Chongqing hotpot is the progenitor. The Michelin Guide Chongqing recognises multiple hotpot restaurants in the city. The story usually told is that Chongqing dock workers in the 1930s cooked discarded beef offal in spiced tallow broth to make something edible from cheap ingredients. The dish spread. It reached Chengdu and was adapted with canola oil for a lighter version.
What you eat in Chongqing today is the original: more tallow, more chili, more Sichuan pepper, more intensity. The city has other things worth eating too. But the hotpot is the reason food travelers come. For the full city guide: Chongqing Travel Guide.
Hotpot: The Right Version
The broth
Chongqing hotpot broth is built on rendered beef tallow. The fat is clarified, combined with dried chili, Sichuan pepper (花椒), doubanjiang (fermented chili bean paste), and a complex of dried spices including star anise, cinnamon, and cardamom. The surface of the pot is red and the fat content is visible. This is not a light dish. Order the split pot (鸳鸯锅) to have one side spicy and one side with a plain bone broth for ingredients that benefit from gentler cooking.
Where to go
- Zhu Laosi Hotpot (朱老四火锅): Waterfront location on Nanbin Road. One of the city’s most established hotpot restaurants. The riverside setting with the city skyline opposite is hard to beat for atmosphere. Queue at peak times.
- Little Swan (小天鹅火锅): A Chongqing-born chain that has expanded nationally. The original Chongqing locations use the authentic beef tallow recipe. Good for first-timers: English picture menus at some locations.
- Eight Immortals Hotpot (八仙美食): Local neighborhood chain. No tourist premium. The version locals eat. Multiple locations in Yuzhong district.
What to order
| Ingredient | Chinese | Cooking Time | Notes |
| Thin beef slices | 肥牛 (fei niu) | 30 to 45 sec | The standard. Wave in broth until pink disappears. |
| Tripe | 毛肚 (mao du) | 10 to 15 sec | Chongqing’s signature ingredient. Chewy. Overcooking makes it rubbery. |
| Duck intestine | 鸭肠 (ya chang) | 10 to 15 sec | Crispy if cooked right. Rubbery if overcooked. Watch it carefully. |
| Beef tendon slices | 牛筋 (niu jin) | 4 to 5 min | Gelatinous. Needs longer cooking. Richly flavored. |
| Lotus root | 莲藕 (lian ou) | 3 to 4 min | Crunchy. Good for moderating the spice impact. |
| Mung bean noodles | 粉条 (fen tiao) | 2 to 3 min | Glass noodles. Absorb the broth beautifully. |
| Brain tofu | 脑花 (nao hua) | 2 to 3 min | Not for everyone. Pork brain cooked directly in the broth. Creamy. |
| Bamboo shoots | 竹笋 (zhu sun) | 3 to 4 min | Slightly sweet. Contrasts the spice. |
The dipping sauce
Self-serve sauce station at most Chongqing hotpot restaurants. Standard setup: sesame oil (麻油), raw garlic (蒜泥), oyster sauce, dried chili, coriander. Base: sesame oil. The oil wraps the food and coats the tongue, moderating the broth heat. Add garlic. Keep the station simple. First-timers often over-complicate it.
Chongqing Noodles (小面, Xiao Mian)
After hotpot, this is the second essential Chongqing food experience. Thin alkaline noodles in a broth built on sesame paste, doubanjiang, dried shrimp, and crushed Sichuan pepper. Topped with green onion and a soft-boiled egg. ¥8 to ¥12 at a local noodle shop. Available from 6am for breakfast. The heat from the Sichuan pepper starts at the tongue tip and spreads gradually. Do not eat this if you cannot tolerate spice. Order ‘bu la’ (不辣) for the mildest version, which will still have heat.
Other Essential Chongqing Dishes
| Dish | Chinese | What It Is | Notes |
| Fuqi fei pian | 夫妻肺片 | Thinly sliced beef and tendon in chili oil, Sichuan pepper, sesame. | Cold dish. Starter. Essential. |
| Zhong dumplings | 钟水饺 | Pork dumplings in sweet soy and chili oil. Served in groups of 10. | A Chongqing institution. Light meal. |
| Mapo tofu | 麻婆豆腐 | Silky tofu in beef mince with doubanjiang, Sichuan pepper, chili. | Better here than almost anywhere else. This is the source region. |
| Chongqing chicken | 歌乐山辣子鸡 | Pieces of chicken deep-fried with dried chili and Sichuan pepper. The chicken is in the chili, not the other way. | Found throughout the city. Requires tolerance for heat. |
| Hot and sour noodles | 酸辣粉 | Thick sweet potato noodles in a tart, spicy broth. | Street food version. Under ¥15. |
Frequently Asked Questions
For hotpot styles: Sichuan Hotpot Guide. For Chinese food broadly: Chinese Food Guide. For full Chongqing guide: Chongqing Travel Guide.
