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Chongqing Suan La Fen (Hot & Sour Sweet Potato Noodles)

Cooks in 30 min Difficulty Easy
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Recipe Video


The Chongqing Bowl That Broke Me (In the Best Way)

The first time I had Suan La Fen, I wasn’t looking for it. I was wandering through Chongqing when I spotted a street food stall with a line that wrapped around the block. No menu board. No theatrics. Everyone seemed to be ordering one thing: a bowl of slippery, translucent noodles swimming in a deep crimson broth.

I joined the line without knowing what I was getting into.

That first bite was a full-body experience. The heat arrived first โ€” a fiery, climbing assault on the back of my throat. Then came the numbness, that slow, euphoric tingle from the Sichuan peppercorns that somehow made the pain feel addictive. Then the acidity. Then the crunch of peanuts and soybeans. Then more noodles, more broth, more everything.

By the end of the bowl I was sweating, my lips were buzzing, and I immediately wanted another one.

That’s the magic of Suan La Fen.


What Is Suan La Fen (้…ธ่พฃ็ฒ‰)?

Suan La Fen (้…ธ่พฃ็ฒ‰) translates literally to “sour spicy noodles” โ€” and that’s exactly what it delivers. It’s a Chongqing street food staple built around thick, chewy sweet potato noodles (fen) submerged in a bold broth that layers sour, spicy, savory, and numbing flavors all at once.

Unlike many noodle dishes where the toppings are decorative, here every component earns its place:

  • Sweet potato noodles โ€” thick, slippery, and chewy in a way that no other noodle can replicate. They hold heat beautifully and carry the broth all the way through.
  • The chili blend โ€” two types of dried chilies doing two different jobs. Tianjin chilies for fragrance and color. Chao Tian Jao (or Bird’s Eye) for pure fire.
  • Green Sichuan peppercorns โ€” the source of that signature numbing tingle that makes this dish so relentlessly addictive.
  • Chinese black vinegar โ€” the “suan” in Suan La Fen. Punchy, slightly smoky acidity that cuts right through the richness.
  • Fried soybeans, roasted peanuts, pickled mustard stem โ€” textural contrast that keeps every bite interesting from first to last.

This is a masterclass in balancing flavor and pain.


A Note on the Chilies

You can absolutely skip the toasting and grinding step and just use a good chili oil โ€” the broth will still be deeply flavorful and plenty spicy.

But if you have 10 extra minutes, toast and grind your own chilies. The difference is hard to overstate. Freshly toasted Tianjin chilies release a fragrant, almost floral chili aroma that pre-made chili oil just can’t fully replicate. When you pour the hot oil over the ground chilies and spices, the sizzle and bloom of fragrance is half the experience of making this dish.

Do it once and you’ll never go back.


Suan La Fen Recipe

Ingredients

Broth

  • 150 g dried sweet potato noodles
  • 1.5 cups chicken stock
  • 1 tsp ginger, minced
  • 2 cloves garlic, minced
  • 1 tsp toasted sesame seeds
  • 4โ€“8 dried Tianjin chilies, toasted and ground (for aroma)
  • 4โ€“6 dried Chao Tian Jao or Bird’s Eye chilies, toasted and ground (for spice)
  • 1 tsp green Sichuan peppercorns, toasted and ground
  • 1 tsp sugar
  • ยผ tsp salt
  • ยผ tsp MSG
  • ยผ tsp chicken bouillon powder
  • 2 tbsp neutral oil
  • 2 tbsp Chinese black vinegar
  • 2 tbsp light soy sauce
  • ยฝ tsp dark soy sauce
  • ยผ tsp white pepper
  • ยฝ tsp sesame oil
  • 1 tbsp chili oil

Ground Pork Topping

  • 100 g ground pork
  • 1 tbsp Shaoxing wine
  • 1 tsp dark soy sauce
  • ยฝ tsp five-spice powder

Other Toppings

  • 2 tbsp fried soybeans
  • 2 tbsp roasted peanuts
  • ยผ cup pickled mustard stems
  • 1 scallion, finely sliced
  • 1 tbsp cilantro, chopped

Instructions

Step 1: Prepare the Toppings

In a pan over medium heat, stir fry the ground pork until cooked through and slightly browned. Turn off the heat, then add the Shaoxing wine, dark soy sauce, and five-spice powder. Toss to coat and set aside.

Slice scallions and chop cilantro. Set aside.

ground pork topping

Step 2: Toast and Grind the Chilies (Optional but Highly Recommended)

In a dry pan over medium heat, toast the Tianjin and Chao Tian Jao chilies until blistered and fragrant. Grind to coarse flakes using a spice grinder or mortar and pestle.

In the same pan, toast the green Sichuan peppercorns until aromatic and grind to a fine powder.

If skipping this step, simply substitute a high-quality chili oil and increase the amount to taste.


Step 3: Build the Broth Base

In a heat-safe bowl, combine: minced ginger, garlic, sesame seeds, ground chili flakes, ground Sichuan peppercorn powder, sugar, salt, MSG, and chicken bouillon powder.

