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Home ❯ Recipes ❯ Soups & Stocks ❯ Winter Melon Soup with Pork Ribs

Winter Melon Soup with Pork Ribs

Judy

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Judy

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Updated: 4/16/2025
Winter Melon Soup with Pork Bones

Winter melon soup is a popular home-cooked Chinese dish when winter melons are in season (late summer through fall). It’s also probably the most popular application of winter melon in China. 

Winter melon soups are often made with pork ribs, meatballs, and seafood like shrimp and clams. We have already published a meatball soup with winter melon, but today, we’re doing the simplest winter melon soup recipe with pork ribs!

What is Winter Melon? 

Winter melon is a large, mild melon used for both savory and sweet applications. It’s related to the cucumber, but has a softer texture. It’s a decent source of vitamin C and antioxidants too. 

Winter melons are high in soluble fiber, so it helps aid digestion and enhance gut health. It also helps to fight inflammation and lower cholesterol for better heart health. 

According to Traditional Chinese Medicine, it has cooling properties, promoting yin. With its cooling constitution, winter melon is known among TCM practitioners as an ingredient that rehydrates and clears away excess internal heat.

You may also see it referred to as wax gourd or ash gourd. It does have waxy skin with a glaucous look to it (like that gray-white bloom on the outside of an unwashed grape). When shopping for winter melon at the Chinese grocery store, look for a whole, firm melon that feels heavy for its size. 

Winter melon plant, thewoksoflife.com
Here’s a photo of a winter melon we grew in our garden a few years ago!

Sometimes, you can also buy winter melon that the store cuts into pieces and wraps in plastic, as they can be quite large. Just make sure the flesh is bright white and firm, since the melon doesn’t last as long once cut open.

How to Use Winter Melon

In Chinese cooking, winter melon may also be braised or used in desserts like winter melon candy, mooncake filling, and the filling for the well-known wife cake (老婆饼 – lǎopó bǐng in Mandarin or lo po baeng in Cantonese), a flaky pastry of sesame seeds and candied winter melon. (For those of you waiting on a recipe for wife cakes, we’re working on it!) 

You can also eat winter melon raw, however. So I might add it to salads (I would thinly slice them into matchsticks) or even into smoothies. I know my girls will look at me funny for that one, but I would add them to my own smoothies!

Buying Pork Ribs For Soup

For this soup, much of the pork flavor comes from the meat itself. Find meaty pork ribs on the bone. You can also use rib tips (the cartilaginous parts of the rib that butchers cut away to make St. Louis ribs).

Winter Melon Soup Recipe Instructions

Soak the ribs in a bowl of cold water for 1 hour to get rid of blood and impurities. Drain. If you don’t have time, this step isn’t strictly necessary, as you’ll be blanching them also in the next step. 

Add the ribs to a large soup pot along with enough water to cover. Bring to a boil. Simmer for 1 minute, and turn off the heat. Drain and rinse the ribs under running water, and clean your soup pot. This step is important––it keeps your broth clear and clean-tasting. 

blanching pork ribs

Put the blanched pork ribs, smashed ginger slices, and 9 cups of water back in the soup pot.

pork ribs and ginger in soup pot with water

Bring to a boil, and immediately reduce the heat down to medium-low. Cover and simmer for 90 minutes. Cantonese soups require low heat for a delicate flavor and clear broth. Check on the soup periodically to make sure it is lightly simmering, but not boiling.

Meanwhile, prepare the winter melon. Trim off the thick skin, rinse it clean, and cut it into ¼-inch thick (6mm) bite-size pieces.

trimming skin off of winter melon
winter melon pieces

After 90 minutes, use a ladle to skim off the excess grease floating at the top of the soup. Then add the winter melon and salt.

winter melon in soup pot with pork ribs

Cover and simmer for another 15 minutes, until the winter melon is just cooked through. (Don’t overcook it—it should still have some bite to it.)

Ladle full of winter melon pork rib soup

Add the white pepper and adjust the salt to taste as well. Finally, add the scallions and/or cilantro. 

scallions and cilantro added to winter melon soup

After cooking in the soup for so long, the ribs are melt-in-your-mouth tender and perfect with a little soy sauce! Serve the soup with a hot bowl of rice and a small dish of light soy sauce as a dipping sauce for the pork ribs.

winter melon soup with pork ribs

If you like this recipe and are looking for more ways to use winter melon, also check out our Winter Melon Meatball Soup with Glass Noodles!

Looking for more authentic recipes? Subscribe to our email list and be sure to follow us on Pinterest, Facebook, Instagram, and Youtube!

