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西湖醋鱼
xī hú cù yú

West Lake Vinegar Fish

Quick Info

Flavor
A delicate sweet-sour sauce over mild, clean-tasting fish — lighter and more refined than Western sweet-and-sour, with the vinegar providing brightness rather than tartness.
Texture
Silky, flaky poached fish flesh that slides easily off the bone, draped in a smooth, glossy sauce
Spice Level
Not spicy
Temperature
Served Hot
Cuisine
Zhejiang 浙菜
Cooking
Boiled
Main Ingredients
Fish

Ingredients

Grass carp (whole)Zhenjiang black vinegarSugarSoy sauceGingerShaoxing rice wineCornstarch

Allergens

Confirmed

FishSoy

Possible

Gluten

These ingredients may vary by restaurant. Ask your server to confirm.

The Story

This dish is one of Hangzhou’s oldest and most famous, tied directly to the city’s iconic West Lake. Legend has it that a young woman created the dish for her brother-in-law before he left to seek justice against a corrupt official. The sweet and sour flavors were meant to remind him of life’s bitterness and sweetness, and to never forget their hardship. When he later became a powerful official himself, he returned to find her — but she had already vanished.

The dish has been a symbol of Hangzhou dining for centuries. Traditionally, the fish is starved in clean water for a day or two before cooking, which purges any muddy flavor and produces remarkably clean-tasting flesh.

What to Expect

A whole poached fish arrives at the table, its curved body draped in a translucent, amber-colored sweet-sour sauce. The presentation is elegant and understated — very different from the loud, heavily battered sweet-and-sour dishes you might know from Western Chinese restaurants. There’s no breading, no deep-frying. Just pure, gently poached fish.

The flesh is incredibly delicate and silky, almost custard-like in its tenderness. The sauce strikes a careful balance between Zhenjiang black vinegar (a mellow, slightly smoky vinegar quite unlike Western white vinegar) and sugar, with ginger cutting through any fishiness. The overall impression is one of subtlety and restraint — this is Zhejiang cooking at its most refined.

Tips

Eat this dish immediately when it arrives — the sauce thickens and the fish texture changes as it cools. Use your chopsticks to gently pull flakes of fish from the bone rather than cutting. The belly meat near the bottom is the most prized, tender section. If you’re not comfortable navigating a whole fish, ask your server to recommend the best sections. This dish is best appreciated alongside richer dishes like Dongpo Pork, as its lightness provides excellent contrast.

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