a popular street-food-style dish from Chengdu, Sichuan Province. Often described as "hot pot for one," Maocai features a variety of fresh vegetables, meats, and offal simmered in a bold, spicy, and numbing (mala) broth.
The ingredients are cooked together and served in a bowl with plenty of the flavorful soup, topped with fresh herbs and extra chili oil for that signature Sichuan kick.
Unlike skewered Malatang (where you often pay by the skewer), Maocai is typically weighed or portioned by the cook and served already assembled in a bowl with broth.Servings: 2–3 (as a main meal)
Prep time: 30–40 minutes (plus soaking time for some ingredients)
Cook time: 30–45 minutes
Total time: About 1 hour 15 minutes (simpler home version)IngredientsFor the Mala Broth Base (Simplified Home Version – using store-bought hot pot base for ease):
Prep time: 30–40 minutes (plus soaking time for some ingredients)
Cook time: 30–45 minutes
Total time: About 1 hour 15 minutes (simpler home version)IngredientsFor the Mala Broth Base (Simplified Home Version – using store-bought hot pot base for ease):
- 50–80g (about 2–3 oz) Sichuan spicy hot pot base (e.g., Chongqing or Chengdu-style mala base; adjust for spice level)
- 1–1.5 liters (4–6 cups) chicken stock, pork bone stock, or water (for richer flavor, use bone broth)
- 2–3 tablespoons Pixian doubanjiang (Sichuan fermented chili bean paste), finely chopped
- 3–4 cloves garlic, minced
- 3–4 slices ginger
- 2–3 scallions (white parts for broth, green for garnish)
- 1–2 tablespoons Sichuan peppercorns (toasted and lightly crushed for numbing flavor)
- 4–6 dried red chilies (e.g., facing heaven or er jing tiao), or more to taste
- 1 tablespoon Shaoxing wine or cooking wine
- 1 teaspoon sugar
- 1–2 teaspoons light soy sauce
- 1 teaspoon oyster sauce (optional)
- Salt to taste
- 2–3 tablespoons neutral oil or beef tallow (for frying aromatics)
- Optional for deeper flavor: 1–2 tablespoons fermented black beans (douchi), a small piece of rock sugar, star anise, or bay leaves
- Vegetables: Lotus root slices, potato slices or wide potato noodles (soaked), cauliflower florets, napa cabbage or bok choy, fresh corn chunks, celery, winter melon, shiitake mushrooms, wood ear mushrooms (soaked), bean sprouts, celtuce (stem lettuce)
- Tofu & Others: Firm tofu or fried tofu puffs, dried tofu skin
- Meats & Offal (Optional but Traditional): Thinly shaved beef or lamb, beef tripe (honeycomb or smooth), pork intestines or luncheon meat, duck intestines, eel slices, or shrimp
- Starch/Noodles: Wide sweet potato noodles (soaked until soft), rice cakes, or glass noodles
- Chopped cilantro and green onions
- Minced garlic (fresh or fried)
- Chili oil (homemade or store-bought, with sediment)
- Sesame oil
- A splash of black vinegar (optional, for brightness)
- Ground Sichuan peppercorn powder (for extra mala)
- Prepare Ingredients
Wash and cut all vegetables and meats into bite-sized pieces that cook evenly (thin slices for meats, thicker chunks for root vegetables). Soak dried items like wood ear mushrooms, potato noodles, or seaweed in warm water until softened (30–60 minutes or overnight for some). Drain well.
Toast Sichuan peppercorns in a dry pan until fragrant, then lightly crush them. This enhances the numbing sensation. - Make the Mala Broth
Heat 2–3 tablespoons oil (or beef tallow) in a large wok or pot over medium heat. Add minced garlic, ginger slices, scallion whites, dried chilies, and Sichuan peppercorns. Stir-fry until fragrant and the chilies darken slightly (do not burn, about 30–60 seconds).
Add the chopped Pixian doubanjiang and stir-fry for 1–2 minutes until the oil turns red and aromatic.
Pour in the hot pot base, Shaoxing wine, sugar, soy sauce, and oyster sauce. Stir to combine.
Add the stock or water and bring to a boil. Reduce to a gentle simmer. Taste and adjust seasoning with salt, more chili, or sugar. Simmer for 10–15 minutes to let the flavors meld. For a more authentic depth, simmer longer (20–30 minutes) on low heat. Skim any foam. The broth should be spicy, numbing, savory, and slightly oily. - Cook the Ingredients
In the simmering broth, add ingredients in stages based on cooking time:- First: Root vegetables and tougher items like lotus root, potato, cauliflower, and tripe (cook 5–8 minutes).
- Next: Mushrooms, tofu, noodles, and cabbage (3–5 minutes).
- Last: Quick-cooking items like shaved beef, shrimp, bean sprouts, or leafy greens (1–2 minutes until just done).
Stir gently to ensure everything is submerged and cooks evenly. Do not overcook—vegetables should remain crisp-tender, and meats juicy.
- Assemble and Serve
Once everything is cooked, use a slotted spoon or spider strainer to transfer the solid ingredients into serving bowls (portion generously).
Ladle plenty of the hot mala broth over the top until the bowl is nearly full.
Garnish generously with chopped cilantro, green onions, fresh minced garlic, a drizzle of chili oil, sesame oil, and a sprinkle of ground Sichuan peppercorn. Add a splash of black vinegar if desired for balance.
Serve immediately while piping hot, with extra chili oil on the side for those who want more heat.
- Spice Level: Start milder if you're new to mala—use less chili and peppercorns, then adjust. The numbing (ma) from Sichuan peppercorns and heat (la) from chilies are what make it addictive.
- Authentic Touch: For a more traditional broth from scratch, fry Pixian doubanjiang with aromatics, add Chinese spices (star anise, cassia, etc.) in a spice bag, and use bone stock. Many home cooks simplify with commercial hot pot base.
- Customization: Maocai is highly flexible—include what you like! Popular combos feature offal for texture contrast with crisp veggies and chewy noodles. Vegetarians can skip meats and use mushroom stock.
- Make-Ahead: Prepare the broth base in advance (it tastes even better the next day). Cook fresh ingredients just before serving.
- Pairings: Enjoy with cold beer, steamed rice, or simply on its own. It's perfect as a comforting, spicy meal that warms you up.