Ají de Cerdo aka Peruvian Pork Stew is a twist on the classic chicken dish made with yellow chili peppers called ají amarillo in Spanish. It’s spicy, rich, irresistible sauce makes it a favorite in our house.
When I was growing up, my father worked/lived for many years in northern Peru so when school let out for the summer, I’d pack up and head south. While the little town didn’t have a lot to recommend it, it was an ideal place to be a free-ranging child with nothing but time on her hands! They were wonderful summers.
Daddy employed a cook named Cata who came in every morning to prepare our main meal which was served at midday. She was an older local woman who had years of experience cooking for her own family and made her living cooking for others.
One of her specialties was ají de gallina, a traditional Peruvian chicken stew served with white rice and garnished with hard-boiled eggs and black olives. It was always a good day when that was for lunch! A bad day included sweet stewed beets.
I hadn’t thought about Cata or her ají de gallina for years, when a great neighbor gave me a couple of chili pepper plants, one growing the bright yellow peppers I’d need to make it! We had been eating a lot of chicken at the time so I decided to make a variation on the classic recipe using pork instead. It was an excellent decision!
Ají de Cerdo – Peruvian Pork Stew
If you don’t have white sandwich bread, unsalted crackers or fresh breadcrumbs can be substituted. This dish calls for a specific yellow South American chili pepper. If you live in a big city then you may be able to find these in your supermarket or, failing that, you can find yellow ají paste in a jar online. Search for Inca’s Food which is a reliable brand.
Ingredients
4 slices white bread, about 3 1/2 oz or 100g
1 can (1 1/2 cups or 355ml) evaporated milk or light cream
2.2 lbs or 1 kg pork shoulder, cubed
2 tablespoons white vinegar
Fine sea salt
Freshly ground black pepper
Olive oil
4 cups or 960ml pork or chicken stock, or more as needed
4-5 yellow ají (yellow chili peppers – see note above ingredient list)
1 large onion, finely chopped
6 cloves garlic, chopped
1 oz or 28g cotija or Parmesan cheese, grated
1/4 cup or 30g pecans
To serve:
Boiled potatoes
Cooked rice
Garnish:
Hard-boiled eggs
Black olives
Method
Soak the bread in the evaporated milk or cream till it softens and gets mushy.
Season the pork shoulder chunks with the white vinegar and a good sprinkle of sea salt and freshly ground black pepper. Mix well. Set aside for 30 minutes to marinate.
In a large pan, heat a splash of olive oil and fry the pork in batches until the pieces are nicely brown, removing each batch to a big plate when it’s done.
If you can’t eat too spicy, remove the seeds from the chili peppers and mince. If you love spice like we do, leave them in.
In the now empty pork pan, add another drizzle of olive oil and fry the onion, garlic and chili peppers until soft.
Scrape them into your blender jug or a measuring vessel for a hand blender.
Add the pork back into your once again empty pan and add in the stock. Bring to a boil then simmer, covered, about 1 hour or until the pork is tender.
Add your bread mix to the onions, garlic and peppers in the blender, along with the cheese and pecans.
When the pork pieces are tender, add the smooth blender ingredients to the pork pan, adding more stock as needed to make a thick sauce.
Serve with the rice and potatoes. Decorate with a hardboiled egg half or quarter and a couple of black olives for each plate.
This is our third year to work our way through the alphabet sharing recipes with ingredients or title featuring the letter of the post so welcome to the 1st edition of Alphabet Challenge 2026, brought to you by the letter A. Many thanks to Wendy from A Day in the Life on the Farm for organizing and creating the challenge. Check out all the A recipes below:
- Ají de Cerdo - Peruvian Pork Stew from Food Lust People Love
- Aloo Bhaji & Poori from Mayuri’s Jikoni
- Amygdalopita from A Messy Kitchen
- Anday Aur Subzi Pulao from Sneha’s Recipe
- Apple Crumb Pie from A Day in the Life on the Farm
- Apple Pork Chops from Blogghetti
- Arancini from Jolene’s Recipe Journal
- Argentine-Style Burgers with Chimichurri Sauce from Karen’s Kitchen Stories
- Artichoke Spinach Rolls from Magical Ingredients
- Atchara: A Pickle from My People…and My Grandmother from Culinary Cam
- Homemade Apple & Whiskey Barbecue Sauce from Faith, Hope, Love, & Luck Survive Despite a Whiskered Accomplice
- Magic Pan Orange and Almond Salad from Palatable Pastime














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