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My Most Popular Chinese Recipes ❤️
Tips, tricks, and recipes for perfect Chinese dishes
FREE EMAIL BONUS:
My Most Popular Chinese Recipes ❤️
Tips, tricks, and recipes for Chinese dishes
Sichuan Wok-fried Chicken
Sichuan wok-fried chicken is a spicy fried chicken dish with ginger, scallion, dried red chilies & Sichuan peppercorn. Amazing and you’ll want more.
My love affair with Sichuan food began about 2 years ago when I first visited China. Before my trip to China, the notion of trying out Sichuan food was never high on my “what-to-eat” list.
Then, when I wanted to have Chinese food, I would go for Dim Sum, Cantonese-style BBQ or seafood meals.
It all changed when I went to China and had my first real Sichuan meal in a popular restaurant called Xiao Lu Lu in Shanghai. I fell under the spell of this exquisitely flavorful Chinese regional cuisine immediately; it was indeed love at first bite.
I was marveled by the depth and the spice structure of the cooking and wished only that I’d discovered Sichuan cuisine earlier. In a way, my trip to China opened up a whole new chapter in my culinary world and gave me access to ingredients and flavors that I’ve never thought possible.
In my opinion (without sounding too cliché), Sichuan food is the new Thai, but more complex and much more explosive in flavor. It’s the epitome of the best Chinese cooking.
The secret ingredient of Sichuan food is Sichuan pepper—the medium that gives Sichuan food the staple tingly numbing effect.
Szechuan pepper exudes rich aroma and exotic scent to dishes and together with dried chili pepper, they give the Ma La (麻辣) flavor that is signature to Sichuan food.
And believe me when I say this, once you’ve tried Ma La (麻辣), there is no turning back.
One of the Sichuan dishes that I absolutely love is this Sichuan wok-fried chicken and I made it this past weekend.
This chili-laden dish was alluringly tongue-numbing, explosively fiery, and pleasantly addictive. Try this this amazing Sichuan wok-fried chicken recipe and you will never see Chinese food the same way again!
How Many Calories per Serving?
This recipe is only 423 calories per serving.
What Dishes to Serve with This Recipe?
For a wholesome meal and easy weeknight dinner, I recommend the following recipes.
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Sichuan Wok-fried Chicken
Ingredients
- 1 boneless and skinless chicken breast (cut into cubes)
- oil (for deep-frying)
- 5 slices peeled ginger
- 2 cloves garlic (peeled and sliced)
- 12 dried red chilies
- 1 tablespoon Sichuan peppercorn
- 3 tablespoons soy sauce
- 1 tablespoon Chinese cooking wine (rice wine or Shaoxing wine(preferred))
- salt to taste
- 1 stalk scallion (cut into 2-inch lengths)
Batter:
- 1 egg white
- 1/2 cup all-purpose flour (sifted)
- 1/4 cup corn starch
- 1/2 teaspoon baking powder
- 1/2 cup water (ice cold)
- 1 tablespoon oil
- 1/4 teaspoon salt
Instructions
- Combine all the ingredients in Batter, mix well. Heat up some oil for deep frying.
- Dip the chicken into the batter, shake off the excess batter and deep fry until to golden brown. Transfer out to a plate lined with paper towels.
- In a wok, heat up some oil until smoky hot. Add in the sliced ginger, garlic, and stir fry until they turn light brown. Add in the dried chilies, Sichuan peppercorns and quickly stir until you smell the spicy and fragrant aroma.
- Add in the chicken cubes, soy sauce, wine and do a final quick stir. Add salt to taste. Serve hot and garnish with the scallion. Serve immediately.
Nutrition
I love Szechuan hot and sour soup, and 干煸四å£è±†!
Simcooks – I don’t blame you…some people don’t like the Ma La flavor.
Tummythoz – I am addicted to them. I loooove the numbing tingly sensation.
Chubbypanda – Yep. I love spicy food. Period.
PE – The chicken does look like tofu on the picture! I think it’s a great idea to try with tofu…as for the tofu absorbing the heat, I think you should be fine if you coat the tofu with batter and then deep fry them.
Syren – Thanks for visiting Rasa Malaysia and thanks for your kind comment. I got the template here, but changed the code a little bit. Here is the URL for the template: http://thrbrtemplates.blogspot.com/
Ho Jiak – It wasn’t super hard, but not that easy either. You should try it out since it’s impossible to get any Szechuan food in Penang.
so many herbs and spicies, should be hard to prepare!
hi rasa malaysia, nice blog u have here…and i love ur neat, clean template! do u mind sharing where u got it?? thanks much!
This dish is on the fiery side! I love the idea though of the commenters to add eggplant. I almost thought the chicken was fried tofu at first. I might make this for my vegetarian friends using tofu instead. Would you agree? (I need to ask the cooking pro first.) It might be too hot, because the tofu would absorb all of the heat from the chilies.
Sichuan food rocks! You know we pandas like it spicy.
– Chubbypanda
Frens & I call those peppercorns ‘lil bombs’. Personally I dislike d tongue/mouth numbing feeling but was told that one can get real ‘high’ on them!
Hot hot hot! This is too spicy for me!
Shiny Blue Black – I have never tried eggplants with this…thanks for your reco. :)
Try the same thing with eggplants. it is UNBELIEVABLY good