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Dandan noodles

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Dandan noodles
Hong Kong–style dandan noodle soup (擔擔湯麵) served in a Sichuan restaurant in Shanghai with traditional red chili oil sauce, pork, and spring onions
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese擔擔麵
Simplified Chinese担担面
Literal meaning"carrying-pole noodles"[1]
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu Pinyindàndànmiàn
IPA[tântânmjɛ̂n]
Yue: Cantonese
Jyutpingdaam1 daam 1 min6
Japanese name
Kanji担々麺
Kanaタンタンメン
Transcriptions
RomanizationTantanmen

Dandan noodles or dandanmian (traditional Chinese: 擔擔麵; simplified Chinese: 担担面), literally "carrying-pole noodles",[2] is a noodle dish originating from Chinese Sichuan cuisine. It consists of a spicy sauce usually containing preserved vegetables (often including zha cai (榨菜), lower enlarged mustard stems, or ya cai (芽菜), upper mustard stems), chili oil, Sichuan pepper, minced pork, and scallions served over noodles. The dish can either be served dry or as a noodle soup.

The dandanmian originated in Chengdu, the capital of Sichuan province. The original dish is served with no soup in a small bowl covered in a mala meat sauce and pickled vegetables, with peanuts and spring onions served on top. The soup variant is from Hong Kong and is more widespread across the rest of China but it is uncommon in Sichuan itself where the traditional style dominates.

Sesame paste or peanut butter is sometimes added, and occasionally replaces the spicy sauce, usually in the American Chinese style of the dish.[3] In this case, dandanmian is considered a variation of ma jiang mian (麻醬麵), sesame sauce noodles, although ma jiang mian usually refers to a specific Shanghainese dish.

Origin and name

Dandan noodles

The name refers to a type of carrying pole (dan dan) that was used by walking street vendors who sold the dish to passers-by. The pole was carried over the shoulder, with two baskets containing noodles and sauce attached at either end. As the noodles were affordable due to their low cost, the local people gradually came to call them dandan noodles, referencing the street vendors. The name translates directly as 'noodles carried on a pole', but may be better translated as 'peddler's noodles'.

A variety of English spellings are used. The first word may be either dandan, dundun or tantan, and the last word may also be spelled mein (Cantonese pronunciation).

The same sauce is frequently served over poached chicken (called bonbon or bangbang chicken (棒棒鸡)), and on steamed, meat-filled dumplings in another Sichuan dish called suanla chaoshou. The corresponding Japanese dish is tantan-men, a form of ramen (formally 担担麺, as in Chinese, but often written with an iteration mark as 担々麺, or with instead of ).

See also

References

  1. ^ Schaller, G.B. (1994). The Last Panda. University of Chicago Press. p. 42. ISBN 978-0-226-73629-7.
  2. ^ Alisa Joyce and David Barba (1990-10-14). "the spot for hot pot the culinary delights of sichuan province". The Washington Post.
  3. ^ Dunlop, Fuchsia (2008). Shark's Fin and Sichuan Pepper. W. W. Norton & Co. ISBN 0-393-06657-6.