Search
by Ingredient

113 sichuan recipes

Recipe NOT List Recipe NOT List™ - disabled
Chinese Stir-Fried Noodles with Veggies
Chinese Stir-Fried Noodles with Veggies

A flavorful and filling dish is great for a quick week-night meal. It's healthy and nutritious enough as well.

Asparagus Shrimp Stir Fry
Asparagus Shrimp Stir Fry

This easy yet tasty recipe is a great way to maintain the texture of asparagus. Tender but still crispy. The Chinese seasoning including soy sauce, sichuan oil, garlic, ginger and rice vinegar really brings tons of flavour into the dish. Serve it with cooked brown rice to make a wholesome meal.

placeholder
Yan Jian Rou (Chili Pork)

Fiery Sichuan chili pork stir-fried with green chiles, garlic, roasted peppercorns, and rice wine. Tongue-tingling, garlicky, and on the table in 25 minutes flat.

Eggplant & Bell Pepper Stir-Fry
Eggplant & Bell Pepper Stir-Fry

This quick and easy stir-fry is a tasty way to cook seasonal eggplant and bell pepper together with classic Chinese seasonings. Serve it over rice.

Asian Stir-Fried Spaghetti with Veggies
Asian Stir-Fried Spaghetti with Veggies

A twist on a different oriental spaghetti recipe I found created this easy yet flavorful Asian stir-fried spaghetti with veggies for dinner last night!

Fried Rice with Broccoli & Egg
Fried Rice with Broccoli & Egg

Chinese fried rice is probably the most popular take-out food, it's quick-easy to make, and packed with flavors. Because of the simplicity, making it at home becomes so easy, and you can be creative too. No matter what it always comes out with great flavors and textures.

Broccoli, Sweet Bell Pepper & Mushroom Fried Rice
Broccoli, Sweet Bell Pepper & Mushroom Fried Rice

A quick and easy way to make your leftover rice into a delicious one pan meal. Feel free to add cooked meat. For a meatless version, add some scrambled eggs or browned tofu cubes.

Rapini & Tofu Stir Fry
Rapini & Tofu Stir Fry

Rapini and tofu are stir-fried in a sweet and sour Chinese cooking sauce. A quick, easy and tasty one skillet dish, serve it over a bed of rice.

Chinese Stir-Fried Bok Choy with Spaghetti
Chinese Stir-Fried Bok Choy with Spaghetti

Why order take-out, if you can whip up a delicious meal within about 20 minute. A quick, easy and tasty Chinese stir-fried veggies with spaghetti will ensure to make your tummy feel happy while satisfy your palate.

placeholder
Pon Pon Chicken

Pon pon chicken (bang bang chicken) shreds poached chicken over salted cucumber ribbons with a warm sesame-soy-ginger dressing. Classic Sichuan cold-plate appetizer or main.

placeholder
Favourite Chinese Hot & Spicy Chicken

Chinese hot and spicy chicken stir-fried with ginger, sherry, dried chilies, and star anise pepper, simmered in a sweet-sour-savory soy sauce. Sichuan-style weeknight chicken main.

placeholder
Millionaire Chicken

Millionaire Chicken: Chinese cold chicken salad with Shantung cabbage, tossed in a spicy hot-oil dressing of Sichuan peppercorns, hoisin, and honey. Make-ahead friendly.

placeholder
Bean Threads with Minced Pork

Sichuan-style bean thread noodles with minced pork, dried mushrooms, hot bean sauce, and fresh ginger. Spicy, slurpable, and deeply savory with a cilantro finish.

placeholder
Chinese Spicy Cold Noodles with Chicken

Cold chewy noodles with shredded chicken and silky egg strips in spicy Sichuan dressing. This make-ahead Chinese salad is perfect for hot summer nights, ready in an hour.

placeholder
Stewed Pork Intestine Over Wu-Ching Burner

A fiery Chinese hot pot of pork intestine, duck blood curd, and sour cabbage simmered in a chili-ginger broth with Sichuan peppercorns. Served bubbling over a tabletop burner.

placeholder
Crispy Beef in Chili Sauce

Sichuan-style crispy beef in chili sauce, double-fried until shatteringly crisp and tossed with garlic, dried red chilies, and a sweet-savory glaze. The takeout favorite made better at home.

Showing 65 - 80 of 113 recipes

Sichuan Tips

How to Prepare a Chinese New Year Dinner

The Chinese New Year (Spring Festival) is all about getting together with families, bringing good luck and prosperity to each other, and in China the rituals associated with this time of the year last for 15 days.

Celebrating The Chinese New Year With Your Own Unique Dinner

Even though the Chinese New Year takes place in February, it doesn’t mean you can’t celebrate. By celebrating, I don’t mean ordering Chinese cuisine for the whole family. Instead, why not try creating your own authentic Chinese New Year dinner?

New Year, Old Tradition

Not many people know, but on February 18th is the day where a large traditional festival will take place in the eastern side of the world. A

more kitche tips & tricks