Infamous Szechuan pork in Chili Broth but an outstanding Shui Zhu dish you should never miss. Like most of the Szechuan dishes, it is simple as long as the ingredients are well prepared.
Shui Zhu, literally translated as water boiled, is a special item referring to a cooking method popular in Sichuan Cuisine. There are two unique features of this cooking method: the first one is the famous seasoning like doubanjiang, Sichuan pepper, Sichuan dried chili pepper (which usually presents a bright red color but less spicy taste) and green onion, ginger and garlic cloves. The second one is the very last step—pouring hot oil over the dish, which can extremely keep the aroma inside the meat and vegetable.
However usually Shui Zhu dishes are home-friendly dishes. You can easily make restaurant style at home or even better! Vegetables are firstly placed at the bottom of the serving bowl. Cabbage, Napa cabbage, bean sprouts and Chinese water spinach are usually used. Pick your favorite or combine several together. I am using water spinach, as it is freshly available in the market now.
Cook’s Note
How to keep the pork slices tender.
Firstly choose the right part of pork. I recommend using pork butt which creates the best tender texture.
Secondly, in order to keep the pork as tender as possible, there are two tips– firstly, the slices should be evenly coated with starch, which will create a smooth surface and prevent the pork to be overcooked; We also need to limit the cooking time after the broth boils again to less than 30 seconds. As you can see from the following picture, there are transparent layers outside the slices. If you love Shui Zhu dishes, check Shui Zhu Fish too.
How to improve the broth to the next level.
One of the secret of really profound and aromatic Shui Zhu broth is the hot pot broth added. The paste has the best flavor of spices and aromatics. You can use any type of spice hot pot soup base. Any a very small amount is needed. If you can’t get it, simple replace with doubanjiang.
Instructions
Slice the pork thinly and then add pinch of white pepper, light soy sauce, oyster sauce and cooking wine. Combine well and set aside for 15 minutes. Then add water starch to coat well. Set aside.
Heat 12 to 20 dried chili peppers for half minute and then add 1 tablespoon of Sichuan peppercorn in wok until slightly aromatic. Move out, cool down and then roughly chop.
In a wok, add 2 tablespoon of oil, fry doubanjiang and hot pot seasoning if you are using with slow fire until the red turns red, then add ginger, scallion sections, garlic, fry for 1 minute until aromatic too. Then place 1/3 of the chili peppers and Sichuan peppercorn we prepared in the first step.
Pour 800ml hot water. Then season the broth with 1/4 teaspoon of sugar and 1 tablespoon of light soy sauce. Let it simmer fro 5-8 minutes.
In the meantime, blanch bean sprouts and oyster mushroom in boiling water. Then lay in the bottom of the serving bowl.
Add 1 teaspoon of oil in the marinated pork and mix them again to make sure they are evenly coated. Turn up fire and add the pork slices in and cook until the broth begin to boil again. Wait for around 20 to 30 seconds and transfer them out immediately.
Pour the broth to fill the container. Place fresh garlic, chopped peppers prepared in step 1, chopped green onion, white sesame seeds on top, then pour 2 tablespoon of hot oil on top. Serve immediately.
Shui Zhu Pork- Szechuan Pork in Spicy Broth
Ingredients
- 1 small bunch of bean sprouts
- 1 small bunch of oyster mushrooms , break into smaller pieces
- coriander for garnishing
Pork seasonings
- 200 g pork butt or pork tenderloin , highly recommend the butt
- 1/2 tbsp. Shaoxing wine , optional
- pinch of salt
- 1/4 tsp. sugar
- 1 tbsp. light soy sauce
- 1 tbsp. oyster sauce , optional
- 1 tsp. vegetable cooking oil
- white pepper
- 3 tbsp. starch + 3 tbsp. water
刀口辣椒 Chopped Chili and Sichuan Peppercorn
- 12-20 dried chili pepper , or as needed
- 1 tbsp. Sichuan pepper
Broth
- 4 tbsp. vegetable cooking oil , divided
- 2 tbsp. doubajiang , or half doubanjiang and half hot pot soup base
- 800 ml hot water as needed
- 2 green onions , white part cut into 2cm long and green pert chopped
- 3 garlic cloves , chopped
- 1 thumb ginger , sliced
- 1 tbsp. light soy sauce
- 1/4 tsp. sugar
Instructions
- Slice the pork thinly and then add pinch of white pepper, light soy sauce, oyster sauce and cooking wine. Combine well and set aside for 15 minutes. Then add water starch to coat well. Set aside.
