A real-deal dan dan noodle recipe that stays true to the authentic Sichuan flavor. This post covers all the key ingredients and includes a super rich and balanced sauce to recreate the classic dish that tastes like China.
Dan dan Noodles is such a classic dish that is really worth the effort to master. I’ve been improving the recipe since I first published it back in 2014, and this is the third version.
Go straight to the recipe directly if you’re familiar with the dish. If you’re new to Chinese food, make sure you browse through the post to learn about the ingredients and cooking tips.
What are Dan Dan Noodles?
Dan Dan Noodles (担担面, dan dan mian) are one of the most famous of Sichuan street foods. The freshly boiled thin noodles are served in a savory, spicy sauce topped with crispy pork and peanut flakes. Simply stir everything together with a pair of chopsticks to coat the noodles with a bit of everything and slurp! The numbing, smoky, spicy sauce will shock your taste buds, leaving you craving for more.
When you go into different restaurants, you’ll find each chef has their own interpretation on dan dan noodles.
In Sichuan restaurants in China, the dan dan noodle dish is more of a snack than a main and is usually served in a small bowl. The noodles are mostly immersed in a thick red broth made with chili oil, with a small amount of pork on top. The dish can sometimes be more soupy and very spicy, but it depends on the chef.
After the dish was introduced in the US, it was transformed and now looks more like a pasta dish — boiled noodles with a meat sauce on top. Sometimes the sauce is more sweet and sour than spicy, almost like a General Tso stir fry (e.g. the Dan dan noodles at Pei Wei). Sometimes the chef will mix Chinese sesame paste into the chili oil to make the sauce creamier and mellow out the spiciness.
My own interpretation of dan dan noodles
When I make dan dan noodles at home, I use an approach that is 80% true to the original version from Sichuan. You get the ultra-umami, spicy and numbing-ness coming from the fried pork, pickled mustard greens, homemade chili oil, and Sichuan peppercorns. But I also mix in some sesame paste to make the sauce creamier and more appealing to anyone who prefers milder food.
Key ingredients
Sui Mi Ya Cai – or preserved mustard green
Sui Mi Ya Cai (碎米芽菜) is a must-have ingredient if you want to call a dish dan dan noodles in China. It is a type of cardamine bean sprout that is native to Sichuan. It is dried, flavored with sugar and spices, and fermented. The end result is a dark brown pickle that has a crunchy texture and a one-of-a-kind taste — a bit sweet, salty, and savory, with an earthy umami.
It can be tricky to find Sui Mi Ya Cai, since it’s a specialty ingredient, even in China. You can usually find it in the un-refrigerated section of the Asian supermarket with the pickles. If you do not live near an Asian market you can also purchase it on Amazon.
NOTE: It’s totally possible to create a delicious bowl of dan dan noodles without this ingredient.
Homemade chili oil
Chili oil is a staple in every family household in Sichuan and the homemade version is a must. It is the main ingredient in dan dan noodles and I highly recommend you make your own. Making chili oil might look daunting at first, but trust me, it only takes 5 minutes. Check out this post to learn how.
NOTE: to anyone who prefers not to eat spicy food — you will still benefit from the homemade chili oil. When you’re making the noodle sauce, you can add a small amount of chili oil to infuse aroma and smokiness; your dish won’t end up very spicy.
Chinese sesame paste
Chinese sesame paste (芝麻酱, zhi ma jiang) is a thick paste made from toasted sesame seeds. Although a lot of original Sichuan dan dan noodle recipes do not contain this ingredient, I prefer to use it to make the sauce creamier. It also balances the spiciness to round out the flavor. It adds great umami too, so your sauce will still taste great if you don’t want to add too much chili oil.
You can find Chinese sesame paste in most Asian grocery stores, or purchase it online. I prefer the sesame paste made with 100% sesame seeds, which has a better taste. You can also find cheaper sesame pastes made from a blend of sesame and peanuts.
NOTE: Chinese sesame paste tastes VERY different from tahini. Do not use tahini as an alternative. If you don’t want to purchase Chinese sesame paste, you can also use natural peanut butter with a few teaspoons of sesame oil mixed in.
