Chinese chili oil|chinasichuanfood.com

Learn how to make authentic Chinese chili oil from whole dried red pepper and crushed red pepper flakes. This method produces a dark right color but the strongest aroma so it is extremely popular in Szechuan restaurants.


In different Chinese cuisine especially Sichuan cuisine, condiments and seasonings are quite important. Since chili pepper and Sichuan peppercorn are the most two important condiments in Sichuan cuisine. Besides, combined Szechuan style chili oil is also an important seasoning, not shining but indispensable to your kitchen.

I have made a similar version long time ago, using pepper flakes directly. Then when I was browsing a picture introducing Sichuan style fried dried pepper, suddenly I realized  the types of pepper flakes might influence the taste a lot. The Sichuan style pepper flakes we bought here in China are all fried before ground. By following this recipe, you can approach the real Sichuan Restaurant  flavor maximumly.  But the oil is actually “dark red” instead of “bright red”.

Chili oil|chinasichuanfood.com

We usually use at least two types of dried whole peppers for red oil because some of them have strong aroma, some with great red color while others are spicy enough. For me, I love to mix Er Jing Tiao (aroma and color), Bullet Head (aroma) and Facing heaven(hotness). If you are in US, you can go this shop and find those ingredients. Or use dried whole peppers from amazon.

Chili oil from dried whole peppers ingredients | chinasichuanfood.comChili oil from dried whole peppers ingredients | chinasichuanfood.com

You can use this chili oil in following Sichuan style hot dishes.

  1. Dan dan noodles
  2. Chongqing noodles
  3. Mouthwatering chicken
  4. Red oil wonton
  5. Cold sesame wonton
  6. Smashed cucumber salad

Ingredients

  • 100g dried chili peppers (cut into small pieces)
  • 1 tbsp. Sichuan peppercorn
  • 1 tbsp. white sesame seeds
  • 2 cups oil (recommend colleseed oil)
  • 2 green onion, white parts only
  • 1 thumb ginger, sliced
Spices
  • 2 star anises
  • 2 bay leaves
  • 1 small piece of Chinese cinnamon
  • 1 tsaoko (optional)
  • 1 fructus amomi, 砂仁 (optional)

Instructions

make the pepper flakes
  1. Cut the dried whole chili peppers. If you want to reduce the hotness, discard part of the seeds to reduce the hotness.
  2. Fry the pepper sections over slow fire until they turn dark red (the purpose of this step is to stimulate the aroma).
  3. Transfer the dried chili peppers into a stone mortar and then crush roughly. Be carefully and protect yourself.How to make Chinese chili oil|chinasichuanfood.com
  4. Transfer the crushed chili flakes to a bowl, add Sichuan peppercorn and toasted sesame seeds.
  5. Add oil in wok and cut the spring onion into one inch sections and slice ginger. Fry over slow fire until they becomes brown.how to make Chinese Chili Oil|chinasichuanfood.com
  6. Transfer them out and then add dried spices. Continue fry over slow fire until aromatic. Move the spices out.
  7. Pour around 1/2 cup of hot oil into the chili fakes. Mix well. At this time, the oil should be quite hot.Chili oil|chinasichuanfood.com
  8. Wait for around half minutes until the oil is slightly cooled. Pour the remaining hot oil into the chili flakes.Chili oil|chinasichuanfood.com
  9. Pour to a air-tight container, wait for 1-2 days until the red color is formed.how to make Chinese chili oil|chinasichuanfood.com
Chili oil|chinasichuanfood.com

How to Make Chinese Red Oil (Difficult Version)

Homemade Chinese spicy red oil. This is a Composited Sichusn style chilli oil.
5 from 20 votes
Print Pin Rate
Course: sauce
Cuisine: Sichuan
Keyword: red oil
Prep Time: 10 minutes
Cook Time: 20 minutes
Total Time: 30 minutes
Servings: 32
Calories: 27kcal
Author: Elaine

Ingredients

  • 100 g dried chili peppers ,cut into small pieces
  • 1 tbsp. Sichuan peppercorn
  • 1 tbsp. white sesame seeds
  • 2 cups oil ,recommend colleseed oil
  • 2 green onion ,white parts only
  • 1 thumb ginger ,sliced

Spices

Instructions

Make the pepper flakes

  • Cut the dried whole chili peppers. If you want to reduce the hotness, discard part of the seeds.
  • Fry the pepper sections over slow fire until they turn dark red (the purpose of this step is to stimulate the aroma).
  • Transfer the dried chili peppers into a stone mortar and then crush roughly.

