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Yuxiang Scrambled Eggs

 Despite the name, there is no fish in this dish — "yuxiang"  refers to a famous Sichuan flavor profile that combines sweet, sour, spicy, garlicky, and savory notes (originally developed for fish, but now widely used with vegetables, pork, eggplant, etc.). 



When applied to eggs, it creates one of the most addictive, quick, everyday Chinese home-style egg dishes.

The eggs are soft-scrambled to stay tender and custardy, then coated in a glossy, vibrant red sauce bursting with garlic, ginger, doubanjiang, black vinegar, and sugar.Ingredients (serves 2–3)Eggs
  • Large eggs — 5–6 (room temperature preferred)
  • Salt — ¼ tsp
  • White pepper — small pinch
  • Cooking oil — 2–3 tbsp (divided)
Yuxiang sauce / aromatics
  • Pixian doubanjiang — 1–1½ tbsp (the soul of the dish; use authentic Sichuan brand)
  • Garlic — 4–5 large cloves, minced (very important — lots of garlic!)
  • Ginger — 1 tbsp, minced
  • Pickled red chili or fresh red chili — 1–2 tbsp chopped (or substitute with 1–2 tsp chili oil + extra doubanjiang)
  • Green onion / scallion — 2 stalks, white part minced, green part finely chopped for garnish
  • Light soy sauce — 1 tsp
  • Black vinegar (Zhenjiang vinegar) — 1–1½ tbsp
  • Sugar — 1–2 tsp (adjust to taste — yuxiang should be noticeably sweet-sour)
  • Water or chicken stock — 2–3 tbsp
  • Cornstarch slurry — 1 tsp cornstarch + 1 tbsp water (for glossy finish)
  • Sesame oil — ½ tsp (final aroma)
Step-by-Step Instructions
  1. Prepare the eggs
    • Crack eggs into a bowl. Add salt and white pepper.
    • Beat vigorously with chopsticks or a fork for 30–60 seconds until very uniform and slightly frothy (this makes the eggs silkier).
    • Set aside.
  2. Make the yuxiang sauce base
    • In a small bowl, mix: doubanjiang, minced garlic, minced ginger, chopped pickled/fresh chili, light soy sauce, black vinegar, sugar, and 2–3 tbsp water/stock.
    • Stir well. Taste and adjust — it should be bold, garlicky, spicy, sweet-sour, and savory. Set aside.
  3. Scramble the eggs
    • Heat 2 tbsp oil in a non-stick wok or frying pan over medium heat.
    • When oil is hot but not smoking, pour in beaten eggs.
    • Let sit 5–10 seconds, then gently push from the edges toward the center with a spatula, letting uncooked egg flow to the sides.
    • Cook until eggs are about 80–90% set (still very soft and custardy — do not overcook; they will finish in the sauce).
    • Remove eggs to a plate immediately.
  4. Cook the sauce
    • In the same pan (no need to clean), add ½–1 tbsp more oil if dry.
    • Over medium heat, add the prepared yuxiang sauce mixture.
    • Stir-fry 1–2 minutes until fragrant, the garlic softens, and the oil turns red (this step releases the full aroma — do not burn the garlic).
    • Give the cornstarch slurry a quick stir, then pour it in while stirring constantly.
    • Simmer 30–60 seconds until sauce thickens to a glossy, velvety consistency.
  5. Combine
    • Return the soft-scrambled eggs to the pan.
    • Gently fold/toss 30–60 seconds until eggs are evenly coated in sauce and heated through (do not over-stir — keep eggs tender).
    • Turn off heat. Drizzle sesame oil and toss once more.
  6. Serve
    • Transfer to a serving plate.
    • Garnish with chopped green onion tops.
    • Serve hot with steamed white rice — the sauce is incredibly flavorful and perfect for mixing with rice.
Quick Tips for Best Result
  • Egg texture → Keep eggs soft and custardy — remove from heat early. Overcooking turns them rubbery.
  • Sauce balance → Yuxiang is supposed to be sweet-sour-spicy-garlicky-savory. Taste the sauce before adding eggs — adjust vinegar/sugar/chili boldly.
  • Doubanjiang quality → Use authentic Pixian doubanjiang — it has the right balance of heat, salt, and fermented depth. Different brands vary greatly.
  • Oil → Use enough oil to carry the sauce — the red chili oil floating on top is part of the appeal.
  • Variations
    • Add diced wood ear fungus or bell pepper for extra texture.
    • For milder version: reduce doubanjiang and chili.
    • For richer version: add a splash of chicken stock or a little ground pork.
  • Storage → Best eaten fresh. Leftovers reheat gently in a pan with splash of water (eggs will firm up).
This dish is fast, inexpensive, and incredibly flavorful — the combination of silky eggs and explosive yuxiang sauce is pure Sichuan magic.