Cooking notes
What type of noodles to use
Dan dan noodles usually use the thin type of wheat noodles. Although it’s usually just a tad thicker than somen noodles. If you’re lucky, you might be able to find the semi-fresh Dan Dan noodles in the refrigerated section in an Asian market. Or you can use any type of dried noodle that is made with wheat and on the thin side.
How to mix the sauce properly
If this is your first time cooking with Chinese sesame paste, you will usually find it is separated into oil on top and thick paste underneath. To make it easy to use, stir the sesame paste thoroughly in the jar to incorporate the oil with the paste. Without this step, you will find the sesame paste very thin on the top of your jar and very dry on the bottom.
Sesame paste has a tendency to thicken when you stir in the liquid. The best way to mix the sauce is to add the sesame paste first, then mix in the liquid ingredients little by little. Whisk the mixture with a pair of chopsticks (or a spoon) until the solid paste is fully blended with the liquid. Then add more liquid and repeat, so everything will dissolve evenly.
How to fry the pork properly
To properly prepare the pork for dan dan Noodles, you’ll need to “overcook” the pork.
Use medium-high heat to cook brown surface first, then turn to medium heat to let it roast until the liquid in the meat is fully released and evaporated.
In the end you will have dark-brown colored pork without adding any soy sauce. The pork bits will be a bit chewy and have an almost-crispy texture when hot.
The best workflow
The ingredient list for dan dan noodles might look overwhelming,. The best approach is to get organized and cook one component at a time.
The best workflow is:
- Chop and prep all the vegetables and aromatics
- Mix the sauce (and make chili oil if needed) – this can be prepared ahead
- Cook the pork – Can be prepared ahead
- Boil the noodles
- Use the noodle-boiling water to quickly blanch the vegetables
- Serve everything family-style, so everyone can assemble their noodles the way they like
If you’re preparing this dish for a party, I highly recommend you prepare the sauce and the pork ahead of time. They will stay good in the fridge for a couple of days. Simply boil the noodles and heat up the pork in the microwave right before serving.
To assemble dan dan noodles like a local
To assemble dan dan noodles like a Chinese street vendor:
- Pour some sauce in a small bowl and chili oil according to your taste
- Add the noodles
- Top with minced pork, green veggies, crushed peanuts, and green onions
- Mix and enjoy!
More Sichuan food recipes
- Mapo Tofu
- Sichuan Eggplant Stir Fry
- Dry Fried Green Beans
- Sichuan Mala Chicken
- Sichuan Spicy Wonton in Red Oil
If you give this recipe a try, let us know! Leave a comment, rate it (once you’ve tried it), take a picture and tag it @omnivorescookbook on Instagram! I’d love to see what you come up with.
Dan Dan Noodles (担担面)
Ingredients
Noodle sauce
- 1/3 cup Chinese sesame paste (or unsweetened natural peanut butter)
- 1/3 cup light soy sauce (or soy sauce)
- 1/4 cup Chinkiang vinegar
- 4 cloves garlic , finely minced
- 2 green onion , finely minced
- 2 tablespoons honey (or agave syrup)
- 1/2 to 1 teaspoon Sichuan peppercorns , toasted and grounded (*footnote 2)
Pork topping
- 1 tablespoon peanut oil (or vegetable oil)
- 1 lb (450 g) ground pork
- 1 tablespoon minced ginger
- 2 green onions , chopped
- 1 1/2 tablespoons fermented black beans , rinsed and chopped
- 1/2 cup Sui Mi Ya Cai (Sichuan preserved mustard greens)
- 2 tablespoons Shaoxing wine (or dry sherry)
- 1/2 teaspoon sugar
To assemble
- 1/3 cup roasted peanuts , crushed
- 14 oz (400 g) Dan Dan noodles (or thin wheat noodles)
- 1 small batch leafy green vegetables , roughly chopped (spinach, choy sum, baby bok choy etc.)
- Homemade chili oil , to taste (*footnote 1)
Instructions
Prepare sauce
- Whisk the sesame paste and light soy sauce together in a bowl until fully incorporated. Add the Chinkiang vinegar. Continue stirring until mixed. Then mix in the garlic, green onion, honey, and Sichuan peppercorns.
