We love Chinese food. And, living in the South, good Chinese food (like good Mexican food) is hard to come by. Don’t get me wrong, there’s good food here; the South isn’t known for awesome food for nothing. The ethnic scope of it is just limited.
I wouldn’t say Cashew Sweet and Sour Pork is Chinese so much as it is “Asian-Inspired.” I got this recipe from Cooking Light a few years ago and it’s been a staple at our house ever since. And just so you know, Cooking Light doesn’t mean Cooking Gross. I would say that some of the best recipes that I have come from Cooking Light. It’s more like Cooking Lighter.

Ingredients Needed
This is just a preview of ingredients and method, keep scrolling for full printable recipe.
Stir Fry
- Pork – Pork tenderloin, pork loin, or pork chops will all work. They key is slicing the pork nice and thin. to get your pork super thin, you’ll need to partially freeze it. When it’s semi-frozen (or mostly-frozen), you can either cut it very thinly with a sharp knife or pop it into your food processor fitted with the slicing blade. It’s like magic.
- Cooking sherry – You can find this by the condiments in your grocery store. It’s basically a very salty wine that is unfit for drinking and designed for cooking, so you don’t need to be 21 to buy it. In this recipe it helps keep the pork tender due to its acidity, but also adds a subtle depth of flavor to the finished dish. If you’d like a non alcoholic sub, I would recommend chicken broth with a splash of apple cider vinegar and a pinch of sugar. You can also sub apple juice in a pinch, but it won’t behave exactly the same.
- Cornstarch – The sliced meat gets marinated in a mixture of cooking sherry and cornstarch. The cornstarch also helps the pork stay tender. It creates a nice brown crust and helps the sauce coat the meat.
- Onions
- Fresh ginger
- Fresh garlic
- Snow peas – These are the large, flat peas you find in Asian stir-fry dishes. Feel free to sub snap peas if you’d like. Little baby snow peas are very tender and don’t need to be trimmed, but you’ll probably have some bigger ones in there. Just snap the corners off and then tug a little to get the tough string that goes along the side of the snow pea.
- Pineapple – Canned pineapple works great here, but feel free to use fresh if you have it.
- Cashews – You’ll just need a handful of cashews. Those little snack bags of nuts you often find in the checkout line in the grocery store are perfect.
- Hot rice – For serving
- Green onions – For garnish, if desired.
Sauce
- Cornstarch
- Water
- Granulated sugar
- Cider vinegar
- Soy sauce
- Ketchup


How to Make Cashew Sweet and Sour Pork
- Get everything ready that you’re going to need because this goes fast! You’ll start by thin-slicing some pork. Popping it in the freezer for a few minutes will make this easier and you can even use your food processor.
- You’ll mix up a quick sauce of cornstarch, water, sugar, vinegar, soy sauce, and ketchup and set that aside. Get all your veggies chopped and ready.
- You’ll cook up the meat, add the veggies, add the sauce, and garnish with cashews and green onions. Serve over hot rice.


Storing and Other Tips
- Store cooled leftovers in an airtight container in the fridge and enjoy within 3-4 days for best results.
- Store nuts separately to prevent them from going soft.

Frequently Asked Questions
Sure! Sirloin steak or chicken breast would be great.
Definitely. Colored peppers, mushrooms, snap peas, or edamame would be good additions.
Yes, this recipe uses corn starch as a thickener so it’s naturally gluten-free.

