Squirrel-Shaped Mandarin Fish
Quick Info
- Flavor
- Sweet and tangy with a bright, ketchup-like sauce. Think sweet and sour chicken from your local takeout, but far more refined and delicate.
- Texture
- Shatteringly crispy battered fish exterior giving way to tender, flaky white flesh, all drenched in a glossy sweet-sour sauce
- Spice Level
- Not spicy
- Temperature
- Served Hot
Ingredients
Allergens
Confirmed
Possible
These ingredients may vary by restaurant. Ask your server to confirm.
The Story
This dish dates back to the Qing Dynasty and is one of the crown jewels of Jiangsu cuisine. The name comes from the way the fish is scored and deep-fried — the cuts cause the flesh to curl outward, puffing up to resemble a squirrel’s bushy tail. Legend has it that Emperor Qianlong tasted it during a visit to Suzhou and was so delighted he demanded the recipe be brought back to the palace.
The dish showcases the Jiangsu culinary philosophy of transforming simple ingredients into edible art. In Suzhou, where gardens and aesthetics are woven into daily life, even a fried fish must be beautiful.
What to Expect
A whole fish arrives at the table looking nothing like a fish. The body has been butterflied, scored into a crosshatch pattern, and deep-fried until the flesh fans out in golden, crispy petals. Hot sweet-and-sour sauce is poured over it tableside, producing an audible sizzle that some say sounds like a squeaking squirrel — another possible origin of the name.
The sauce is bright, tangy, and gently sweet, studded with pine nuts, tiny shrimp, and green peas. The contrast between the crunchy exterior and the moist, delicate fish inside is the whole point. Eat it quickly — this dish loses its magic as the crispy coating softens.
Tips
This is a showpiece dish, so it takes a while to prepare. Order it early in your meal. Use your chopsticks to pull apart sections of the fish rather than trying to cut it. The belly side tends to be the most tender. Pair it with a pot of Suzhou green tea to cut through the richness.