Prepare the pork topping
- Heat the oil in a large nonstick skillet over medium-high heat until hot. Add the pork. Cook and stir until the surface is lightly browned.
- Turn to medium heat. Add the ginger, green onion, fermented black beans, Sui Mi Ya Cai, cooking wine, and sugar. Cook and chop the pork into small pieces, until all the liquid has evaporated and the pork turns a dark brown color. Transfer to a bowl and set aside.
Prepare the noodles
- Cook the noodles according to instructions.
- Briefly blanch the leafy green vegetables, drain, and set aside.
To assemble the noodle bowls
- For each noodle bowl, add 1/4 cup of noodle sauce. Add the chili oil according to your taste. Add some noodles, then top with a few spoonfuls of the cooked pork and green veggies. Garnish with peanut crumbles and chopped green onion. Sprinkle with a pinch of toasted ground Sichuan peppercorn, if you like the numbing taste.
- Serve hot or cold.
Notes
Nutrition
The recipe was originally published by Feb. 26, 2015 and updated on Apr. 27, 2017.
I love dan dan noodles but have never tried making them. What kind of spicy sauce do you recommend? Would sriracha or garlic chili sauce work?
Hi Karen, for the the spicy sauce, I used the homemade one and you could check it here (The recipe called “spicy sauce”). I never tried to cook it with Sriracha, but I think the result will be quite different. You could purchase Chinese chili oil, also calls red oil, in China town. But I highly recommend make it at home, because the taste will be much better for freshly made chili oil, and it’s quite easy to cook.
I have never had dan dan noodles, but I can inhale a bowl of it right now. It looks so good!
Oh Maggie, you’re singing to my heart! I love dan dan noodles, and your recipe looks absolutely amazing! I wish I had a big bowl of this right now! I can’t wait to get back home (still traveling in Europe) and make this dish!
I haven’t tried dan dan noodles, but I feel like I’m missing out! Looks delicious, great flavor, I love the sauce!!!
Hi, Maggie! I am a fan of Dan Dan Noodles, but I have been making it with a jarred sauce, mixed with pork. Not exactly authentic! Your version looks much better, and the tip about using the noodle cooking water is genius! Can’t wait to try your recipe!
I’m so glad to hear you are interested in trying out this recipe! It takes a bit more time than using jarred sauce, but if you already have some chili oil (I always do, because they stay forever in the fridge), it will be super simply to make these noodles.
Happy cooking and let me know how the dish turns out 🙂
I tried this Dan Dan Noodle recipe today. I used fresh noodles instead of the dried–I found the boiling water and noodles to be very starchy. Should I have rinsed them? and used fresh boiling water with the chili sauce? Also, how do you keep your noodles from sticking together?
I made this recipe this morning (with the fresh chili oil) and it was DELICIOUS!! I was worried the chili oil would be harder than it actually was – it’s fairly simple except I wasn’t sure at first what to use for chili flakes. I ended up putting some Tien Tsin peppers in a food processor to ground them up. I also bought frozen noodles from a Chinese grocery nearby. I haven’t had a bowl of noodles like this since I left China- awesome!!
Thank you for the recipe!
Hey Maggie! 🙂 I’ve been meaning to make this recipe for ages – it looks so good. A couple of questions: Do you store your homemade chili oil in the fridge? I see some Dan Dan Noodle recipes that call for pickled mustard greens – are you familiar with them? Thanks friend!
Hi Marissa, happy to see you here! To answer your questions, yes, I do store my chili oil in the fridge. You don’t have to if you make a small batch and use them fast. But storing it in the fridge will prevent it from getting rancid much longer. As for mustard greens, yes, the authentic dish does use it for topping. You can get it in Asian market. It is fermented mustard greens, basically a pickle. The Asian market here is too small and I couldn’t find it at the time, so I skipped it in this recipe.
Happy cooking and let me know how the dish turns out 🙂
Thanks, Maggie! I got a bunch of mustard greens in my CSA share yesterday. I think I’ll try pickling them myself. To use them in this recipe, when would a you add them in and about how much? Thanks for your help! So excited to try this!
Hi Marissa, you can use this recipe to make the pickle: http://www.chinasichuanfood.com/pickled-mustard-green-recipe/
Once you finished making the noodles, simply chop a tablespoon pickled mustard greens and top them with the minced pork.
