Spicy Sichuan Hot Pot [Mild Broth Recipe Included] (2024)

We have both a Spicy and a mild broth recipe listed above for your convenience.

Sichuan peppercorns can be found in a Whole Foods market, Asian Market, specialty stores and also online on Amazon. Feel free to substitute other mild dried chilis available or fresh chili to taste, if you cannot find dried Sichuan chili peppers.

Please be careful if you have young children participating in this family feast. Please cook for them and place on their plates.

The first item of business is to determine what kind of hot pot will your family and friends enjoy. Do they like it spicy or mild? There are many dual hot pots on the market so that you can cook spicy (la da) on one side and mild (bu la da) on the other side. Otherwise, if you want one of each will have to cook it in two separate pots.

You can add anything your little heart desires to your hot pot. However, some of our family favorites are the diakon radish, corn on the cob, thin beef, Chinese green vegetables and mushrooms.

If you want to keep this recipe low carb, just skip the corn and the noodles.

If you want to keep this recipe gluten-free, you will not be able to add the Chili bean sauce as we have not been able to find this item gluten-free as of yet. Use a gluten free broth and tamari instead of soy sauce. If you want to make this recipe vegan, use vegetable or mushroom broth and add in vegan options to the pot to cook.

Cook your hard vegetables first, like your diakon and corn on the cob. Then the rest of the items such as thin meats, fish and vegetables all cook very quickly in a matter of seconds in the broth.

You can make a very simple dipping sauce of soy sauce or tamari if you need it gluten free and a little chili or sesame oil. We love fried garlic. After you cook your items in the hot pot, you can dip into your dipping sauce and enjoy.

Sometimes, during the cooking process, your broth level will get a little low and start to concentrate. Add some boiling water from your hot kettle and you are back in business or more chicken or vegetable broth.

You will need to skim your broth. Yes, just like mom used to do when she made soup. When you first add your broth ingredients you will need to skim the top.

If you have not made Spicy Sichuan Hot Pot before, check out these helpful hints for our cooking our hot pot recipe.

  1. Cook the hard vegetables like lotus root, squash, carrots, daikon, etc. first as they take longer to cook.
  2. If you are preparing your own thin sliced meats, place them in the freezer for about 45 minutes before slicing. Cut meats thin against the grain. Freezing your meat makes it easier to cut it super thin. Your goal is to have it thin as shaved beef or sukiyaki beef.
  3. Set aside extra chicken or vegetable broth to add to the pot mid-cooking. As you cook your ingredients, some of the soup broth will be absorbed and evaporate.

How to host a hot pot buffet gathering?

  • Make your Spicy Sichuan Hot Pot
  • Broth and/or mild soup broth and keep warm in electric hot pot cooker, portable electric cooktop with pot, instant pot or deep electric frying pan. (Reserving a little extra chicken broth for later as the liquid volume reduces during the cooking process)
  • Slice meats and fish. Prepare vegetables, tofu, dumplings, noodles, mushrooms, etc. and place on serving plates on your table.
  • Gather up cooking chop sticks, tongs, strainers to cook your ingredients.
  • Make the hot pot dipping sauce and place in individual little containers for each person.
  • Set the table with a small bowl, napkins, eating chopsticks and soup spoon for each guest.
  • Gather up your guests to sit around the table.
  • Designate one person as the guide and main chef to the cooking process.
  • Increase the temperature of the cooking device up to a boiling level and adjust to a medium boil during the cooking process.
  • Add your hard vegetables that take longer to cook first to the pot.
  • Next allow your guests with cooking chopsticks or tongs to add ingredients to the pot that they wish to eat.
  • If your soup broth level starts to evaporate during the cooking process, add a little extra chicken or vegetable broth to the hot pot cooker. Then, allow the broth to come back up to temperature before adding more ingredients to the pot.
  • As the very last step, add the noodles in a little basket to prevent them from getting lost in the pot and cook until aldente. We cook noodles last as they soak up a lot of the soup broth.
  • Enjoy the experience

Hot Pot Etiquette and Safety

  1. Cooking chopsticks vs eating chop sticks. Do not dip the eating chop sticks in the pot and do not eat with the cooking chopsticks. We are very strict about this. (Be sure to take extra precautions to make sure the cooking instruments used, and all ingredients placed in the cooking pot or taken out of the cooking pot are with CLEAN COOKING INSTRUMENTS ONLY and NOT THE EATING CHOPSTICKS.) Okay, the nurse will now step down from her soap box.We have separate kitchen chopsticks and tools for meats, seafood, mushrooms, tofu and vegetables to prevent cross contamination. In addition, we place the raw items like meats on one plate separated from vegetables on another.
  2. Keep the Children Safe: If you have young children, you know they can be unpredictable. It’s always best to be on the safe side. We usually sit small children at a separate table right next to us but far away from the electric hot pot. We cook for them and put it in their bowl, so their hands are far away from the hot cooking vessel. However, we found that once children are a little older, compliant and can follow directions, they love watching the cooking process at the table. However, we still do the cooking for them. However, by the time they are 9 or 10, they can be cooking for you.
  3. Eat what you put in the pot and not what your friend put in the hot pot, if you want to stay friends. (smiling)
  4. No double dipping! After you cook your ingredients, remove them from the pot and place them on your plate, you are done. Do not put ingredients that have been on your personal plate back into the pot. Ewwww!
  5. Designate one personal chef in the group. During the times when we are more aware of cross contamination and illness, nominate one person to cook and scoop the hot pot ingredients on everyone’s plate. This may not be the full cooking experience, but it is certainly still mesmerizing watching the hot pot broth boiling away. This is the safest option. Another option is to make one delicious pot of our Chinese Beef Noodle Soup Recipe and serve it up.
  6. Use the scooper basket to add in your noodles so they don’t get lost in the pot. Do not cook noodles until the very end because they will absorb a lot of the liquid in the hot pot.
Spicy Sichuan Hot Pot [Mild Broth Recipe Included] (2024)

