Chashu Pork — Ramen and Beyond
Japan — adapted from Chinese tradition; systematised in 20th century ramen culture
Chashu (Japanese char siu adapted from Chinese cha siu) refers to the slow-braised or slow-roasted pork belly or shoulder that has become the defining topping of Japanese ramen. Unlike Chinese char siu (roasted on hooks with high sugar-caramelised exterior), Japanese chashu is almost always braised/simmered in soy, sake, mirin, and sugar until silky-tender, then often rolled into a cylinder, tied with string, and sliced into rounds for presentation. The braising liquid is reduced to a tare that is itself used to season the ramen broth. Key regional variations: Fukuoka tonkotsu ramen uses very thin-sliced chashu with minimal sauce; Tokyo-style uses thick-cut belly medallions; Sapporo-style uses pork shoulder with more assertive sauce. Contemporary ramen restaurants have elevated chashu to signature dish status — sous-vide chashu at 68°C for 36 hours is the modern benchmark for silky texture.