Sichuan Hot Pot — Fire Pot
Quick Info
- Flavor
- Intensely numbing-spicy broth. A sea of red chili oil with Sichuan peppercorns, dozens of dried spices, and fermented bean paste. The 'yuanyang' (鸳鸯) split pot offers a mild bone broth option on one side.
- Texture
- You choose your own ingredients to cook in the bubbling broth — meat, vegetables, tofu, noodles
- Spice Level
- 🌶️🌶️🌶️🌶️🌶️ — Far beyond any hot sauce you know. Order the split pot (鸳鸯锅 yuān yāng guō) to have a mild side as refuge
- Temperature
- Served Hot
Ingredients
Allergens
Confirmed
Possible
These ingredients may vary by restaurant. Ask your server to confirm.
The Story
Sichuan hot pot originated from dock workers along the Yangtze River who would cook cheap offal and vegetables in a communal spicy pot to stay warm. Chengdu (and neighboring Chongqing) turned this into a social dining institution. Going for hot pot is the default friend hangout in Chengdu — it’s not just food, it’s a 1-2 hour social experience.
What to Expect
A bubbling cauldron of brick-red chili oil is placed in the center of your table over a gas burner. You order raw ingredients — meats, vegetables, tofu, mushrooms, noodles — from a menu or a self-serve fridge, then cook them yourself by dipping them into the broth. There’s also a sauce station where you mix your own dipping sauce.
Hot pot is very different from ordering a regular dish. Don’t worry — the steps below will walk you through the entire process.
Step 1: Choose Your Pot Base (锅底 guō dǐ)
This is the most important decision. The pot base is the flavored broth that everything cooks in.
Recommended for first-timers:
- 鸳鸯锅 (yuān yāng guō) — “Mandarin Duck Pot” / Split Pot. Half spicy, half mild. This is the safest choice — you get to experience the famous spicy broth while having a mild side as refuge. Almost every hot pot restaurant has this option.
Other common pot bases:
- 红锅 / 红油锅底 (hóng guō) — Full Spicy Pot. Pure spicy broth with red chili oil. Only for the brave or the experienced.
- 清汤锅底 (qīng tāng guō dǐ) — Clear Bone Broth. Mild and savory, no spice at all.
- 番茄锅底 (fān qié guō dǐ) — Tomato Broth. Sweet and tangy, very beginner-friendly.
- 菌汤锅底 (jūn tāng guō dǐ) — Mushroom Broth. Rich umami flavor, no spice.
The server will ask which pot base you want first. Just point to the name above or say “yuān yāng guō” for the split pot.
Step 2: Order Ingredients (涮菜 shuàn cài)
After the pot base, you order raw ingredients to cook in the broth. Most restaurants have a paper menu with checkboxes — just tick what you want. Some have a self-serve fridge where you grab plates directly.
Popular meat options (荤菜 hūn cài):
- 肥牛 (féi niú) — Thinly sliced beef. The most popular choice. Cooks in 10-15 seconds.
- 嫩牛肉 (nèn niú ròu) — Tender marinated beef slices. About 30 seconds.
- 毛肚 (máo dǔ) — Beef tripe. A Chengdu favorite! Dip for exactly 15 seconds (locals call this “七上八下” — 7 dips up, 8 dips down). Chewy texture.
- 鸭肠 (yā cháng) — Duck intestine. Sounds scary, tastes great. Quick dip, 10 seconds.
- 羊肉卷 (yáng ròu juǎn) — Lamb rolls. Thin slices, cooks in 15 seconds.
- 虾滑 (xiā huá) — Shrimp paste. Spooned into the broth, cooks in 2-3 minutes.
- 午餐肉 (wǔ cān ròu) — Luncheon meat / Spam. A surprisingly popular hot pot classic.
Vegetable options (素菜 sù cài):
- 藕片 (ǒu piàn) — Lotus root slices. Stays crunchy, great texture.
- 土豆 (tǔ dòu) — Potato slices. 3-5 minutes.
- 冬瓜 (dōng guā) — Winter melon. Absorbs broth flavor beautifully.
- 生菜 (shēng cài) — Lettuce. Quick dip, 10 seconds.
