Got the cookbook, love the relaxed, humorous style and recognition of Chinese-American cuisine (no authenticity police). Never had this dish but will try it once I find my jumbo bag of dried Sichuan peppers.
MSG is not controversial! Its fine everyone! The cookbook is GREAT! One of my favorite reads in a while for cook books and some really good recipes (made 5 so far!)
So why why did restaurants ban it in certain countries? Weather it's safe or not . Banning something did cause controversy obviously. I think you mean it shouldn't be controversial
@@cleftturnip7774 there was a series of extremely flawed studies back in the 1960s that were prompted arguably by anti-asian sentiment that claimed MSG caused health problems. The results have since been debunked and the studies have been totally discredited, but that is the source of the MSG "controversy". So basically, it's complete bullshit
Ate this in a chinese restaurant un Kuala Lumpur and it was absolutely amazing. Very crispy and aromatic. But I also ate the chilis, they were tasty, too ^^
Love your videos, and until I listened to the ATK podcast episode I had no idea what your family has been through. There is no hint on screen of the past turmoil. I honestly wiped away tears. It's such a delight to see your father beam every time you call him "Dad". Happy families are what we all want and what we all want for others. And your food is amazing!
This is a great dish! I've cooked something similar in the past. BTW love the dad and son action, a generation passing the wisdom to the next one. So nice to see. Keep going!
Kevin, I believe almost everything that you tell me. Jeffrey, I believe everything that you say! Wow does this look great and I might just give it a try when my new cookbook arrives. You two are the most fun of all the cooking specialists out there! Thank you both❤😁
I have been searching for this recipe for years! A restaurant here in Toronto makes it and I've loved it for years. I look forward to trying it. On a local Thai restaurant's spice scale I'm about an 8.
YES This is one I've been hoping for! Love this dish and David's version looks really close to the version I fell in love with. I like the breading mixutre with the AP Flour and Baking Powder vs the all startch breading from the other recipes I've tried. Time to make it again with your version! Thanks Pangs.
Looks scrumptious! I'm probably about a 6. My benchmark for what I can't take is mango chutney made by a friend's mother in Mumbai. Color was about like a ripe tangerine--very orange. Nearly took the top of my head off. But good Mexican, Hunan, or Sichuan food, at nearly-local heat, is usually just fine. Though I have a weird quirk: If it's near my limit, I start hiccuping. A drink of something stops them, and I can then finish--and enjoy--the dish without further hiccups.
HI, THANK YOU FOR THE RECIPE. ESPECIALLY FOR THE BATTERING OF THE CHICKEN. BEEN WANTING A RECIPE FOR THIS. AND FOR HOW SPICY, MILD SPICY. ALL DEPENDS. THANK YOU FOR SHARING.
Holy smokes - Pangs!!! This was so good! The flavor was so savory and amazing! Once again, my Chinese husband (via Vietnam) has neither heard of this or had it. We all devoured it. My picky son may have eaten the most. Such a magical mix of ingredients. Y’all are the best!!! Keep the recipes coming.😊 P.S. We are in the MSG camp. My son, in particular, is a huge fan.
This looks amazing--trying to figure out if I can do this with seitan... I used to be able to handle spice at an 8 or 9 depending on the restaurant's definition, but as I've aged I can handle only a max of 6 without suffering unpleasant after effects. ☹
This looks so tasty .. I can smell it through the screen. But I'd have to use a mild pepper variant, that still provides the taste, not sure which one. The amount of chili here reminds me of a documentary of china, where the Chinese eat hot pots in the Sichuan province, that seem to be made of pure hotness .. hot oil, tons of chili, meat covered in chili... I fear I might burst into flames :)
For those in the greater Boston area (where ATK is based), the humble Dumpling Kitchen on Highland Ave. in Somerville has a tremendous version of this dish. No green onions, but they add some fermented black beans for a salty burst that goes well with the aggressive heat. (Besides being a regular customer, I have no affiliation with Dumpling Kitchen.)
