Sign up with email

or

Already a member? Log in.

Trouble logging in?

Not a member? Sign up!

cities-category/elsewhere/beijing-city

“Can you eat spice?” the waitress asked after taking our order. Her hand hovered hesitantly over the cash register.

“Yes,” we replied.

“But… Can you?” she asked again, looking to the other waitresses for help.

“Yes!” we responded emphatically, trying to vocally convey our love of the tongue-tingling, lip-burning action we had come for.

“Umm… These are Chongqing noodles. They are really spicy,” she said with her hand still in a no-man’s-land somewhere between our money and the cash register, unsure whether our foreign palate had what it took to slurp down a bowl of noodles from China’s spiciest city.

“We know, we like them,” we replied. “If they are too spicy for us, we will not be mad. It will be our fault, we promise.”

She finally gave in, promising not to let us down by giving us the laowai level of spice, and sent the order back to the kitchen.

Spicy beef noodle soup at Pang Mei Mian Zhuang, photo by UnTour ShanghaiIn Chongqing, the noodle-crazy municipality in central China, Pang Mei is famous, ranking among the sprawling city’s top 20 noodle shops. The noodles have been fêted by celebrities and foodies alike, including Li Yundi, one of the country’s most famous pianists and a Chongqing native. Translated literally, the name of this place is “Fat Sister’s Noodle Shop” (although in Beijing, someone has given it the more palatable English name of “Decent Sister”).

Pang Mei has been serving up bowls of spicy noodles in Chongqing for more than 20 years and opened in Beijing last April down a tiny hutong in the city center. On days when they pound chilies flown in from Chongqing into homemade spicy pastes and sauces, the fumes in the tiny hutong are enough to make your eyes water.

Pang Mei’s most famous dish is the spicy beef noodles (牛肉面, niúròu miàn), a standard dish in many regional Chinese cuisines, but one that the chefs take extra care with here. The beef is a tendon-layered cut from the front shank of the cow, simmered for more than four hours in chili oil, until the tender chunks absorb all the fiery goodness of the homemade spicy broth. The noodles are alkaline, giving them the same bouncy texture of Japanese ramen. You can order it with fatty intestine too if you’re feeling adventurous (肥肠面, féicháng miàn).

Pang Mei Mian Zhuang, photo by UnTour ShanghaiBut how’s the spice level? Well, it didn’t help that we had a cold and were sniffling. We plowed our way through a bowl of pork wontons (红油抄手, hóng yóu chāoshǒu) the size of a soup tureen in the same spicy soup as the beef noodles. Chili oil, chilies plus Sichuan peppercorn opened our sinuses in a way Vick’s VapoRub never has. After we went through half a box of tissues, a waitress came up and asked if we’d like a bowl of clear broth. We opted instead for the “cold cake” (凉糕, liáng gāo), a homemade compressed patty of rice milk flavored with brown sugar. Nothing cools the infernal burn of Sichuan peppercorn like this famous Chengdu snack. As soon as our lips stopped tingling, we were already thinking about our next bowl of Fat Sister’s noodles.

  • CB on the RoadJuly 27, 2016 CB on the Road (0)
    When you’re in the capital of Sichuan province, snacking is a way of life. Noodles made […] Posted in Shanghai
  • Fly By JingMay 4, 2017 Fly By Jing (0)
    Whether we’re heading to Sichuan province for a little culinary vacation or just looking […] Posted in Shanghai
  • Liu Tang MenApril 5, 2017 Liu Tang Men (0)
    In the past year, we’ve seen more new noodle houses hawking spicy Chengdu and Chongqing […] Posted in Shanghai
Jamie Barys

Published on August 31, 2016

Related stories

July 27, 2016

CB on the Road: Chengdu's Fly Restaurants

Shanghai | By Jamie Barys
ShanghaiWhen you’re in the capital of Sichuan province, snacking is a way of life. Noodles made of bracken, wheat, eeickpeas, mung beans and more, as well as tofu puddings and dumplings, make up the city’s “small eats” (小吃, xiǎochī) scene, served from what’s colloquially known as “fly restaurants.” A step above street food, these family-owned…
May 4, 2017

Fly By Jing: Sichuan Supper Club

Shanghai | By Jamie Barys
ShanghaiWhether we’re heading to Sichuan province for a little culinary vacation or just looking for the best bowl of dan dan mian in the city, there’s one person we call for dining recommendations: Jenny Gao. Born in Chengdu and raised in Canada, Gao’s family still lives in Sichuan, and since moving to Shanghai in 2012,…
April 5, 2017

Liu Tang Men: Chengdu Noodles, Done Right

Shanghai | By Jamie Barys
ShanghaiIn the past year, we’ve seen more new noodle houses hawking spicy Chengdu and Chongqing style noodles than we can count on two hands. Very few of the Shanghai-based noodle houses do the fly restaurants of Chengdu justice. Some dish out bowls of insipid strands that barely register on the Scoville scale, while others go…
Select your currency
USD United States (US) dollar
EUR Euro