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鸭脖
yā bó

Wuhan Spicy Duck Neck — The Gnawing Snack

Quick Info

Flavor
Intensely spicy, savory, and addictive with complex warm spice notes. Like the most flavorful, spicy beef jerky you have ever had, but wetter and more aromatic.
Texture
Small nuggets of dense, chewy meat clinging to vertebrae bones, coated in a sticky, spicy glaze
Spice Level
🌶️🌶️🌶️ — A sustained habanero-level heat that builds with each piece — your lips will tingle for a while afterward
Temperature
Room Temperature
Cuisine
Hunan 湘菜
Cooking
Braised
Main Ingredients
Duck

Ingredients

Duck necks (chopped into segments)Dried red chiliesSichuan peppercornsStar aniseCinnamon barkFennel seedsBay leavesSoy sauceSugarGarlicGinger

Allergens

Confirmed

Soy

Possible

Gluten

These ingredients may vary by restaurant. Ask your server to confirm.

The Story

Wuhan turned the humble duck neck into a national snack food phenomenon. What started at small stalls in Wuhan’s university district in the 1990s has grown into a billion-dollar industry, with chains like Zhōu Hēi Yā (周黑鸭, Zhou Black Duck) and Jué Wèi (绝味) now operating thousands of stores across China. The concept is simple: duck necks are braised for hours in a complex spice mixture until the flavors penetrate to the bone, then sold as a grab-and-go snack.

The duck neck works brilliantly as a snack because the small amount of meat on each vertebra forces you to gnaw and nibble, extracting flavor slowly — making one bag last a long time.

What to Expect

You receive a bag or plate of small, dark reddish-brown duck neck segments, each about two inches long. They are served at room temperature and glistening with a thin layer of spicy oil. There is not a lot of meat on each piece — that is not the point. You gnaw around the small vertebrae, pulling off strands of intensely flavored meat and sucking the spicy juices from the bones. The flavor is deeply savory with aggressive chili heat and a complex background of warm spices. Your lips and fingers will be stained reddish-brown and tingling.

This is finger food that demands your full attention and rewards patience.

Tips

Buy these from one of the ubiquitous chain stores (Zhōu Hēi Yā is the most famous Wuhan brand) or from street vendors. They come in different spice levels — start with medium (zhōng là, 中辣) if you are new to them. Pair with cold beer, which is practically mandatory. Keep napkins handy, as this is gloriously messy. The technique is to gnaw around the vertebrae, rotate the piece, and repeat until you have extracted all the meat and flavor. Do not try to eat them delicately — embrace the gnawing.

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