Hope your dish turns out great!
Thanks so much, Maggie! xo
Made this twice now and it’s turned out very well. Used frozen Japanese udon noodles which seemed to work well, but the quantity of liquid seemed a little bit high (“fill bowl until almost covering noodles”). I ended up just adding more chili oil though, and it worked out. Maybe the udon noodles don’t absorb as much liquid as others.
Anyway, very delicious – thanks for this recipe.
Hi Robin, I’m glad to hear you enjoyed the dish! I never used frozen udon noodles for this one yet, but I think it will work. The thin noodles I used absorb tons of water, so I ended adding more. If it does not work for your noodles, do try adding less soup the next time.
Hope you have a great week ahead 🙂
Love the pictures and love this recipe. This looks so great and I can’t wait to give it a try at home
These noodles look incredible! It looks like the kind of dish I would order off a menu in an instant, but I would never dream of making at home. So thank you for the recipe.
My girls is from Hunan. We love spicy in our house!
This recipe sounds amazing
I make your dan dan recipe overtime and love it. It is similar to the other guys (and I love all these recipes out there, not downing anyone) but yours for some reason is just more fitting to my family. Thank you for sharing and allowing all to explore different foods at home!
This recipe seems to call for about 4 fluid oz of “stuff” (soy sauce, vinegar, honey, sesame paste) and then 2/3 – 1 CUP of chili oil. From the appearance of this pictures, perhaps this should be 2/3 – 1 TABLESPOON? Or did you really mean “cup”? With 4 times as much chili oil as sesame paste, I’m pretty sure that I couldn’t even taste the sesame flavor.
Hi John, yes I did mean cup. The oil always sinks to the bottom of the bowl, so it’s not that obvious in the photo. The authentic Sichuan version uses chili oil as a main ingredient in the sauce. Since you’ll be making the oil fresh, the dish will taste very fragrant. Although it’s totally fine to add less chili oil if the spicy flavor does not appeal to you. In this case, I suggest you mix the sauce without the chili oil first, then you can try to add the oil into single serving bowls to your taste.
Ayyye. I desperately want to make this but I have access to so few of the ingredients… frustration!
Just found your blog by the way. So generous, interesting, rich and thorough! The mooncakes… I’m hooked, thank you for this beautiful material you’re gifting us with.
Hi Elisa, thanks so much for the kind words. Yes the Dan Dan noodles require a LOT of special ingredients. If you do not have an Asian market nearby, you can get most of the stuffs on Amazon and super fresh Sichuan peppercorns from The Mala Market. Hope you can manage to source all the ingredients and make the noodles. They are really good 🙂
LOVED these noodles!!!. Used peanut butter instead of sesame paste and omitted the mustard greens. Still delicious!
I used Lao Gan Ma chili oil and the whole thing tasted divine! My husband and I ate way too much of it just now. Thank you for sharing!
Hi Jen, I’m so happy to hear you tried the recipe and enjoyed the dish! OMG adding Lao Gan Ma chili oil will definitely make the dish addictive! I won’t able stop eating if I do that 😛 Thanks for taking time to leave a comment 🙂
Hi! Can I make this with beef? If so, what modifications would I need to make?
Thanks!
Hi Nada, yes you can make it with beef and no modifications are needed. I’ve done it in the past and it always turns out great.
Happy cooking and let me know how the dish turns out! 🙂
Any tips on how to make the beef juicy and not dry?
Thanks!
The best way is to use a heavy and large pan and heat the pan to really hot before adding the beef. Also, do not move the beef for 30 seconds to a minute once you add it, so the pan will heat up again. Try to break apart the ground meat without stirring too much. The higher heat the pan gets, the quicker the beef browns without losing all the juice and get steamed. I also found adding some cornstarch and cooking wine to the ground meat (1 tablespoon each for 1 lbs beef) will help to generate a tender result.
Hi Maggie, This was delicious!!! We used to live in Hong Kong and absolutely loved the dan dan mien at Crystal Jade. We’ve now moved back home to the states and have not found anything like it. Every time we find “dan dan noodles” on a menu, we try it and it is just never the same. You are right, chefs all have their different versions, but yours comes pretty close to our favorite at Crystal Jade. We made it tonight and were all delighted by how it turned out. Thank you so much!! This is a keeper!!