Heat 2 tbsp of neutral oil in a small pan until almost smoking, then pour directly over the spice mixture. It should sizzle aggressively โ€” that’s what blooms the aromatics.

sizzling broth base

Add the light soy sauce, dark soy sauce, Chinese black vinegar, white pepper, sesame oil, and chili oil. Stir to combine.


Step 4: Cook the Noodles and Finish

Bring a pot of water to a boil and cook the sweet potato noodles according to package instructions (typically 5โ€“7 minutes) until tender but still chewy.

Meanwhile, bring the chicken stock to a boil in a separate pot.

Pour the hot chicken stock into the spice bowl and stir. Add the cooked noodles.

Top with fried soybeans, roasted peanuts, pickled mustard stems, scallion, cilantro, and the five-spice ground pork.

Serve immediately.

Chongqing Suan La Fen (Hot & Sour Sweet Potato Noodles)

Recipe by Patrick Kong
Course: Main, AppetizerCuisine: ChineseDifficulty: Easy
Servings
+

1

servings
Prep time

20

minutes
Cooking time

10

minutes

Ingredients

  • Broth
  • 150 g dried sweet potato noodles

  • 1.5 cups chicken stock

  • 1 tsp ginger, minced

  • 2 cloves garlic, minced

  • 1 tsp toasted sesame seeds

  • 4-8 dried Tianjin chilies, toasted and ground (for aroma)

  • 4-6 dried Chao Tian Jao or Bird’s Eye chilies, toasted and ground (for spice)

  • 1 tsp green Sichuan peppercorns, toasted and ground

  • 1 tsp sugar

  • 1/4 tsp salt

  • 1/4 tsp MSG

  • 1/4 tsp chicken bouillon powder

  • 2 tbsp neutral oil

  • 2 tbsp Chinese black vinegar

  • 2 tbsp light soy sauce

  • 1/2 tsp dark soy sauce

  • 1/4 tsp white pepper

  • 1/2 tsp sesame oil

  • 1 tbsp chili oil

  • Ground Pork Topping
  • 100 g ground pork

  • 1 tbsp Shaoxing wine

  • 1 tsp dark soy sauce

  • 1/2 tsp five-spice powder

  • Other Toppings
  • 2 tbsp fried soybeans

  • 2 tbsp roasted peanuts

  • 1/4 cup pickled mustard stems

  • 1 scallion, finely sliced

  • 1 tbsp cilantro, chopped

Directions

  • Prepare the Toppings
  • In a pan over medium heat, stir fry the ground pork until cooked through and slightly browned. Turn off the heat and add the shaoxing wine, dark soy sauce, and 5-spice powder. Set aside.
  • Slice scallions and chop cilantro. Set aside.
  • Prepare the Broth and Noodles
  • (Optional, but yields more aroma) In a pan over medium heat, toast the Tianjin and Chao Tian Jao chilies until blistered. Grind to flakes.
  • (Optional, but yields more aroma) Toast the green sichuan peppercorns and grind to a powder.
  • In a pot, add chicken stock and bring to a boil and bring another pot of water to a boil.
  • Meanwhile, add ginger, garlic, sesame seeds, the Tianjin and Chao Tian Jao chili flakes, the green sichuan peppercorn powder, sugar, salt, msg, and chicken bouillon powder in a heat-safe bowl.
  • Heat 2 tbsp of neutral oil until almost smoking and pour into the bowl.
  • Then add the light soy sauce, dark soy sauce, chinese black vinegar, white pepper, sesame oil, and your chili oil of choice.
  • Boil the sweet potato noodles until cooked to the package instructions (typically about 5-7 minutes).
  • Pour in the hot chicken broth and add the noodles.
  • Top with the fried soybeans, peanuts, pickled mustard stems, scallion, cilantro, and ground pork.

Flavor & Texture

Every element in this bowl has a job to do:

  • Two-dimensional spice โ€” the red chilies bring throat-forward fire while the Sichuan peppercorns layer in a slow, numbing buzz underneath
  • Black vinegar acidity โ€” sharp and slightly smoky, it cuts through the richness and keeps the broth from feeling heavy
  • Textural contrast โ€” the crunch of roasted peanuts and fried soybeans against the silky noodles makes every bite land differently
  • Sweet potato noodles โ€” thick, chewy, and slippery in a way that carries the broth beautifully with every slurp

This is a bowl where nothing is decorative. Every component is load-bearing.


Serving Suggestions

Suan La Fen is a complete meal on its own โ€” it needs nothing else. That said, it pairs naturally with:

  • Simple cucumber salad to cool things down between bites
  • Cold Shaoxing rice wine or a light lager (you’ll want something cold nearby)
  • Extra pickled mustard stem on the side for those who want more acidity

Final Thoughts

Suan La Fen isn’t a subtle dish. It’s loud, aggressive, and completely unapologetic about it. But underneath all that fire and vinegar is a bowl with real finesse โ€” a careful balance of flavors that makes the pain feel purposeful.

The line wrapped around the block in Chongqing for a reason.


Tags: suan la fen, hot and sour noodles, Chongqing noodles, sweet potato noodles recipe, Chinese street food, Sichuan noodles, spicy noodle recipe, suan la fen recipe, Chinese black vinegar noodles, numbing spicy noodles