FAQs

What is Sichuan broth made of? ›

Essentially, it's made of a concentrated, highly flavoursome soup base and water (or stock). The most popular type, known as Hong You Guo Di/红油锅底 (meaning red oil hot pot broth), comes from Sichuan and Chongqing (a direct-controlled municipality which used to be part of Sichuan province).

Do you eat the broth in Chinese hot pot? ›

Consider cooking times before crowding the pot: Leafy greens and meat slices cook quickly, while denser noodles and veggies will need a couple of minutes. 5. Some like to drink the hot pot broth and some don't—but if you do, wait until the end of the meal.

How do you use broth flavour hot pot seasoning? ›

Tuk Tuk Method: Add 1-1.2L of water into a pot (for better flavour please use bone broth). Pour in the product, add some bamboo shoot tips, bones and mushrooms to your taste. Add vegetables and meat of your choice. When it's cooked thoroughly, you can enjoy them.

How to use spicy hot pot soup base? ›

How do you use a hot pot base? Most of the time the hot pot base will have instructions on the back of the package. And usually one package is sufficient for one meal, diluted with 6 to 8 cups of water. Simply combine your hot pot base with water and heat it until boiling, then your dinner party is ready to start.

Is Sichuan really spicy? ›

One ancient Chinese account declared that the "people of Sichuan uphold good flavour, and they are fond of hot and spicy taste." Most Sichuan dishes are spicy, although a typical meal includes non-spicy dishes to cool the palate.

What does Sichuan taste like? ›

Sichuan pepper has a citrus-like flavor and induces a tingling numbness in the mouth, akin to a 50-hertz vibration, due to the presence of hydroxy-alpha sanshool.

How do I make my hot pot more flavorful? ›

Prioritize the Broth

You can also create your own broth base with chicken and goji berries for a unique flavor profile, or lean into a vegetable-based broth with mushrooms and miso. If your broth is too concentrated in flavor, you can add water as it starts to boil down.

How do you make hot pot broth less spicy? ›

You can add dairy: heavy cream, yogurt, cheese, etc. You can add something sweet: coconut milk, sugar, syrup, etc. You can introduce an acid: lemon juice, a little vinegar, tomato paste, etc. You could simply add more of the other ingredients that went before the spice, so the proportions are more in line.

Is hot pot healthy? ›

Additionally, many common hotpot ingredients are high in energy and fat. Overconsumption of such ingredients would lead to imbalanced nutrition. In fact, having hotpot can also be healthy as long as the soup bases and ingredients are wisely chosen.

How to eat sichuan hot pot? ›

You dip thin slices of meat, vegetables, tofu, noodles, and dumplings into the pot to cook, then eat them with a dipping sauce. The variations are endless—you can make the broth spicy, mild, tomato-based, creamy, or completely vegetarian. Play around with ingredients and discover new flavor combinations every time.

Do you add water to hot pot soup base? ›

The soup base can be as simple as just boiling straight up water or chicken stock, or as nuanced with as many spices and ingredients as you'd like.

What are the best noodles for hotpot? ›

Though all noodles are good noodles, I've recently started using mostly rice or bean-based varieties because they don't cloud the broth with starch or stick to the bottom of the pot (a pain during post-meal cleaning). My favorites include mung bean glass noodles, vermicelli, pho noodles, and egg noodles.

What is Sichuan made from? ›

Szechuan cuisine, Szechwan cuisine, or Sichuan cuisine is a style of Chinese cuisine originating in Sichuan Province of southwestern China famed for bold flavors, particularly the pungency and spiciness resulting from liberal use of chili peppers, as well as the unique flavor of the Sichuan peppercorn (花椒).

What is Sichuan paste made of? ›

Salted Chilli Peppers 24% (Chilli Peppers, Salt), Water, Fermented Soybean Paste (Water, Salt, Soybeans, Wheat Flour), Soy Sauce (Water, Salt, Soybeans, Wheat Flour), Sugar, Tomato Paste, Sichuan Pepper Powder 5%, Soybean Oil, Dried Chilli Peppers 3%, Fermented Vinegar, Flavour Enhancers (621, 631, 627), Shallots, ...

What is Chinese soup broth made of? ›

It takes more than just chicken broth and soy sauce to make a Chinese soup broth! Chinese cooking wine – the key ingredient. Just 1.5 tablespoons adds complexity and depth of flavour to the store bought chicken stock. Without it, the broth will taste “flat” ie missing something.

What makes Sichuan food numbing? ›

To dive a little deeper, Sichuan peppercorns have a compound named hydroxy-alpha sanshool which creates the tingling, effervescent, and mouthwatering effect. Other trigeminal compounds can lead to other effects like numbing, cooling, or even burning in your eyes when you cut onions.

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