From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Type | Sandwich |
|---|---|
| Place of origin | Macau |
| Main ingredients | Piggy bun, pork chop |
| Pork chop bun | |||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chinese | 豬扒包 | ||||||||||
| |||||||||||
A pork chop bun is a well-known snack in Macau, and has been described as a Macau specialty. [1] The dish was developed in Macau during the mid-20th century, reflecting the region’s history as a meeting point between Chinese and Portuguese culinary traditions. The dish is widely believed to have been inspired by the Portuguese bifana, a pork sandwich introduced during the colonial period, and later adapted using local ingredients and preparation methods.[2] One of the most famous vendors associated with popularizing the snack is Tai Lei Loi Kei, a Macau eatery established in 1968 that is often credited with helping establish the pork chop bun as a regional specialty.[3]
Over time, the pork chop bun became one of Macau’s most recognizable street foods and a symbol of the territory’s fusion cuisine, which combines Cantonese culinary traditions with European influences resulting from centuries of Portuguese presence.[4]
The bun (locally called a "piggy bun") is extremely crisp outside and very soft inside.[5] A fried pork chop is placed in the bun[5] horizontally. The pork chop bun has been described as "the Macanese version of a hamburger."[6]