I was looking for a recipe to replicate a fantastic dish that I tried while travelling in China, this looked the closest. Your recipe was delicious and looked absolutely beautiful on the plate, it will be a regular from now on. Thanks so much for sharing it.
I absolutely love this recipe, however, I find it hard to get hold of Sui Mi Ya Cai. Is there an alternative I can use?
Thanks for another great recipe.
I hate using the home-made chili oil as it always makes everything slippery when doing the dishes. But who am I to nitpick on such a thing. When crushing the dried Sichuan peppers I still struggle a little bit getting good flakes. But all in all I am happy with how the Dan Dan Noodles turned out.
I also must say I love it that you also add Northern Chinese recipes those are the ones I’ll really start gunning for.
Hi! I tried it today after sourcing some of the items I am not familiar with me or not available in the regular supermarket like sui mi ya cai, chinkiang vinegar, shaoxing wine and sichuan peppercorns. 😊 I used peanut butter instead of sesame paste, I just added sesame oil instead and powdered toasted sesame seeds for added flavor, I also used minced beef. over all it was soooo goood! I have been wanting to do this for a long time. I love the kick from the sichuan peppercorn, the crunch from sui mi ya cai and crispy minced beef and the flavor of black vinegar. it an explosion of flavor in my mouth. I’m absolutely gonna make it again.
love from Philippines. ❤️😊
Hello! I’m vegetarian. Have you tried making this recipe with tofu or tempeh? If love any advice you have!
Hi Dawn, I’d love to make a vegetarian version of this recipe. Will add it to my list and release the recipe in my newsletter.
Hi Maggie! This looks great! Do you have a link to the original post that you made of this recipe? I am interested to see the difference between the two!
Warmest Wishes
I love this recipe. I’ve used variations on two Dan Dan noodle recipes in Fuchsia Dunlop’s book “land of plenty” but I think yours is tops (although this was the first time I was able to find fermented mustard greens in our local Asian market). I forget to get fermented black beans so I used mustard in chili oil instead. I’m sure the black beans add a wonderful complexity to the flavours so I’ll be making this again soon. I also mixed the chicken stock and noodle sauce together to assemble instead of mixing in the individual bowls and that worked fine.
Instead of pork, I’ve used mushrooms to make vegetarian Dan Dan noodles and that was good (but I prefer pork).
I wasn’t able to find the right kind of preserved mustard at my local Asian market, but otherwise followed the recipe as written. It was fantastic. I’ll look for the Sichuan preserved mustard for the next time–and there will definitely be a next time.
A new favorite – absolutely delicious and easy to do as well!
Can’t thank you enough for showing us your recipes – especially when there is no real asian takeaway in the Austrian mountains.
Looking forward to trying the next recipe soon!
Growing up in Hong Kong, my favourite dish when I ate out was this. I swapped out the pork for tofu as I’m vegan, and it was absolutely spot on. Really impressed, my family were also delighted! Tastes like home!
Fantastic recipe. Found it from a google search and glad I went with you. Simple to make but so blooming tasty. Definitely on the repeatable dish list. Three thumbs up.
I loved your recipe, they are really good. Appreciate your clear explanation, teaching steps by steps which is so wonderful for beginner to start off. Thank you very much.
We tried the more soupy version of this dish recently but I’m keen to try your recipe as it looks absolutely mouthwatering! I love the sound of the more drier-style sauce, can almost taste it now. Also I’m loving cooking more with Sichuan peppercorns. 🙂
Was so excited about making this recipe…even managed to get all the obscure ingredients . It was very delicious, although my sauce seemed very thick, even after I added some noodle water….so I didn’t quite get the slurp I was hoping for….will adjust next time…xx
Wow. Just Wow. Dan Dan noodles are one of my favorite restaurant dishes – and hard to come by where I live in Europe. This recipe just nailed it – relatively easy to make and so so good. As I said to my wife after my first bite – “everything about this is exactly how I want it to be.” I can’t wait to make this again. Thanks for the great recipe!
I got here through the link from sui mi ya Cai. It is for vegan Dan Dan noodles. How can it be vegan if you use pork? BTW we do not eat pork. I love your recipes that do not use that meat.
