Chongqing Grilled Fish — Wanzhou Roasted Fish
Quick Info
- Flavor
- Smoky, spicy, and deeply savory. Like a Cajun blackened fish plunged into a spicy stew — charcoal-grilled smokiness meets Sichuan málà intensity.
- Texture
- Flaky, tender fish flesh with charred edges, sitting in a bubbling tray of oil loaded with soft vegetables, crunchy bean sprouts, and tofu
- Spice Level
- 🌶️🌶️🌶️ — About cayenne pepper level — a strong, steady heat balanced by the richness of the oil and vegetables
- Temperature
- Served Hot
Ingredients
Allergens
Confirmed
Possible
These ingredients may vary by restaurant. Ask your server to confirm.
The Story
This dish comes from Wanzhou, a district in eastern Chongqing perched along the Yangtze River where fresh fish is abundant. Local cooks developed a technique of first grilling whole fish over charcoal, then placing it in a metal tray filled with spiced oil and vegetables and bringing it to the table still sizzling. It combines two Chinese cooking methods — grilling and braising — into one dramatic dish. Grilled fish restaurants exploded across China in the 2000s and remain wildly popular.
What to Expect
A metal tray arrives at your table on a portable burner, sizzling aggressively. Inside lies a whole butterflied fish that has been charcoal-grilled until smoky and charred, then submerged in a fragrant pool of spiced oil packed with vegetables. The fish flesh is tender and flaky, infused with smoky flavor from the grill and spice from the broth. Underneath the fish, you will find bean sprouts, tofu, celery, and other vegetables soaking up the incredible sauce. It is a show-stopping centerpiece dish.
Tips
You will need to choose your flavor style — málà (numbing-spicy), garlic (蒜香, suàn xiāng), or pickled pepper (泡椒, pào jiāo) are the most common. For first-timers, garlic flavor is the most approachable. Watch carefully for fish bones. The vegetables underneath the fish are often the best part, so dig down to the bottom of the tray. This is a sharing dish that feeds two to four people easily.