
Vietnamese Caramelized Pork Spare Ribs (Suon Khia or Suon Ram Man) is a classic Vietnamese side dish. In this dish, the pork spare rib is slowly braised in coconut juice until fall-of-the-bone tender. The liquid is then cooked off at the end, reducing to a sweet and savory glaze.
Cut pork spare ribs into bite-sized pieces.
Clean the pork (optional but highly recommended): Fill a small pot with water (enough to cover the spare ribs when added). Add salt (1 teaspoon). Bring the water to a boil. Add pork ribs and blanch the pork for 8 minutes or until scum floats to the top. This will remove the impurities and off-smell of pork. Drain the ribs in a colander in the sink. Rinse thoroughly under cold running water. Pork ribs are now ready to be cooked.
Marinate the pork with shallots, garlic, bouillon powder, fish sauce, black pepper, and sugar (1 tablespoon) for 10 minutes.
Add 2 tablespoons of sugar directly into a medium pot over medium-high heat. Stir with a wooden spoon to prevent burning. The sugar will caramelize, turning a dark amber color. Once this happens, quickly and carefully add the marinated pork (and all the marinade juices) into the pot and stir evenly to get the amber color onto the pork. The caramelized sugar may start to clump. Do not worry. The heat will dissolve the clumps of sugar back into the pot.
Add coconut soda and water. Bring the pot to a boil. Cover the pot with a lid (a little off-center to prevent the liquid from boiling over). Reduce heat to a medium-low simmer and braise for 30 to 40 minutes. Occasionally toss the pork for even cooking. Remove lid and continue to simmer on low until the liquid evaporates off, leaving a shiny glaze on the pork.
Garnish with green onion (optional).