Pickled Vegetable Fish — Suancai Fish
Quick Info
- Flavor
- Sour and savory with mild heat. Tangy pickled mustard greens create a bright, appetizing broth that balances the richness of the fish.
- Texture
- Velvety fish slices in a tangy, slightly thick broth with soft pickled greens and crunchy glass noodles
- Spice Level
- 🌶️🌶️ — Milder than most Sichuan dishes — the tang is stronger than the heat, similar to mild buffalo sauce
- Temperature
- Served Hot
Ingredients
Allergens
Confirmed
Possible
These ingredients may vary by restaurant. Ask your server to confirm.
The Story
Originating from Chongqing’s riverside fish restaurants, this dish showcases Sichuan’s love of pickled vegetables (泡菜). The combination of sour pickled greens with fresh fish is ancient — fishermen along the Yangtze would cook their catch with whatever preserved vegetables they had on hand. The modern restaurant version became a nationwide sensation in the 2010s, with dedicated chain restaurants serving nothing but this dish.
What to Expect
A large bowl or basin of golden-green tangy broth filled with silky fish slices and shreds of pickled mustard greens. The broth is the star — intensely sour and savory, almost addictively drinkable. The fish slices are velvet-coated (egg white and starch) for an incredibly smooth texture. This is Sichuan comfort food at its best — warming, tangy, and much milder than the region’s fiery reputation suggests.
Tips
This is a great choice if you want Sichuan flavor without extreme heat. The broth is meant to be drunk — it’s delicious over rice. Order this alongside spicier dishes for balance. Many restaurants offer a choice of spice level; ask for “wēi là” (微辣, mildly spicy).