The Pork Knuckle Ginger Stew is a must-have postpartum dish in Cantonese culture. My dad makes this stew for all the women in our family (cousins, aunties, sisters-in-law) and most recently me after my first born. This recipe is not just a meal; it’s a ritual for recovery.

🔍 Quick Look:
- What is it? It’s a classic Cantonese postpartum dish made with pork knuckles, ginger, rice vinegar, sweetened vinegar, and eggs. This disih is traditionally prepared for new mothers in a large batch and shared with the whole family to celebrate the birth of the new baby.
- 🔥 Cook Method: Sun-dry the ginger, steam the pork knuckles then mix the dried ginger with Chinese vinegar sauce and let it rest overnight before boiling everything together. My dad likes to split this over three days to maximize flavor, but it’s totally optional if you’re on a time crunch, like most new parents.
- 👩🍳 Flavor Profile: This is opinionated and pungent in flavor, sharp from the vinegar, and spice from the ginger.
- ⭐ Difficulty: This dish is easy to make but requires time for the flavors to slowly build and deepen. It’s totally rewarding once you try it!
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Postpartum Cantonese Tradition
The Cantonese culture believes that during pregnancy and childbirth, core elements become imbalanced, making postpartum a challenging period for new mothers. That’s why the cure is not medicine, but nourishing foods like the Pork Knuckle Ginger Egg stew. Pork knuckles replenish the blood and energy lost in childbirth; ginger restores internal heat and expels “wind” from the body, and vinegar helps with the blood circulation.
Traditionally, this stew is eaten daily as part of a mother’s zuo yue zi (“sitting the month”), where the mother focuses the first month just resting and eating nourishing foods. This recipe is made in one enormous pot when the baby is born, so that the mother and close family can share throughout the first month. It truly takes a village to raise a newborn!
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Key Ingredients
Here’s a look at what you need to make this Pork Knuckle Ginger Stew. The highlights are here but the full ingredient list and quantities of each are in the recipe card.
This recipe serves 30 and requires a large pot, but you can definitely halve the portions if you can’t fit all these ingredients in your pot!
- Pork Knuckles – you won’t find these neatly packaged at a regular grocery store, so head to an Asian market like 99 Ranch or H Mart.
- Ginger – the key ingredient that gives the spicy kick; grab a bunch!
- Eggs – hard-boiled eggs go into the stew and soak up the vinegar and ginger flavor. After a day in the pot they turn a deep amber color and become one of the best parts of the dish.
- Rice Vinegar – any Asian rice vinegar will work with this dish!
- Sweetened Chinese black vinegar – the most important ingredient in this dish. My dad uses the Pearl River Bridge sweetened vinegar sauce, which you can find at your 99 Ranch. Do not substitute balsamic vinegar or regular black vinegar because the flavor profile is completely different and you’ll end up with something that isn’t this dish.

How to Make Pork Knuckle Ginger Stew
DAY 1

Step 1: Prepare the ginger by peeling the skin & letting it sunbathe overnight. This removes all the water so the spice from the ginger is extra concentrated.

Step 2: Place the pork knuckles in a bowl, and rinse with water multiple times. This will wash out all the guts and ensure your pork is extra clean.

Step 3: In a large pot, add the pork knuckles, some ginger slices (optional) and a cup of rice vinegar. Fill with water so that the pork knuckles are all covered, and bring to boil for 5 minutes.

Step 4: The pork knuckles will have a translucent color, and put them in the fridge overnight.
DAY 2
Step 5: Grab the sun-dried ginger, and chop them into chunks. Using the side of a knife, smash them into pieces. Give it a good whack!

Step 6: Pour a quarter of the Chinese vinegar sauce into a large pot along with your smashed ginger. Bring to a boil for 5 minutes, and leave the pot overnight on the counter.
DAY 3

Step 7: Take the pot from overnight and add in the pork knuckles from day 1 and all the peeled eggs (optional). Pour the remainder of the Chinese vinegar sauce.

Step 8: Bring the pot to a boil, and you’re ready to serve.
Pork Knuckle Ginger Stew FAQs
Yes, I did! But here’s the honest part. It’s not a meal you eat for pleasure. The vinegar is sharp. The ginger spice stings, and the stew is pungent and opinionated. There were days I loved it, and there were days I just ate it because my dad nagged me to. It’s a ritual of recovery, and like most rituals, the discipline is part of the medicine.
Yes, men can absolutely eat this. While it’s traditionally made as a postpartum dish, it’s really just a regular nutritious meal made with pork knuckles, ginger, vinegar, and eggs. It’s commonly enjoyed by the whole family, not just new moms because of its hearty, comforting flavor and high protein and collagen content.
Pork Knuckle Ginger Stew
Ingredients
- 5 lbs pork knuckles
- 3 lbs ginger peeled
- egg
- rice vinegar
- vinegar sweetener
Instructions
- (Day ⅓) Prepare the ginger by peeling the skin & letting it sunbathe overnight. This removes all the water so the spice from the ginger is extra concentrated.
- (Day ⅓) Place the pork knuckles in a bowl, and rinse with water multiple times. This will wash out all the guts and ensure your pork is extra clean.
- (Day ⅓) In a large pot, add the pork knuckles, some ginger slices (optional) and a cup of rice vinegar. Fill with water so that the pork knuckles are all covered, and bring to boil for 5 minutes.
- (Day ⅓) The pork knuckles will have a translucent color, and put them in the fridge overnight.
- (Day ⅔) Grab the sun-dried ginger, and chop them into chunks. Using the side of a knife, smash them into pieces. Give it a good whack!
- (Day ⅔) Pour a quarter of the Chinese vinegar sauce into a large pot along with your smashed ginger. Bring to a boil for 5 minutes, and leave the pot overnight on the counter.
- (Day 3/3) Take the pot from overnight and add in the pork knuckles from day 1 and all the peeled eggs (optional). Pour the remainder of the Chinese vinegar sauce.
- (Day 3/3) Bring the pot to a boil, and you're ready to serve.
Notes
- Sun-dry the ginger properly: Don’t skip the sun-drying step, as removing moisture concentrates the ginger’s aroma and gives the stew its signature bold, warming flavor.
- Don’t rush the steaming step: Steaming the pork knuckles with ginger and rice vinegar first builds a cleaner, richer base for the stew.
- Let the ginger-vinegar mixture rest overnight: Allowing the smashed ginger to soak in vinegar overnight is key to developing that deep, concentrated spice.









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