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葱油拌面
cōng yóu bàn miàn

Shanghai Scallion Oil Noodles

Quick Info

Flavor
Deeply savory and aromatic with caramelized scallion sweetness. Imagine the best onion-flavored anything you've ever had, concentrated into a noodle sauce.
Texture
Springy, chewy wheat noodles coated in a dark, glossy oil that clings to every strand
Spice Level
Not spicy
Temperature
Served Hot
Cuisine
Jiangsu 苏菜
Cooking
Cold-mixed
Main Ingredients
Noodles

Ingredients

Wheat noodlesScallions (large quantity)Soy sauceDark soy sauceSugarVegetable oilSesame oil

Allergens

Confirmed

GlutenSoySesame

The Story

This is arguably Shanghai’s most iconic noodle dish, and it achieves greatness through radical simplicity. No meat, no vegetables, no fancy ingredients — just noodles tossed in oil that has been slowly infused with scallions until they turn crispy and golden. The magic is in the technique: the scallions must be fried low and slow until every drop of their flavor has been coaxed into the oil, creating something far more complex than the ingredient list suggests.

Scallion oil noodles are everyday food in Shanghai. They are what Shanghainese cooks make when there is nothing in the fridge, and yet visitors remember them as one of the best things they ate in the city.

What to Expect

A seemingly plain bowl of dark-glazed noodles topped with crispy, caramelized scallion pieces. It looks almost too simple to be special. Then you toss the noodles (always toss before eating — the sauce pools at the bottom), take your first bite, and understand what all the fuss is about.

The scallion oil is intensely aromatic, sweet, and savory at once. The dark soy sauce adds color and a slight molasses-like richness. The crispy scallion bits provide crunch and bursts of concentrated allium flavor. It is comfort food at its most elemental — every culture has a version of “noodles in flavored oil,” and this is China’s best.

Tips

Toss the noodles thoroughly before eating — the sauce settles at the bottom and unmixed noodles will taste bland on top. Many Shanghainese add a fried egg on top, and so can you — just ask for “jia ge jian dan” (add a fried egg). This is a light meal, so pair it with a side dish or soup if you are hungry. Street stalls and hole-in-the-wall noodle shops often make the best versions.

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