I'm about a 2 or 3 on the spice scale, I think - I can handle some spicy things, but not too spicy. I'm gonna try and find Sichuan peppercorns where I live so I can try this recipe! I have a slight fear of frying foods (all that hot oil) so I tend to avoid recipes that require frying; but this recipe just might make me get over my fear 😂
DO NOT APOLOGIZE FOR MSG OR MAKE IT A “CHINESE THING”. You don’t apologize for using peanut oil or a mountain of chiles or any other ingredient. It ALREADY goes without saying in any recipe: leave it out what you don’t want. Classic ATK: GREAT FOOD, too many steps, too many utensil. Combine the chicken marinade with the dry ingredients, leave out half the water. Use a cheap fine mesh spider from an Asian grocery no tongs. Don’t drain on paper towel, it holds moisture and grease to the chicken, just drain in the rack.
@@franksindoneii5410do you use Sugar? Salt? So why not msg? It's the same kind of thing just for a different basic flavour. If you don't like tasty food, speak for yourself but don't bash people for using a perfectly normal seasoning. The white anti-msg hysteria is just a form of publically acceptable anti Asian racism.
@@gr3g0r5 one of the most incoherent irrelevant and pathetic comments I’ve ever heard. MSG is nothing like salt or sugar lol. It’s a crutch for uncultured make believe line cooks like yourself lol. Also the fact you attempted to squeeze race in as a factor here was hysterical. The secondhand embarrassment with this one is real. Yikes….. 🤣
I never understood why any recipe would call for a ridiculous number of chilies that you weren't going to eat, so I would just chop up ONE chili which made the dish just hot enough for my taste. One time I decided to just follow the recipe and add that ridiculous number of whole chilies and while in the middle of cooking it, my son ran into the kitchen saying "Oh my God, that smells so good!!" Not only did my whole kitchen smell delicious, but the food was also so much better, but not really that much hotter. I am guessing that the flavor compounds that leak out of a whole chili, are weaker than the really hot flavors that you only get when you chop up the chili. You would not notice those weaker flavors in ONE chili, but a handful of whole chilis would give enough flavor to really notice. Indian cooking styles also know this concept. I am glad I finally learned it. Now if I could just get over my fear of deep frying.
Totally agree. I use TWO chilies fine mince added to the final spice blend. In addition. You only need 1 TEASPOON of Sichuan peppercorns ground and also added to the final dry spice blend. Just as good for a lot less money and with no waste. Very good recipe with these changes and I make it all the time.
Red and green, huh? I'm going to add this to my Christmas dishes. (The first time I had laziji, I fell in love, and love hurts... when you get greedy and eat a mouthful of chili)
Can't wait to make this dish. I have tons of dried Thai chiles, but they're a bit too spicy. Next time I'm at the Asian market, I'll get a big bag of these dried red peppers.
Do you eat the chilis? I had this in Chinatown in SF years ago and given the copious amounts of chilis I wasn't sure since it seemed like way to much to eat but also maybe you should since it is on the plate?
I like to order this dish for the dried peppers but I know most people don't eat them. I take them home and bake them even more and eat them like chips. They shouldn't be rubbery at all though. As you saw in the recipe video there's no wet ingredients for the dry chilies to absorb moisture from.
There is a place in Redwood City, CA called Crouching TIger that has Explosive Chicken (and beef). They some how fry their peppers (perhaps different ones) such that they are crispy and delicious to eat. Every bit of the dish is delicious and I always have an empty plate when done.
@@yellowfr0g oh that really smart! I'll have to do that. They were really hard to chew, but idk a word to describe the texture. They aren't rubbery like overcooked seafood. Just hard to chew through. Maybe "tough" is a better word.
This is definitely a recipe for me. I'd probably crack open half the dry chillis or use a mix of habanero and ghost peppers. I need to start my pepper sprouts so they're ready for spring.