I’m afraid it’s a wrong link! Sorry about that. This is the vegan dan dan noodle: https://omnivorescookbook.com/vegan-dan-dan-noodles/
Will sesame sauce work on this recipe? Found this brand called mizkan sesame sauce. I’m based in Singapore and for some weird reason I can’t find sesame paste here.
Thanks
I would use unsweetened peanut butter to replace the sesame paste.
If you cannot find it, the sesame sauce might work but you need to adjust other ingredients (namely soy sauce and vinegar), so the sauce won’t taste too salty.
Love all the recipes and this one has been a hit with myself and for others! It’s one of my friends favourite dishes and we were glad to have found a good recipe.
I miss China and the food so this blog was a great find!
Made it a few times now, with different noodles and different proteins and it’s very forgiving as long as you get the delicious base correct.
Just made this today and it turned out amazing! Thank you so much for this lovely recipe. I normally get my fix at Malaysia but lately the borders have been closed so I can’t. It’s also a pretty expensive dish where I stay so I’m so happy to finally nail this, after my first try! I did my best to get all the ingredients. I couldn’t find the preserved mustard greens but I found a pretty similar preserved vegetable. It tasted just fine so I guess it’s all good!
Thanks so much once again 🙂
Maggie,
I note that the most recent link you posted on your newsletter points to the 2017 recipe, not the 3/2020 revision.
Bill Zigrang
I updated the recipe so it’s the one from 2017 with minor adjustment (mostly new photos).
Made this today with some small modifications, and loved it! Dan Dan noodles are one of my favorite dishes, so I’m so happy to have a reliable method for them.
My changes:
– omitted mustard greens (didn’t have on hand – will def look for them next time I’m at an Asian market, there are plenty of them nearby)
– used frozen udon noodles (again, had on hand, closest thing in my pantry to hand pulled noodles for texture)
– black bean paste instead of black beans (again, what I had). Might try actual fermented black beans in future after this jar is done.
– I did use homemade chili oil, and so omitted the Sichuan peppercorns (the oil already has a good amount in it).
I made a single serving and wound up using too much sesame paste, but I’m still VERY happy with the results! Also, gotta say that I love your website and have been using it for many Chinese home recipes 🙂
Hi Emily, thanks so much for leaving such a thorough review! All those changes you made totally make sense and I think I’d do the same if I do not have access to all the ingredients. Can’t wait to hear what you’ll cook the next 🙂
We have tried a few Dan Dan noodle recipes and yours has proven to be the closest to the Dan Dan at our favourite hand made noodle shop ( too far to get delivery during Covid). We follow the technique and ingredients as described. We subbed a combination of unsalted peanut butter and sesame oil for the Chinese sesame paste as you had suggested, reduced the ground pork mixture by 1/2 to suit our taste, and use locally made fresh noodles we keep in our freezer. It is indulgent but healthier than most take out. One of the few dishes for which I can convince my husband to put down the take-out menus on a Friday night. Thank you!
Thanks for leaving a thorough review and I’m glad to hear that you and your husband both enjoyed the dish! All the modifications sound good to me! The original dish uses very little pork, but I increased the amount to make it a more prominent meal. I thinking cutting it to half makes it more authentic 🙂 Happy cooking and can’t wait to hear what you’ll cook the next!
This recipe is very “rich” in flavor. I LOVE it and have made it a few times already! The recommendation of using peanut butter in place of the sesame paste was much appreciated – not many markets near me and it was sold out online. I used my own homemade noodles the last time I made this and everyone was very impressed. The Mala Market Sichuan peppercorns also make a HUGE difference in getting that amazing “mala” flavor.
Absolutely mind blowing! Your entire site should be winning awards. Your recipes are wonderful beyond words. I can’t wait to go to my favorite Asian grocer and get all the ingredients to make some of your recipes that I haven’t tried yet. Enjoy your videos too.
Wow. This is fabulous! Could tahini be used instead of the Chinese sesame paste, or is it truly different cause the seeds are roasted first? I have all of the other ingredients except for the mustard greens. I made chili oil a while back and am almost out! Used it for a Chinese hot pot a couple times recently. Such a great thing to have around.
