reading your comment now gives me the urge to try. Thank you so much for sharing your experience and your kind comments about my stories. I love it when my readers tell me they enjoy my stories… 😉 Have a great weekend!
Jessica says
Is it doable with tofu?
JinJoo says
I have not tried it but I’m sure it’s doable with tofu. And for that I don’t think you even need an IP. You can just cook the tofu with the sauce and peppers. https://kimchimari.com/tofu-braised-in-soy-mirin-sauce-dooboo-jorim-%EB%91%90%EB%B6%80%EC%A1%B0%EB%A6%BC/ is a recipe that cooked tofu in sauce. You may just need to do the same thing but use this sauce instead. Tofu should be bigger pieces though since the spicy pork recipe’s sauce is quite salty and strong to work with the pork. Good luck!