I have diverticulosis so I have to be super careful about seasonings. My go tos are dried or fresh herbs, cumin, nutmeg and cinnamon, ginger and maybe a touch of sweet paprika. But I used to love the heat before I had an agonizing attack.
Not completely certain how I would rate my heat tolerance, but any time I go out to eat and I order something spicy I order the dish "Extra spicy. Tell them to make it like they don't like me very much." Usually works.
10. I wish I could find Szechuan peppercorn at my Asian markets but I can't, and shopping online is hard to do for that because you don't know what you're getting. Any suggestions? I need to find quality Szechuan peppercorns.
I tried the non battered version. Im just too lazy to batter and fry the chicken. I just cook the chicken in rendered chicken fat from the skins from the thighs and make a stock from the bones to season the chicken
MIX OIL into the batter just before frying so the chicken doesn't stick together. Come on, that's like Chinese frying 101. Although there's NO batter in an actual Szechuanese 辣子鸡 anyway. The battered version's fine tho, really soaks up the spicy fragrant oil, definitely a valid variant, kind of see them in Japanese Chinese restaurants from time to time.
I am in love with this family. I've never really tried cooking any of the popular Chinese dishes, but these guys make it really easy.
Lovely trust and bond between them, it’s so relaxing watching father and son cooking
Got the cookbook, love the relaxed, humorous style and recognition of Chinese-American cuisine (no authenticity police). Never had this dish but will try it once I find my jumbo bag of dried Sichuan peppers.
Love the Pangs
MSG is not controversial! Its fine everyone!
The cookbook is GREAT! One of my favorite reads in a while for cook books and some really good recipes (made 5 so far!)
It's not fine if you get explosive diarrhea when you eat it.
So why why did restaurants ban it in certain countries? Weather it's safe or not . Banning something did cause controversy obviously. I think you mean it shouldn't be controversial
@@cleftturnip7774 there was a series of extremely flawed studies back in the 1960s that were prompted arguably by anti-asian sentiment that claimed MSG caused health problems. The results have since been debunked and the studies have been totally discredited, but that is the source of the MSG "controversy". So basically, it's complete bullshit
Love you two and your recipe presentations; so much fun to watch!
Ate this in a chinese restaurant un Kuala Lumpur and it was absolutely amazing. Very crispy and aromatic. But I also ate the chilis, they were tasty, too ^^
Dad Pang is so adorable! And can’t wait to try this recipe. 🥰
Love your videos, and until I listened to the ATK podcast episode I had no idea what your family has been through. There is no hint on screen of the past turmoil. I honestly wiped away tears. It's such a delight to see your father beam every time you call him "Dad". Happy families are what we all want and what we all want for others. And your food is amazing!
I'm definitely a 1 on the spicy scale. I was sweating just watching y'all cook.
The finished dish looks delicious.
This is a great dish! I've cooked something similar in the past. BTW love the dad and son action, a generation passing the wisdom to the next one. So nice to see. Keep going!
Kevin, I believe almost everything that you tell me. Jeffrey, I believe everything that you say! Wow does this look great and I might just give it a try when my new cookbook arrives. You two are the most fun of all the cooking specialists out there! Thank you both❤😁
I have been searching for this recipe for years! A restaurant here in Toronto makes it and I've loved it for years. I look forward to trying it. On a local Thai restaurant's spice scale I'm about an 8.
Which restaurant in Toronto? :D
This is one of my favorite dishes to order when I go to a sichuan restaurant. great job!
Omg! This is in my top 3 fave Sichuan dishes!! I was craving this the other day..now I just make this 🤤🤤🤤🔥🔥🔥
YES This is one I've been hoping for! Love this dish and David's version looks really close to the version I fell in love with. I like the breading mixutre with the AP Flour and Baking Powder vs the all startch breading from the other recipes I've tried. Time to make it again with your version! Thanks Pangs.
I love your family. Keep the videos coming. Blessings
I like to fry things in lard rather than nut or vegetable oil. I find it easier to get good color and crispiness without burning things.