Lovely lovely recipe. Super easy to follow and a total keeper
Drool! I have been making versions of Dan Dan Noodles for yrs! It is just so super delicious in my tummy! I love the ways you combine the ingredients & it tastes so good like your making this dish is your super power!!! THANKS!!!
I loved this recipe ! I switched the meat for dried shitake and it was delicious 😀
Delicious! I made this last night and I can’t believe how well it turned out. I didn’t have fermented black beans, so I used Pixian bean paste, but only a little under a tbsp, since it’s so salty and had some chili oil incorporated. I also used plain old spaghetti noodles, but they did the trick. I would recommend even more ground toasted sichuan peppercorn as well, since I didn’t get any numbing sensation from the recommended amount (though I may be desensitized to it at this point).
Making this tonight using smooth peant butter with added sesame oil
Great recipe! I substitued spinach for the mustard greens and bacon for the ground pork, it was still heavenly, and gets hotter as you get to the bottom of the bowl!
My friends and I absolutely loved this recipe.
Have you heard from anyone who has made this recipe using zoodles (zucchini noodles)? We’ve made some other Asian dishes replacing egg and wheat noodles with zoodles and been happy with the results.
I haven’t but I think it will work out well since the sauce is very rich and goes great with vegetables.
We are ordering the special ingredients you describe in your write up before beginning this culinary experiment. Will be reporting back with our review.
Could I substitute the pork for ground chicken?
Yes you totally can!
Thank you so much for sharing this delicious recipe Maggie. It was my first try at Sichuan cuisine and it turned out delicious with all your tips/instructions. Looking forward to try all the other recipes. I’m so grateful that I found your website.
The sauce is too salty. The preserved mustard greens are salty enough. I think I will omit the thin soy sauce.
I made this tonight for dinner and it was delicious!! I didn’t have any sesame paste so I used black sesame paste which tasted just as good. Thanks for the easy to follow recipe!!
I have made this delicious bowl of noodles 3 times now, and I expect I’ll make it a couple more times this week. It’s SOO good! Great job Maggie. The noodle sauce is packed with flavor and tastes amazing with the homemade chili oil. I had leftover chili oil from your Biang Biang noodle recipe, so I used that for the chili oil in the recipe. So good! I did not have Chinese sesame paste (though I ordered some from Mala Market), so I used peanut butter. Cannot wait to try it with the sesame soon!
I forgot to say – I did not have fermented black beans, so I added a tiny bit of Pixian doubanjiang. I also did not have proper dan dan noodles, so I used some other wheat noodles in my pantry that were a similar size and shape. I also used a vegan burger substitute (I think it was Beyond Meat) because that’s what I had in the freezer. Was still delicious! Thank you so much for the care you put into these recipes, I am a big fan of your blog. 🙂
What’s the weight equivalent of your ½ cup preserved mustard greens? Huge variation depending on how I chop and pack them into the measuring cup…
Sorry I don’t have the gram measurement right now, but the ones I use are finely minced type that comes in the package. If you finely mince it, you should loosely pack it in the 1/2 cup. If you’re not sure, start with less and you can always add a bit more if the pork doesn’t taste salty enough.
This recipe is dope. I make this a few times a year (last night for example), and my family loves it. I fiddle with most recipes, but follow this one exactly as written. Maggie, I LOVE your recipes!
Great recipe! Delicious! Easy to fomlow. I didnt have pork but I made it with tempeh creating a vegan version of Dan Dan noodles. I used the same method as for cooking pork to replicate the crispy texture. I’m excited to make the szceshuan oil. Finally someone has a recipe with all the components to make a rich and complex oil.
I nailed it with this recipe. My husband ranked it the top 10 dishes I’ve ever made. Thank you, Maggie!
omg this recipe came out amazinggg!! I love it so much – seriously so full of flavor. Thank you for sharing this authentic recipe! I can’t wait to make it again
I am so enjoying your recipes, Maggie. Am fortunate to live in Hong Kong so easy for me to get ingredients but wonder if tahini would be a reasonable substitute for Chinese sesame paste, as I have a big jar in the fridge.
This is our go to recipe and a household favourite!! It’s beyond delicious!!
We always double the recipe.