Search
by Ingredient

9 sichuan recipes

that are low in fat

Sichuan (commonly mispelled as szechuwan, szceuan or szechuan) is a province in west China that is a well known variety of Chinese food. Spicy food seasoned with Sichuan pepper and hot chilies along with garlic, ginger and soy sauce; Sichuan has become a very popular and well-known style of quick Chinese recipes that are packed with flavor.

Recipe NOT List Recipe NOT List™ - disabled
Sichuan Potato Salad
Sichuan Potato Salad

In China, there are literally thousands of methods to cook potatoes. This sweet and sour potato salad is quick and easy to put together, and it tastes delicious. It can be made one day ahead, served chilled, at room temperature or warm.

placeholder
Sichuan Crispy Skin Duck

A multi-day Sichuan duck project: dry-rubbed with toasted spiced salt, air-dried overnight, steamed, battered, and deep-fried to shattering crispness. Includes a tea-smoked variation. Worth every step.

placeholder
Fred's Schezuan (Sichuan) Sauce

Well, this is NOT non-fat, but is low fat. It's kind of a Schezuan sauce I guess, of my own invention. If I could figure out how to avoid using the oil it would be non-fat.

placeholder
Sichuan Dry-Fried Green Beans (Sides)

Dry your beans well before cooking. To get the traditional ‘blistered’ look of the beans you will need to shallow-fry them for 5-6 minutes and stir constantly to avoid burning.

placeholder
Seasoned Vegetarian Broth

Chinese-style vegetarian broth made with dried shiitake mushrooms, Sichuan preserved vegetables, scallions, and both light and dark soy sauce. A rich, savory base for soups and stir-fries.

placeholder
Grilled Lamb Skewers with Spiced Mint Marinade

Grilled lamb skewers marinated overnight in fresh mint, orange juice, Sichuan peppercorns, ginger, and sherry. Bold East-meets-Mediterranean flavors on the grill in under 10 minutes.

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
Cooking Duck, Chinese Style

How Chinese cooks tame a whole duck, layering methods like steaming, smoking, and frying to render the fat and turn the skin succulently crisp. A guide to Peking, Cantonese, and Sichuan crispy-skin duck techniques.

placeholder
Pai Chiao Hsia Ch'Iu (Shrimp Balls)

Chinese shrimp balls (pai chiao hsia chiu) rolled in stale bread cubes and double-fried until shatteringly crisp. Served with Sichuan pepper-salt dip. 30 pieces.

Showing 1 - 16 of 9 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