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Chili crisp 

or chile crisp is a crispy and spicy condiment, a type of hot sauce, made with fried chili
pepper and other aromatics infused in oil, sometimes with other ingredients. Multiple homemade and
restaurant-original versions exist. The best-known commercial brand is Lao Gan Ma, which
combines the numbing flavor of Sichuan pepper with crunchy roasted soybeans.
Chili crisp originated in Chinese cuisine. It has been described as going with anything and
everything. Multiple variations have been developed.

Contents

 1History
 2Description and ingredients
 3Flavor profile
 4Uses
 5Production
 6See also
 7References

History[edit]
Infused-oil hot sauce condiments have been made and used in China for centuries.[1] Regional
variations developed.[1] In southern China it is more common to simmer the ingredients in the oil,
while in the north it is more common to pour hot oil over the ingredients.[1] Households[2] and
restaurants developed their own versions, and in China "almost every restaurant makes their own",
according to chef and restaurateur Lucas Sin.[1]
In 1997, Chinese restaurateur Tao Huabi began the first commercial production of chili crisp
in Guizhou under the Lao Gan Ma brand, which quickly became popular[1][2] and eventually became a
Chinese pantry staple.[3][4] It was not widely known internationally until the late 2010s and became
particularly popular in the US during the coronavirus pandemic.[1][5][6][7] The New York Times called it "a
quarantine cooking need".[8] The condiment has a fan base often described as "cult-like".[9][6][clarification needed]

Description and ingredients[edit]


Chili crisp is an oil-based condiment that contains crunchy bits of chili pepper, usually along with
other spices such as garlic, onions, scallions, or other aromatics.[1] It is related to chili oil and to chili
sauce, and sometimes the terms are used interchangeably to refer to it.[1] Chili crisp's proportions are
such that the condiment contains much more crunchy bits than oil, which creates the texture of the
condiment.[1][10] It is typically not pourable like chili oils and chili sauces but instead is spooned over or
stirred into dishes, and unlike chili oils and chili sauces it is not typically used in cooking but instead
is added to foods before serving.[1] Some recipes for chili oil call for making a chili crisp–like product,
then straining out the solids.[7]
Sichuan pepper is a common traditional ingredient.[1] Rapeseed oil or soybean oil are common
bases.[1] Vinegar, which is commonly used in hot sauces, is not an ingredient.[7][1]

Flavor profile[edit]
Chili crisp is savory, salty, spicy, and oily.[2][5] Today described chili crisp as "a flavor bomb, incredibly
nuanced, usually spicy, full of umami".[1] The Los Angeles Times described the flavor as "the salty,
crackly pleasure of potato chips with a just-right amount of tingling chile heat".[2] New York magazine
described it as "balanced the way sriracha is, only with more crunch and oomph".[11] Chili crisps
containing Sichuan pepper create ma-la, an "intense heat and numbing sensation" typically
associated with mala.[1][12][13]
Besides the actual flavors, much of the appeal is often attributed to the texture.[1][5]

Uses[edit]

Chili crisp on vanilla ice cream

It has been described as being good with "anything" and "everything", including desserts.[1][5][2][13] Sam
Sifton described it as "magical" and "a condiment to improve all it touches".[8] Lucky Peach listed it
among their pantry staples, saying:[14]
Do you need this? Not quite. Do you want this? Most definitely ... a signifier to other food nerds that
you crossed the sriracha river into the land of freaky-deaky hot sauces that will never be trendy.
Chili crisp is typically used as a condiment rather than as a cooking ingredient.[1][7] It is used to top
many different dishes, such as avocado toast,[1][5] tacos,[1] eggs,[5][2] fish,[2] vegetables,[2][5] salads,[15] fruit,
[5]
 grains,[16] peanut brittle,[9] or vanilla ice cream.[1][5][12][17] It is spooned onto or stirred into soups and
broths.[1][5] It is tossed into noodles or used to top them.[1][5] It is used as a dip or spread.[1]
Jing Gao, who makes an artisan chili crisp, called topping ice cream with the condiment an example
of hei an liao li, a term used on the Chinese internet for bizarre food combinations that translates to
"dark cuisine".[17][12][9]

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