Looks scrumptious! I'm probably about a 6. My benchmark for what I can't take is mango chutney made by a friend's mother in Mumbai. Color was about like a ripe tangerine--very orange. Nearly took the top of my head off. But good Mexican, Hunan, or Sichuan food, at nearly-local heat, is usually just fine. Though I have a weird quirk: If it's near my limit, I start hiccuping. A drink of something stops them, and I can then finish--and enjoy--the dish without further hiccups.
That was fun and interesting! I'll try it!
That looks so good! Thx ❤
My fav chinese dish! Can't wait to try this!
Happy Pangs-Giving to Kevin & Jeffrey!
This stuff is insanely good.. it’s that good
This is really beautiful and delicious recipe❤❤❤😋👌
HI,
THANK YOU FOR THE RECIPE.
ESPECIALLY FOR THE BATTERING OF THE CHICKEN. BEEN WANTING A RECIPE FOR THIS.
AND FOR HOW SPICY, MILD SPICY. ALL DEPENDS. THANK YOU FOR SHARING.
I’m definitely a 10 on the heat level. More spice! Can’t wait to try this.
Loving Hunger Pangs! Great name!
looks incredible
Holy smokes - Pangs!!! This was so good! The flavor was so savory and amazing! Once again, my Chinese husband (via Vietnam) has neither heard of this or had it. We all devoured it. My picky son may have eaten the most. Such a magical mix of ingredients. Y’all are the best!!! Keep the recipes coming.😊 P.S. We are in the MSG camp. My son, in particular, is a huge fan.
This is my favorite Chinese dish!
There’s finally Chinese food on ATC. Yasssssss 👏
I love this channel
I bought and cooked all the peppers, I'm eating all the peppers.
This is one of the best all times recipes. This dish is so addictive. perfection.
one of my favorite dishes to order, mouth was watering just watching this dish come together and made me want to make this myself! Thanks Pangs!
I can 1,000% affirm that this recipe is 10,000% amazing
...and with only 100,000% exaggeration?
@@denisoliver6083 -5% hyperbole
Good to know.
Thanks a million
I used to be a 12 on heat, but the stomach doesn't like that anymore! I'm probably a 7 or 8 now... Love your videos.
Hi guys!!!! Love you're here today!!!! Best!!!
This dish triggers all my senses textures, flavors ,Heat sweet and savory . I've got a winner !
My favorite version of this has peanuts in it. Thanks for showing this dish. It’s so yummy
This looks amazing--trying to figure out if I can do this with seitan... I used to be able to handle spice at an 8 or 9 depending on the restaurant's definition, but as I've aged I can handle only a max of 6 without suffering unpleasant after effects. ☹
I recognized Boston's Chinatown the second I saw it! I also love Sichuan, bring on the heat!!
7:50 Fuiyoh!!! MSG is King of Flavor!
This looks so tasty .. I can smell it through the screen. But I'd have to use a mild pepper variant, that still provides the taste, not sure which one. The amount of chili here reminds me of a documentary of china, where the Chinese eat hot pots in the Sichuan province, that seem to be made of pure hotness .. hot oil, tons of chili, meat covered in chili... I fear I might burst into flames :)
I’ll be making this soon 🇨🇦 Thanks
I can't wait for my cookbook to arrive!
For those in the greater Boston area (where ATK is based), the humble Dumpling Kitchen on Highland Ave. in Somerville has a tremendous version of this dish. No green onions, but they add some fermented black beans for a salty burst that goes well with the aggressive heat. (Besides being a regular customer, I have no affiliation with Dumpling Kitchen.)
I'm about a 2 or 3 on the spice scale, I think - I can handle some spicy things, but not too spicy.
I'm gonna try and find Sichuan peppercorns where I live so I can try this recipe! I have a slight fear of frying foods (all that hot oil) so I tend to avoid recipes that require frying; but this recipe just might make me get over my fear 😂
I’m sure this would work great with fried soft shell crab instead of chicken too!