Recipe

Winter Melon Soup with Pork Bones
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5 from 1 vote

Winter Melon Soup with Pork Ribs

Winter melon soup with pork ribs is a popular home-cooked Chinese dish and one of the most popular ways to cook winter melon.
by: Judy
Serves: 8
Prep: 1 hour hr 10 minutes mins
Cook: 2 hours hrs 15 minutes mins
Total: 3 hours hrs 25 minutes mins

Ingredients

  • 2 pounds pork ribs or pork rib tips (cut into 1-2-inch/2.5-5cm pieces)
  • 5 slices ginger (⅛-inch thick and smashed)
  • 9 cups water (plus more for soaking and blanching the ribs)
  • 1 1/2 pounds winter melon
  • 1 1/4 teaspoon sea salt (plus more to taste)
  • white pepper (to taste)
  • 1 handful cilantro and/or scallions (chopped)
  • light soy sauce (to serve with the ribs)

Instructions

  • Soak the ribs in a bowl of cold water for 1 hour to get rid of blood and impurities. Drain. If you are strapped for time, this step isn’t strictly necessary, as you’ll be blanching them also in the next step.
  • Add the ribs to a large soup pot along with enough water to cover. Bring to a boil. Simmer for 1 minute, and turn off the heat. Drain and rinse the ribs under running water, and clean your soup pot. This step is important––it keeps your broth clear and clean-tasting.
  • Put the blanched pork ribs, smashed ginger slices, and 9 cups of water back in the soup pot. Bring to a boil, and immediately reduce the heat down to medium-low. Cover and simmer for 90 minutes. Cantonese soups require low heat for a delicate flavor and clear broth. Check on the soup periodically to make sure it is lightly simmering, but not boiling.
  • Meanwhile, prepare the winter melon: trim off the thick skin, rinse it clean, and cut it into ¼-inch thick (6mm) bite-size pieces.
  • After 90 minutes, use a ladle to skim off the excess grease floating at the top of the soup, then add the winter melon and salt. Cover and simmer for another 15 minutes, until the winter melon is just cooked through (don’t overcook it—it should still have some bite to it).
  • Add the white pepper and adjust the salt to taste as well. Finally, add the scallions and/or cilantro.
  • After cooking in the soup for so long, the ribs are melt-in-your-mouth tender and perfect with a little soy sauce! Serve the soup with a hot bowl of rice and a small dish of light soy sauce as a dipping sauce for the pork ribs.

Tips & Notes:

Nutrition info does not include light soy sauce served with the ribs.

Nutrition Facts

Calories: 230kcal (12%) Carbohydrates: 2g (1%) Protein: 13g (26%) Fat: 19g (29%) Saturated Fat: 6g (30%) Polyunsaturated Fat: 3g Monounsaturated Fat: 7g Trans Fat: 0.2g Cholesterol: 64mg (21%) Sodium: 442mg (18%) Potassium: 203mg (6%) Fiber: 0.1g Sugar: 0.03g Vitamin A: 67IU (1%) Vitamin C: 1mg (1%) Calcium: 47mg (5%) Iron: 1mg (6%)
Nutritional Info Disclaimer Hide Disclaimer
TheWoksofLife.com is written and produced for informational purposes only. While we do our best to provide nutritional information as a general guideline to our readers, we are not certified nutritionists, and the values provided should be considered estimates. Factors such as brands purchased, natural variations in fresh ingredients, etc. will change the nutritional information in any recipe. Various online calculators also provide different results, depending on their sources. To obtain accurate nutritional information for a recipe, use your preferred nutrition calculator to determine nutritional information with the actual ingredients and quantities used.
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Judy

About

Judy
Judy Leung is the matriarch of The Woks of Life family, working on the blog alongside husband Bill and daughters Sarah and Kaitlin. Born in Shanghai, China, she immigrated to the United States at sixteen. Fluent in both English and three Chinese dialects, she also plays the important role of researcher and menu translator! Drawing from over four decades of cooking experience and travel, Judy aims to bring Chinese culinary traditions to readers and preserve recipes that might otherwise be lost to time. Her expertise spans from Shanghainese cooking and everyday homestyle dishes to a variety of regional foodways, showcasing the depth and breadth of Chinese cuisine for a global audience. Over the last decade, she’s helped transform The Woks of Life into what Saveur Magazine has deemed “the internet’s most popular Chinese cooking blog,” co-written a New York Times bestselling cookbook, and become convinced that we will never run out of recipes to share!
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