Garlicky Pan-fried Pork Steaks Recipe (Thit Cot-let Chien) - Viet World Kitchen (2024)

By Andrea Nguyen

My mom reads this blog and loves to come up with ideas for cool content. This weekend when I visited my parents, she showed me her new twist on one of my childhood favorites: pan-fried pork steaks full of garlicky goodness. It’s a dead simple recipe that reflects Vietnamese-French cooking. Just note the Vietnamese name: thit (meat) cot-let (cutlet/pork chop) chien (fried).

The difference between what I grew up eating and what my mom served the other night is that instead of using dry thin pork chops, my mom now prefers end-pieces of pork loin. She buys them in bulk from Smart & Final for a good deal. They are a pork processing byproduct. She loves it and stands by her pork choice. Would you mess with this woman?

That cut of pork has a moderate amount of fat and lots of flavor. It’s tastier than the pork chops of my youth. All my mom did was defrost the pork (remember, she loves to freeze things) and then used the spine of a cleaver to lightly pound and tenderize the meat, which she cut up into pieces about the size of the palm of her hand. Then she generously seasoned it with minced garlic, salt and pepper.

My parents had a packed social schedule that day and didn’t get home till 5:30pm. Given that, mom prepped the pork the night before and refrigerated it. (You can marinate the meat for an hour at room temperature, if you like.) She let the meat sit at room temperature for about 45 minutes to take some of the chill off.

Then she coated each one in plain breadcrumbs (nothing fancy like panko) and pan-fried the pork steaks in a skillet on her outdoor stove. She loves her patio set up and does most of her cooking there where there’s an ocean breeze and she can ‘communicate’ with the ingredients. It’s a bit like being in Vietnam.

Mom used medium-hot heat and made sure there was enough oil to cover the bottom of the large skillet at all times. Each piece took about 5 minutes to cook, and got flipped over midway. She had to add oil as she fried because she cooked about 5 pounds of meat. Occasionally she would scoop some of the overly fried bits out of the skillet to clean it out.

The result was heavenly. The outside was slightly crisp and the meat inside was succulent and savory. I would have eaten a lot more had there not been so much other food on the table.

When making this simple pork, you don’t have to shop at Smart & Final for the meat. Boneless pork shoulder steaks would be fine. Or, cut pieces from the more marbly end of a pork loin.

We eat these pork chops with fork and knife. It’s one of the few Vietnamese dishes where each guest gets his/her personal slab of meat. Nevertheless, I noticed that everyone at the table – my mom, dad, husband and me – sliced up their entire pieces of pork before any was eaten. Feel free to dip the pork in a bit of chile garlic sauce for some heat.

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Jesse

    I don't see an ingredient list? I must make this...MUST!

  2. Dave Weinstein

    It's worth noting that Pork "Country Style Ribs" are just Pork Shoulder.

  3. twitter.com/aqnguyen

    @Jesse: For my mom's pan-fried pork steaks, I italicized the ingredients and instructions: pork, garlic, salt and pepper, bread crumbs and oil. Medium-high heat. Keep the pork about 3/8" thick. That is really all there is to it!

  4. Jai

    No, I would not want to mess with Mom... What a simple, delicious recipe. Keywords: pork, garlic, fried. I would definitely go for the chile garlic sauce.

  5. Rena Takahashi

    Thanks - that looks lovely. So simple and I like how it can be prepared ahead of time. Your mom's neighbors must go craaaazy with the delicious smells and sounds of cooking food next door. mmmmm!

  6. twitter.com/aqnguyen

    My mom loves cooking on her outdoor cooktop. It's fun to gather around it and chat with her or cook together. There's more space to freely move about. I've never thought of what the neighbors must smell but they must get quite a nose full of food fragrances!

  7. 4gb sd card

    Your recipe looks awesome,i had never eat such type of recipe just note down the recipe.Keen to make and invite mine friends.

  8. Mytah

    Sounds MMMMM. Thats the nice thing about most gas grills these days, they have a side burner for just this type of cooking. Cooking outside is the best IMO
    I am still trying to figure out what cut of meat you all are referring to though :/

  9. Thuy

    At first, I thought you were trying to pull a fast one by offering some strange cut of an endangered species of Californian wildlife called "cot-let" even though the English title said pork. LOL
    My parents make something similiar to this minus the breadcrumbs. They bread it with seasoned all purpose flour.

  10. Sohbet Et

    Oh my God, what this site is a great site that I like you so much beautiful old library with a 5-6site that yours is the best we can say. You have added many wonderful articles and your homepage is pretty high on the next page prli prleri so good that a good site

  11. Yen

    Wouldn't the cot-let be the Vietnamese derivation of the French cotelette for "chop"? Vietnamese have quite a few
    French derived nouns, such as xa-phong for savon (soap)!
    Anyway, thanks for a well-remembered dish.

  12. twitter.com/aqnguyen

    @Yen: You're so right. Cot-let is the Viet bastardization of French cotelette. Glad you like my Mom's pork chop recipe.

  13. Sayrah

    I love dishes like this that are perfect with any cuisine. The universal appeal of garlicy breaded fried meat is a beautiful thing.

  14. moowiesqrd

    My mom makes a version of these and they're true comfort food. A little jasmine rice on the side and it's a meal from my childhood right there.

  15. Canada Goose

    Two heads are better than one.

  16. marlon

    What a simple, delicious recipe. Thats the nice thing about most gas grills these days, they have a side burner for just this type of cooking.

Garlicky Pan-fried Pork Steaks Recipe (Thit Cot-let Chien) - Viet World Kitchen (2024)
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