Absolutely love this dish!
DO NOT APOLOGIZE FOR MSG OR MAKE IT A “CHINESE THING”. You don’t apologize for using peanut oil or a mountain of chiles or any other ingredient. It ALREADY goes without saying in any recipe: leave it out what you don’t want.
Classic ATK: GREAT FOOD, too many steps, too many utensil. Combine the chicken marinade with the dry ingredients, leave out half the water. Use a cheap fine mesh spider from an Asian grocery no tongs. Don’t drain on paper towel, it holds moisture and grease to the chicken, just drain in the rack.
MSG is garbage and is a sign of a garbage chef. So yea they are sorry they are using MSG.
@@franksindoneii5410do you use Sugar? Salt? So why not msg? It's the same kind of thing just for a different basic flavour. If you don't like tasty food, speak for yourself but don't bash people for using a perfectly normal seasoning. The white anti-msg hysteria is just a form of publically acceptable anti Asian racism.
I use msg to its advantage, nowhere near takeaway level. Rice mostly. I use kombu tsuyu for fish pie, noodles and even shepherds pie. Get over it 😂
@@gr3g0r5 one of the most incoherent irrelevant and pathetic comments I’ve ever heard. MSG is nothing like salt or sugar lol. It’s a crutch for uncultured make believe line cooks like yourself lol. Also the fact you attempted to squeeze race in as a factor here was hysterical. The secondhand embarrassment with this one is real. Yikes….. 🤣
On the paper towel point you’re simply wrong, paper towels drain fat and moisture away more effectively and keep things drier
"Pangs - ARE YOU CRAZY?!?" Can we get that on a t-shirt? I love it!😆
8! Love your videos!
I never understood why any recipe would call for a ridiculous number of chilies that you weren't going to eat, so I would just chop up ONE chili which made the dish just hot enough for my taste. One time I decided to just follow the recipe and add that ridiculous number of whole chilies and while in the middle of cooking it, my son ran into the kitchen saying "Oh my God, that smells so good!!" Not only did my whole kitchen smell delicious, but the food was also so much better, but not really that much hotter. I am guessing that the flavor compounds that leak out of a whole chili, are weaker than the really hot flavors that you only get when you chop up the chili. You would not notice those weaker flavors in ONE chili, but a handful of whole chilis would give enough flavor to really notice. Indian cooking styles also know this concept. I am glad I finally learned it. Now if I could just get over my fear of deep frying.
Totally agree. I use TWO chilies fine mince added to the final spice blend. In addition. You only need 1 TEASPOON of Sichuan peppercorns ground and also added to the final dry spice blend. Just as good for a lot less money and with no waste. Very good recipe with these changes and I make it all the time.
OMG that looks beautiful and tasty! Maybe a 6?
AHHHHH!!! I LOVE THIS DISH!!!! AAAAAAAAAHHHH!!!
One of the best Sichuan dishes. Hands down.
Everything from panda express anything Chinese food me and my family loves
Looks like something I'd like to order at a restaurant then ask to pack the leftover chillis home for other dishes 🤤
Red and green, huh? I'm going to add this to my Christmas dishes. (The first time I had laziji, I fell in love, and love hurts... when you get greedy and eat a mouthful of chili)
OMG that dish has me drooling, I'm so hungry for some!
Can't wait to make this dish. I have tons of dried Thai chiles, but they're a bit too spicy.
Next time I'm at the Asian market, I'll get a big bag of these dried red peppers.
very cute father son team
My go-to dish at the local Szechuan place. Can't bring myself to get anything else.
the Pangs have done it again
I love Triple Pepper Chicken!
Ma la is my favorite flavor profile, but I can only go to about a 6 on the hotness scale.
I've gotta try it sometime...