Cashew Sweet and Sour Pork
Ingredients
Pork and Marinade
- 1 pound pork tenderloin or boneless pork chops thinly sliced
- 1 tablespoons cooking sherry or apple juice
- 1 tablespoon cornstarch divided
Sauce
- 1 tablespoon cornstarch
- ⅓ cup water
- ¼ cup sugar
- ¼ cup cider vinegar
- 3 tablespoons soy sauce
- 3 tablespoons ketchup
Stir Fry
- 1 tablespoon oil
- ⅓ cup chopped cashews
- ¼ cup green onions
- 2 teaspoons fresh ginger minced or grated
- 2 teaspoons fresh garlic minced or pressed
- 6-8 ounces snow peas trimmed
- 1 8- ounce can pineapple chunks drained
Instructions
Pork
- Slice your pork. To get your pork super thin, you’ll need to partially freeze it. When it’s semi-frozen (or mostly-frozen), you can either cut it very thinly with a sharp knife or pop it into your food processor fitted with the slicing blade. It’s like magic.
- Combine 1 tablespoon of the cornstarch, the sherry, and the pork. Toss well. Set aside.
Prep Sauce
- Combine a tablespoon of cornstarch, water, sugar, vinegar, soy sauce, and ketchup. Stir with a whisk; make sure there are no clumps with the cornstarch. Set aside.
Prep and Cook Stir Fry
- Trim your snow peas if necessary. Little baby snow peas are very tender and don’t need to be trimmed, but you’ll probably have some bigger ones in there. Just snap the corners off and then tug a little to get the tough string that goes along the side of the snow pea.
- If you’re serving this sweet and sour pork with rice, begin cooking that so it’s ready when the pork is.
- Now collect everything that’s going into the stir fry next to the stove so you can access it easily. Once you start stir frying, things move fast!
- Heat 1-2 tablespoons of canola oil in a large frying pan or wok over medium-high heat. Add pork and stir-fry 3 minutes. Add onions, ginger, and garlic. Stir-fry 1 minute.
- Add snow peas and pineapple. Stir-fry 3 minutes more.
- Whisk sauce ingredients again and add to pan. Bring to a boil. Cook 1 minute, stirring frequently.
- Stir in cashews and serve over hot rice. Garnish with more cashews and green onions if you want.
Notes
- Nutritional information was calculated for 1/4 recipe with no rice.














Questions & Reviews
Yum! I just tried this tonight w/ chicken instead of pork though–but some of the best asian food I've had!
Hi Amy, I'm really not sure how this recipe would freeze because I've never tried it- so you may just have to experiment and let us know!
I'm new to your site, but I already love it! This pork looks wonderful and I was wondering if you have suggestions on how to prepare some of it ahead of time to freeze? Either way, I'll try it soon! Thankyou!!
BTW: made honey chicken last night and loved it!!
OMG this was so good. I just finished eating it and I'm going back for more.
made this last night for dinner and all but my picky 7 yr old loved it! My husband said it tasted like something from a good restaraunt.
Made this tonight for christmas eve dinner…absolutely scrumptious 🙂 i tried it with edamame rather than snow peas because its all i had, and still very good!
Okay, Smith Family, your comment just made my month!! 🙂
OH-MY-GOSH~!
I literally JUST finished making this… like Hubby on the way home… rice is done, kind of stuff.
I just tasted the done chicken mixture and was expecting it, for some reason… (because of past experiences with home made chinese type food) to be blahh… and taste like soy sauce and garlic in water. But I WISH I had a picture of my face when I was leaning over the kitchen, burning my mouth, for a bite. IT WAS SO GOOD! SO much FLAVOR! My hubby is going to be so PROUD of me!!!! 🙂 I am SUCH a bad dinner maker-er. And I have about 5 recipes from your site that I'm attempting to make this week, that I've already got all the ingredients for, to win back the "wife of the year award"… (okay, SO far away from that, but you know what I mean)… This was a GREAT confidence booster for me… for the rest of the week. I had to jump on here and say THANK YOU for making these recipes REAL… and easy to make and follow… Ooo, I could KISS you right now. But no time… I'm going to eat my dinner! 🙂
Yet another great recipe! With fresh peas from the garden to find new uses for, this is perfect. Thank you for sharing your talent with all of us.
I made this for dinner tonight, and it was fantastic! This is the third recipe I've made from your site (I've also tried the sweet potato fries and the honey chicken), and we've loved them all. Keep up the great work, ladies!