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成都凉面
chéng dū liáng miàn

Chengdu Cold Noodles — Sichuan-Style Cold Noodles

Quick Info

Flavor
A balanced hit of sesame, garlic, vinegar, and chili. Like a cold sesame noodle from a New York deli but spicier, tangier, and more aromatic.
Texture
Chewy, springy wheat noodles lightly oiled and slightly sticky, coated in a thin but punchy dressing
Spice Level
🌶️🌶️ — About the heat of a generous squeeze of Sriracha — noticeable but not painful
Temperature
Served Cold
Cuisine
Sichuan 川菜
Cooking
Cold-mixed
Main Ingredients
Noodles

Ingredients

Wheat noodlesChili oilSesame pasteSoy sauceRice vinegarGarlicSugarSichuan peppercorn oilBean sproutsCrushed peanutsGreen onions

Allergens

Confirmed

GlutenSoySesamePeanuts

The Story

Chengdu summers are brutally hot and humid, and nobody wants steaming noodles when it feels like you are sitting in a sauna. Cold noodles became the city’s answer to eating well in the heat. Every neighborhood has a vendor with their own sauce recipe, and locals argue about whose is best with the same intensity that New Yorkers argue about pizza slices.

What to Expect

A tangle of room-temperature to cold wheat noodles, glossy with oil and tossed in a fragrant dressing that hits every taste bud — salty, sweet, sour, nutty, garlicky, and just enough spicy to make things interesting. The noodles have a satisfying chew, and the bean sprouts add a fresh crunch. It is simple, refreshing, and dangerously easy to inhale.

Tips

This is a casual street snack, not a sit-down restaurant affair. You will often find it sold from carts or tiny shopfronts. Eat it quickly — the noodles are best before the sauce fully soaks in and they turn soggy. If you want more heat, ask for extra chili oil (加辣油, jiā là yóu).

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