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铁锅小公鸡
tiě guō xiǎo gōng jī

Tie Guo Xiao Gong Ji — Iron Pot Young Rooster

Tie Guo Xiao Gong Ji — Iron Pot Young Rooster

Quick Info

Flavor
Bold, deeply savory, and aromatic. Warm spices like star anise and cinnamon mingle with soy-braised chicken, building layers of rich, hearty flavor with a moderate chili kick.
Texture
Fall-off-the-bone tender chicken pieces in a thick, reduced sauce with soft potatoes and slightly charred green peppers
Spice Level
🌶️🌶️ — A noticeable warmth from dried chilies — present but not overwhelming
Temperature
Served Hot
Cuisine
Dongbei
Cooking
BraisedStewed
Main Ingredients
Chicken

Ingredients

Young rooster (whole, chopped)Dried chili peppersStar aniseCinnamonBay leafGingerGarlicSoy sauceDark soy sauceCooking wineGreen peppersPotatoes

Allergens

Confirmed

SoyGluten

The Story

This dish is pure northeastern China — big, bold, and generous, just like the people of Dongbei. The tradition of iron pot cooking (铁锅炖) comes from the harsh Manchurian winters, where families would gather around a massive iron pot built into a wood-fired stove, slow-cooking whatever was available until it became a rich, warming stew. Young roosters were prized because their meat is leaner and more flavorful than hen, with a firmer bite that holds up to long braising. Today, iron pot restaurants are a phenomenon across China, with some featuring theatrical pots up to a meter wide set into the dining table, the fire burning underneath while you eat.

What to Expect

This is not a dainty dish. A large iron pot arrives at your table, still bubbling, filled with chopped bone-in chicken pieces in a dark, fragrant sauce. The aroma hits you first — star anise, cinnamon, and soy sauce creating that unmistakable Chinese braised-meat perfume. The chicken is deeply colored from the dark soy, tender enough to pull from the bone, and soaked through with flavor. Potatoes break down into the sauce, thickening it. Green pepper slices add freshness and a slight bite.

The real signature move: corn bread (贴饼子) pressed onto the inside rim of the pot, where it steams and crisps simultaneously, absorbing the fragrant vapors from the stew below. You tear off a piece of this bread and dip it into the sauce. It’s the Dongbei version of mopping up gravy with bread, and it’s magnificent.

Tips

Look for restaurants with 铁锅炖 in the name — they specialize in this style of cooking and will have multiple iron pot options (chicken, goose, fish). This is a sharing dish, perfect for 2-4 people. Don’t forget to order the 贴饼子 (tiē bǐng zi, pot-side cornbread) — it’s the essential companion. The pot stays hot for a long time, so pace yourself and be careful of the rim. If you’re ordering at a Dongbei restaurant (东北菜馆), this pairs beautifully with 地三鲜 (stir-fried potato, eggplant, and pepper) and a cold 拍黄瓜 (smashed cucumber salad) to balance the richness. Expect to pay 68-128 yuan depending on the restaurant.

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