Spinach and Egg Rolls

This is a very popular, simple and healthy home-style Chinese dish — thin omelette sheets rolled around blanched spinach with a light savory filling. 



It’s often served as a cold appetizer, breakfast item, lunchbox food or side dish. The rolls are tender, colorful, mildly seasoned and look elegant when sliced.

Ingredients (makes 6–8 rolls)Egg sheets
  • Eggs — 4 large
  • Salt — ¼ tsp
  • Cooking oil — 1–2 tsp (for frying)
Spinach filling
  • Fresh spinach — 300–400 g (about 10–12 cups packed)
  • Garlic — 2–3 cloves, minced
  • Light soy sauce — 1–1½ tsp
  • Sesame oil — 1 tsp
  • Salt — ¼–½ tsp (to taste)
  • Sugar — ½ tsp (optional, balances flavor)
  • White pepper — small pinch
  • Toasted sesame seeds — 1–2 tsp (optional, for garnish)
Optional add-ins for extra flavor/texture
  • Carrot — ½ small, julienned or finely shredded (blanched)
  • Wood ear fungus — 20 g dried (soaked, blanched, shredded)
  • Cooked ham or crab stick — 50 g, julienned (for richer versions)
Step-by-Step Instructions
  1. Blanch the spinach
    • Bring a large pot of water to a boil. Add a pinch of salt.
    • Add spinach in batches. Blanch 20–30 seconds until bright green and wilted.
    • Immediately transfer to a bowl of ice water (or very cold water) to stop cooking and keep the color vivid.
    • Drain well. Squeeze out as much water as possible with your hands (very important — wet spinach makes rolls soggy).
    • Chop roughly or leave in longer strands (depending on preference).
  2. Season the spinach
    • In a bowl, mix blanched spinach with minced garlic, light soy sauce, sesame oil, salt, sugar, white pepper, and optional toasted sesame seeds.
    • Toss well. Taste and adjust seasoning (it should be savory, garlicky, and lightly aromatic).
    • Let sit 5–10 minutes so flavors absorb.
  3. Make the egg sheets
    • Crack eggs into a bowl. Add ¼ tsp salt. Beat well until fully combined (no streaks).
    • Heat a non-stick pan (20–24 cm diameter) over medium-low heat.
    • Lightly brush with oil (use a paper towel — very thin layer).
    • Pour in a thin layer of egg mixture (about ¼ of total for each sheet). Swirl pan quickly to spread into a thin, even circle.
    • Cook 30–60 seconds until set and edges lift slightly (do not brown — it should stay pale yellow).
    • Flip carefully (or slide onto a plate and invert back into pan) and cook 10–15 seconds more.
    • Slide onto a cutting board or plate. Repeat to make 4 thin egg sheets.
    • Let cool slightly.
  4. Assemble the rolls
    • Place one egg sheet on a clean surface or bamboo mat (optional).
    • Spread a thin, even layer of seasoned spinach across the sheet (leave 1–2 cm border at the top edge).
    • If using carrot, ham, or wood ear: arrange thin strips in a line near the bottom edge.
    • Starting from the bottom, roll tightly into a cylinder (like rolling sushi).
    • Seal the end by pressing gently (egg is slightly sticky when cool).
    • Repeat with remaining sheets and filling.
  5. Slice & serve
    • Trim the ends for neatness (optional).
    • Cut each roll into 1.5–2 cm thick slices with a sharp knife (wipe knife between cuts for clean edges).
    • Arrange slices cut-side up on a plate.
    • Serve chilled or at room temperature as an appetizer, side dish, or snack.
Quick Tips for Best Result
  • Egg sheet thinness → Thin sheets roll easier and look prettier. Use low heat and swirl quickly.
  • Squeeze spinach well → Excess water makes rolls soggy and fall apart.
  • Flavor balance → Garlic and sesame oil are the stars — don’t skip them. Sugar is subtle but rounds out the taste.
  • Make ahead → Rolls can be made 4–6 hours in advance and refrigerated (cover tightly). Slice just before serving.
  • Variations
    • Add shredded chicken, imitation crab, or dried shrimp for richer filling.
    • For spicy version: mix chili oil or chili crisp into the spinach.
    • For vegan: replace egg sheets with thin tofu skin or rice paper.
  • Storage → Refrigerate up to 1 day (texture best on day of making). Do not freeze.
This dish is light, fresh, colorful and full of gentle savory flavor — a perfect Chinese home-style cold dish.

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Yuxiang Scrambled Eggs

 Despite the name, there is no fish in this dish — " yuxiang "  refers to a famous Sichuan flavor profile that combines sweet, s...

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