- 木耳 (mù ěr) — Black fungus. Crunchy and mild.
- 金针菇 (jīn zhēn gū) — Enoki mushrooms. 1-2 minutes.
- 香菇 (xiāng gū) — Shiitake mushrooms. 3-5 minutes.
- 海带 (hǎi dài) — Kelp / Seaweed. 2-3 minutes.
Tofu and bean products (豆制品 dòu zhì pǐn):
- 老豆腐 (lǎo dòu fu) — Firm tofu. Absorbs the spicy broth, incredible flavor.
- 冻豆腐 (dòng dòu fu) — Frozen tofu. Sponge-like, soaks up soup.
- 腐竹 (fǔ zhú) — Tofu skin sticks. Chewy and flavorful.
- 豆皮 (dòu pí) — Tofu skin sheets. Very thin, cooks fast.
Staples (主食 zhǔ shí) — order these near the end:
- 方便面 (fāng biàn miàn) — Instant noodles. The classic hot pot finish.
- 红薯粉 (hóng shǔ fěn) — Sweet potato glass noodles. Slippery and fun.
- 米饭 (mǐ fàn) — Plain rice. Good for balancing the heat.
How much to order? For 2-3 people, start with 2-3 meat plates and 4-5 vegetable plates. You can always order more — just call the server.
Step 3: Mix Your Dipping Sauce (蘸料 zhàn liào)
Most hot pot restaurants have a self-serve sauce station (sometimes called 自助调料区 zì zhù tiáo liào qū). You grab a small bowl and mix your own sauce.
The classic Chengdu combo (highly recommended):
Sesame oil (香油 xiāng yóu) + crushed raw garlic (蒜泥 suàn ní). That’s it. The sesame oil actually coats your mouth and reduces the burning sensation from the spicy broth. The garlic adds punch and is believed to be good for digestion.
Other sauce ingredients you might find:
- 蚝油 (háo yóu) — Oyster sauce. Savory.
- 芝麻酱 (zhī ma jiàng) — Sesame paste. Creamy and nutty.
- 醋 (cù) — Vinegar. Cuts through the richness.
- 香菜 (xiāng cài) — Cilantro. Fresh garnish.
- 葱花 (cōng huā) — Chopped green onions.
- 小米辣 (xiǎo mǐ là) — Fresh chili rings. For extra heat lovers.
- 花生碎 (huā shēng suì) — Crushed peanuts.
Cooking Tips
- Don’t drink the broth — it’s for cooking, not soup. It’s extremely oily and salty.
- Meat cooks fast — thin slices only need 10-30 seconds. Don’t leave them in too long or they get tough.
- Vegetables take longer — root vegetables (potato, lotus root) need 3-5 minutes. Leafy greens are quick.
- Use the spoon strainer — there’s usually a small mesh strainer (漏勺 lòu sháo) at the table for fishing out food. Use it!
- Alternate between spicy and mild sides — if you have the split pot, cook something in the spicy side, then refresh your palate with something from the mild side.
- The oil level rises — as the broth boils down, the chili oil becomes more concentrated. The meal gets spicier as it goes on.
Practical Tips
- Budget: Expect to spend ¥80-150 per person at a mid-range hot pot restaurant.
- Time: A typical hot pot meal lasts 1-2 hours. Don’t rush — it’s a social experience.
- Clothing: Wear something you don’t mind getting smoky. Hot pot smell clings to clothes and hair. Some restaurants provide aprons and phone bags.
- Drinks: Order some 酸梅汤 (suān méi tāng, sour plum juice) or 王老吉 (Wáng Lǎo Jí, herbal tea) — both are traditional “cooling” drinks that pair perfectly with spicy food.
- Numbness warning: The 麻 (má, numbing) sensation from Sichuan peppercorns is different from spicy heat. Your lips and tongue will tingle. This is normal and part of the experience!
- Restroom reality: Spicy hot pot is famously hard on the stomach for newcomers. This is affectionately called 辣到菊花开 (là dào jú huā kāi) — “so spicy it blooms.” Consider going mild on your first visit.
- Paying: Usually one person pays the whole bill. The server will bring a printed receipt to your table. Pay at the counter or by scanning a QR code.