Prepare the oil

  • Transfer the crushed chili flakes to a bowl, add Sichuan peppercorn and toasted sesame seeds.
  • Add oil in wok and cut the spring onion into one inch sections and slice ginger. Fry over slow fire until they becomes brown.
  • Transfer them out and then add dried spices. Continue fry over slow fire until aromatic. Move the spices out.

Mix oil with pepper

  • Pour around 1/2 cup of hot oil into the chili fakes. Mix well.
  • Turn up the fire and heat the oil until almost smoky. Pour the remaining hot oil into the chili flakes.
  • Pour to a air-tight container, wait for 1-2 days until the red color is formed.

Notes

The Nutrition facts are calculated based on about 1 tablespoon of the chili oil. 
Please adjust the amount according to your needs. The chili oil can be kept up to a month in a sealed container.
This is no salt version, if you want your chili oil has some salty taste, add 1 teaspoon of salt with the chili powders.

Nutrition

Calories: 27kcal | Carbohydrates: 3g | Protein: 1g | Fat: 2g | Saturated Fat: 1g | Sodium: 3mg | Potassium: 69mg | Fiber: 1g | Sugar: 1g | Vitamin A: 840IU | Vitamin C: 1.2mg | Calcium: 10mg | Iron: 0.3mg

 

Chili oil|chinasichuanfood.com

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recipe Rating




This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

83 Comments

    1. Rosanna

      Thanks for stopping by and hope it work out well on your side. Homemade chili oil is healthier and economical.

  1. 5 stars
    By the way, the picture with the red oil in the spoon is amazing. This is the picture that made me discover your website.
    Last time, I did the short version, but tonight I’ll do the full one.

  2. I made my first time and it got a little brown and not red like yours. I’m sad. Maybe next time will go better. I made the more difficult version. But you didn’t put the measures for that one.

    1. Margarida,

      If you are making the simple version, the color actually depends on the chili powder you are using since oil in poured directly. You can wait the oil to cool down a little bit before mixing with the powders, otherwise the powders might be burnt and thus bring a darker color. Besides the simple version usually cannot be pure red since the ingredients are not filtered.
      For the more difficult version, I have added the measures for your convenience. And hope it works great this time.

          1. Can a darker color also not be the result of heating up the oil to high? Which in turn can burn the spices but I believe it makes the oil more brown as well? I got this the second time and I think it is because I let the oil heat up too long

  3. Hi Elaine!

    Thanks for sharing the recipe!
    For the simple version, when you say a 10:2:2:4 what does that refer to and how much oil should I start out with?

    Thanks!

    1. Hi James,
      Thanks for pointing that out. I think it might be a little bit confusing too. I have updated the recipe and listed the ingredients you will need for a small batch testing.

  4. Hi Elsine to date I have tried quite a few of your recipes and they are fantastic

    For quite a while now I have been looking for a really authentic dim sum pastry recipe but having tried a considerably amount off the net I just can’t seem to get that perfect texture and taste – I’m ok with fillings it the pastry recipe please

    Is there any way you would have time to post a response with the exact ingredients and method please

    Kind regards … Stuart

    1. Wow That’s really so many chili Jun. Do you mean that you plan to make all of them to chili oil? Have you never heard of Chinese Lao Gan Ma. I think it might inspire you some way.

  5. hello. dear, i like to make very large qty if chilli oil, this might use in restruant if goes well with it, is there anything i should know more about it?? thanx

    1. Hi Tseba,
      The only suggestion I can give is to test with a small batch firstly to see how it goes and you can add more spices for restaurant dishes.

  6. Hi Elaine-

    Thanks for sharing the recipes. I tried the simple version a few months ago and it turned out great! I want to explore the more difficult version but have a quick question. How much oil am I adding to the spice mixture? 4 tablespoon seems like a very small amount. Just want to double check to make sure the oil comes out perfect! Thanks for all your help!

    Alanna

    1. Hi Alanna,
      Thanks for your feedback about the simplified version and your correctness about the more complex version. Usually I did not measure the oil used in the recipe at that time. And yes, 4 tablespoons are too small and I have updated the recipe for a more appropriate amount, for 4 oz chili pepper, it should be around 2 cups. However if you want the chili oil to be less spicy, you can use 3 cups oil too.