- Heat 12 to 20 dried chili peppers for half minute and then 1 tablespoon of Sichuan peppercorn in wok until slightly aromatic. Move out, cool down and then roughly chop.
- In a wok, add 2 tablespoon of oil, fry doubanjiang and hot pot seasoning if you are using with slow fire until the red turns red, then add ginger, scallion sections, garlic, fry for 1 minute until aromatic too. Then place 1/3 of the chili peppers and Sichuan peppercorn we prepared in the first step.
- Pour 800ml hot water. Then season the broth with 1/4 teaspoon of sugar and 1 tablespoon of light soy sauce. Let it simmer for 5-8 minutes.
- In the meantime, blanch bean sprouts and oyster mushroom in boiling water. Then lay in the bottom of the serving bowl.
- Add 1 teaspoon of oil in the marinated pork and mix them again to make sure they are evenly coated. Turn up fire and add the pork slices in and cook until the broth begin to boil again. Wait for around 20 to 30 seconds and transfer them out immediately.
- Pour the broth to fill the container. Place fresh garlic, chopped peppers prepared in step 1, chopped green onion, white sesame seeds on top, then pour 2 tablespoon of hot oil on top. Serve immediately.
- Serve directly with coriander.
This looks mice. I love everything Sichuan style. The chicken looks so tender in the spicy sauce. Yum!
It is neither mice nor chicken: it is PORK.
This looks mice. I love everything Sichuan style. The chicken looks so tender in the spicy sauce. Yum!
By the way, I would like to ask you what recipe plugin you use to insert the pictorial instructions on the recipe? I noticed that the pictures don’t show when I click to print. I really like the feature.
Hi Holly,
I am using a recipe plugin named as Ziplist. It should be available on wordpress. And you can check to hide the images when printing.
Thanks! I actually used that plugin before but I didn’t realize that I could add the images. LOL!
Great recipe! My wife is Chinese, although from Fujian rather than Sichuan, but she absolutely loved this. Will make again.
Hay, thanks for your lovely feedback and I am so glad to know that your wife love it. You are such a caring husband!!! Enjoy happy time with your family.
This recipe works great with beef too! Reminds me of eating Sichuan food in the winter in Hebei Province
Hi Nick.
Yes beef slices should be perfect ingredient for Shui Zhu dishes too. Szechuan food is really great in winter, right?
I love your blog! You have captured so many of my favorite dishes. I made this dish last night and it was delicious! One question though, in step 6 when you say “grasp the pork” was I supposed to drop the slices of pork in one at a time or just pour the pork mixture in all at once with all the liquid starch mixture? Thanks!
Hi Monica,
Sorry for the misunderstanding! You need pour the pork into the mixture in all at once and then combine well. “Grasp the pork” can help to massage the pork slices to help adsorbing the mixture and combine mixing the mixture as even as possible.
Thank you so much!
I flipped when I first had this in a chinese restaurant, in Vienna of all places! Yes, we have to travel 1000 km to get good chinese restaurants… now I do it at home, not too often, because I have the impression that the oil goes straight into my hips after 2 weeks. Be careful! But the oil trick is so fantastic, I often make it just with noodles, chicken broth, some green and chopped beef or pork. A good trick would also be to buy just any meat and chopping it with a hammer, this allows for short cooking time and the flavors go into the meat very well. Of course not a thing your butcher would recommend – they say it destroys the meat’s structure. Well, this is just the point, isn’t it?
“Secondly, limit the cooking time after the broth boils again to less than 30 minutes”
Is this correct ? Seems rather long time to boil.
Hi Milos,
Thanks for the correctness. It should be less than 30 seconds.
I hate to ask but is there a substitute or can I leave out the doubanjiang? I have everything but that.
Hi Elaine,
I really liked the Shui Zhu Beef and have yesterday tried this recipe with pork. It’s just amazing. Thank you so much!
By the way, it is my impression, that sweet potato starch needs a lot more water than regular potato starch.
I put minced mice meat in mine.
Cooking wine is mentioned only in instructions. I can’t find mention of wine in narrative or recipe. What type do you recommend? Thank you!
Sorry! Please replace “recipe” with “ingredient list” in my last comment anout cooking wine!
Sorry, Adri. I missed cooking wine in the ingredient list. Thanks for the information.