Can you use fresh chilis for this? seems like it would be really good with some fresh birds eye
I always toasted the dried chili first. Take them out then do the aromatics.
you made me subscribe to the channel
What are the top 5 recipes in the shamelessly promoted Cookbook that are also in Kevin's top 5?
I'm definitely a 1 also. I'd like to try the dish just for the favor😊
Do you eat the chilis? I had this in Chinatown in SF years ago and given the copious amounts of chilis I wasn't sure since it seemed like way to much to eat but also maybe you should since it is on the plate?
I love this dish! Glad to know I'm not supposed to eat the peppers, I tried a few times and they were so rubbery.
I like to order this dish for the dried peppers but I know most people don't eat them. I take them home and bake them even more and eat them like chips. They shouldn't be rubbery at all though. As you saw in the recipe video there's no wet ingredients for the dry chilies to absorb moisture from.
There is a place in Redwood City, CA called Crouching TIger that has Explosive Chicken (and beef). They some how fry their peppers (perhaps different ones) such that they are crispy and delicious to eat. Every bit of the dish is delicious and I always have an empty plate when done.
The peppers are crunchy and edible after air frying (leftovers), but a few are enough.
@@yellowfr0g oh that really smart! I'll have to do that. They were really hard to chew, but idk a word to describe the texture. They aren't rubbery like overcooked seafood. Just hard to chew through. Maybe "tough" is a better word.
3 cups of chili? I wonder if the recipe originated in Sichuan Province?
Heat makes food better. I'm usually around a 7-8 at restaurants, or the old "how do you have it?" I don't try to hurt myself with heat, though!
This is definitely a recipe for me. I'd probably crack open half the dry chillis or use a mix of habanero and ghost peppers. I need to start my pepper sprouts so they're ready for spring.
What size and where did purchase the wok in the video?
Can you please try the Pakistani Chinese version of this. I am so curious to know what you think of their version of it
I have diverticulosis so I have to be super careful about seasonings. My go tos are dried or fresh herbs, cumin, nutmeg and cinnamon, ginger and maybe a touch of sweet paprika. But I used to love the heat before I had an agonizing attack.
I’ve had VERY spicy Indian food and survived (ha ha) I think this dish will be so welcome. It looks so good!
That’s chicken flavored stirred fried chili
Dish look amazing, and spice lvl for me is that I will eat the chilies before the chicken 😂
👉 Pang! 👉Pang!
Imagine if they did a collab with Jeremy Pang from School of Wok. Pang Pang Pang.
Not completely certain how I would rate my heat tolerance, but any time I go out to eat and I order something spicy I order the dish "Extra spicy. Tell them to make it like they don't like me very much." Usually works.
Use the leftover peppers to make chili oil.
Can you make the chili flakes from blitzing a few of the whole chilies ?
imma need to get that book...
the garlic looked nearly burned in the first 2 seconds, you said you cooked it for another 2 more minutes...? How do you avoid burning it? Thanks!
10. I wish I could find Szechuan peppercorn at my Asian markets but I can't, and shopping online is hard to do for that because you don't know what you're getting. Any suggestions? I need to find quality Szechuan peppercorns.
Got mine on Amazon
I got some from Penzey's
Penzey's is my go to for all my spices.
So this is where Babish gets the ideas that have made him a gazillionaire.. that and J Kenzi Lopez Alt: presentation matters I guess.
Yummy
one! Maybe two!
frying in the wok is the move
My spice tolerance level is a 2.5 at best, and I'm Asian-American
JEFREEEEEE!
Wow
I tried the non battered version. Im just too lazy to batter and fry the chicken. I just cook the chicken in rendered chicken fat from the skins from the thighs and make a stock from the bones to season the chicken
MIX OIL into the batter just before frying so the chicken doesn't stick together. Come on, that's like Chinese frying 101. Although there's NO batter in an actual Szechuanese 辣子鸡 anyway. The battered version's fine tho, really soaks up the spicy fragrant oil, definitely a valid variant, kind of see them in Japanese Chinese restaurants from time to time.