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Ants Climbing a Tree — Spicy Glass Noodles

Ants Climbing a Tree — Spicy Glass Noodles

Quick Info

Flavor
Savory-spicy with umami depth. Chili bean paste and soy sauce coat slippery noodles, with tiny morsels of seasoned pork throughout.
Texture
Springy, slippery glass noodles clinging to tiny bits of minced meat in a lightly oily sauce
Spice Level
🌶️🌶️🌶️ — Similar heat to a spicy arrabiata pasta — present but manageable
Temperature
Served Hot
Cuisine
Sichuan 川菜
Cooking
Stir-fried
Main Ingredients
Glass NoodlesPork

Ingredients

Glass noodles (sweet potato starch)Ground porkDoubanjiang (chili bean paste)Soy sauceGingerGarlicGreen onionsChili flakes

Allergens

Confirmed

SoyPork

Possible

GlutenSesame

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

The Story

The poetic name — “Ants Climbing a Tree” — describes how tiny bits of minced pork cling to the thin glass noodles, resembling ants scaling tree branches. It’s a classic home-style Sichuan dish that’s been on family tables for centuries. Despite its whimsical name, it’s a practical, economical dish: a small amount of meat flavors a large amount of inexpensive noodles, making it a staple of everyday Chinese cooking.

What to Expect

A tangle of translucent glass noodles arrives, tinted reddish-brown from chili bean paste and soy sauce. Tiny specks of ground pork cling to every strand — there’s the ants. The noodles are springy and slippery, absorbing all the savory-spicy sauce. It’s more flavorful than it looks, and surprisingly filling. The dish is simple but deeply satisfying.

Tips

Glass noodles are naturally gluten-free (made from sweet potato starch), though the sauce contains soy and possibly wheat-based soy sauce. This dish is a great introduction to Sichuan home cooking — approachable spice level and familiar textures. Eat it with rice to stretch the meal further.

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