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钟水饺
zhōng shuǐ jiǎo

Zhong Dumplings — Zhong's Boiled Dumplings

Quick Info

Flavor
Sweet, savory, and gently spicy. Like gyoza dipped in a sweet soy-chili glaze — the sweetness is unexpected and addictive.
Texture
Thin, delicate dumpling wrappers with a dense, pure pork filling, drenched in a slick, sweet-spicy sauce
Spice Level
🌶️🌶️ — Mild like a sweet chili dipping sauce — more warmth than heat
Temperature
Served Hot
Cuisine
Sichuan 川菜
Cooking
Boiled
Main Ingredients
Pork

Ingredients

Pork fillingThin wheat dumpling wrappersSweet soy sauceChili oilGarlicSugarGreen onions

Allergens

Confirmed

GlutenSoyallergen.pork

Possible

Sesame

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

The Story

In the 1930s, a man named Zhong Shaobai started selling dumplings from a tiny stall in Chengdu. His twist was using only pork in the filling (no vegetables, which was unusual) and dressing them in a distinctive sweet soy and chili sauce. The dumplings became so popular that they earned a spot as one of Chengdu’s officially recognized heritage snacks — and the Zhong name has survived nearly a century.

What to Expect

A bowl of small, plump dumplings swimming in a dark, glossy sauce that is surprisingly sweet. Unlike the dumplings you may know from other Chinese cuisines, these have no vegetables in the filling — it is pure seasoned pork wrapped in a paper-thin skin. The sweet soy sauce is the signature move here, and it catches most first-timers off guard in the best way possible.

Tips

These are meant as a snack, not a meal — portions are intentionally small. Order them alongside other Chengdu street snacks for a proper tasting tour. Do not drain the sauce; scoop the dumplings up with plenty of it. The combination of sweet, savory, and spicy in one bite is the whole point.

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