How spicy chili crisp can change your life: A pandemic story (2024)

How did my yearlong relationship with chili crisp start? I'm not really sure anymore. I think it was some article, a tweet, realizing it was already a trend somewhere. The look of the jar reminded me of something. I knew the taste, the funk. I had it in a Sichuan restaurant before. So things go in the pandemic time: fuzzy memories out of time, stuff absorbed from social feeds. An idea floats up out of the sea of tweets. Sometimes I'm late to discoveries, or right on time.

My love affair began last summer, back when isolation had only been happening for a few months, yet still felt like forever. I ordered three jars of Lao Gan Ma. This company and its condiments had already become a pandemic trend then. I thought I was late. But I also realized I was cooking all the time, ordering everything I needed online and never going to stores, and I had completely avoided restocking my spices. Instead of dreaming of Sichuan food I could no longer eat in restaurants, maybe I could just try having some of the flavors on hand.

That's how I got my jars. I haven't looked back since. What I didn't expect is that it would resonate with my friends, reconnect me with old acquaintances, and provide a spark of kinship that's helped me endure my year away from so many people. Thank you, chili crisp.

Chili crisp is bits of chili and onion fried in oil, more or less. Or garlic. Or Sichuan peppercorns, ideally. Maybe fermented soybeans. Lao Gan Ma's chili crisp has all of that, plus a big dollop of MSG. Monosodium glutamate has become a modernist-cuisine addition now, as opposed to the feared additive it was decades ago. Basically, it's the umami flavor. A funky, addictive part of the taste spectrum. Chili crisp isn't all that spicy. Or even that incredibly salty.

I didn't plan to connect with friends over my chili crisp love. It was going to be my personal lifeboat, my own little comfort. Something to sit on my shelf and remind me of the lost places, like a souvenir of adventures I couldn't take anymore. I tried a small spoonful. Then another.

Chili crisp at last pic.twitter.com/DuYYG3Ya5S

— Scott Stein (@jetscott) August 14, 2020

My first order of Lao Gan Ma chili crisp was on Aug. 9, 2020, according to my Amazon shopping history. I shared my first photo of it on Aug. 14. Why did I share it? I don't know, I was excited. I also took a photo of it next to a jar of everything bagel seasoning, which had been my previous comfort souvenir. Onions, garlic, salt, sesame. Also umami. Umami and umami, side by side.

The first thing I remember putting it in was a bowl of ramen with spam and a fried egg. It was fantastic.

Chili crisp wasn't the first condiment I stocked up on during the pandemic. I bought a jar of sambal before that. Sambal, a tangy chili sauce, has a totally different profile. I specifically bought sambal oelek, which is wonderfully profiled here. I added sambal to fried rice, eggs, all sorts of things. Leftover Chinese takeout. I started using chili crisp the same way.

Things evolved (or devolved) quickly after that. When I realized everything bagel spice and chili crisp were both umami, I thought: Why not chili crisp on bagels, too?

Everything chili crisp bagel is the best thing in the world pic.twitter.com/JOCuxR9alX

— Scott Stein (@jetscott) August 28, 2020

Chili crisp on a bagel, with cream cheese (and raw onion, and maybe everything bagel spice, too) was my new favorite "leave me alone, I'm pandemic-eating" snack.

Also, oatmeal. I've added it to more oatmeal permutations than I can possibly remember. And buckwheat. Barley, everything bagel seasoning and eggs and chili crisp and oats. It worked, really well. The idea's like congee, a Chinese rice porridge. But with other grains. I started getting weird and mixing other umami in, like nutritional yeast.

Oatmeal, nutritional yeast, chili crisp, parmesan, broccoli, Italian sausage. Fully off-rails home lunch pic.twitter.com/ZmXhv8IV4F

— Scott Stein (@jetscott) August 20, 2020

I also shared some photos on Facebook. This is around the time the relationship with old friends began.

I've never felt comfortable on Facebook. Compared with Twitter, which is a fast-paced, mad feed of strangers trying to stay afloat in currents of information, Facebook always seemed to taunt me with the illusory promise of reuniting with old friends. People I knew at some point, sharing their experiences, giving likes and loves and comments. It always feels like a community I'm almost on the verge of joining.

Facebook hurts because when I share things there -- stories, strange thoughts -- I don't feel like people respond. And those people are supposed to be my friends. Are my friends? Were my friends? They hover adjacently. No likes on Twitter, I don't take it that personally. No likes on Facebook hits harder, no matter how many times I tell myself it's all an algorithmic casino. No matter how much I try to say likes don't matter, they do. So I pull back.

Besides my posting of family pics, I find, like a cruel joke, that Facebook works better when posting about things that just don't matter to me. Or are tangentially absurd. I've started using it like that. Floating stuff out there. So went the chili crisp photos.

Friends liked it. Over time, as I posted more, more people reacted. Especially to my sauce experiments.

Because I loved chili crisp, I kept eating it. What wouldn't it be good on? I haven't tried it on ice cream (which people do, quite a bit), but I've had it in eggs, on chicken, in sandwiches. On bread (bagels, pizza, sourdough, anything).

Oatmeal, sambal, chili crisp, avocado
Oatmeal, peanut butter, nutritional yeast, chili crisp
It makes me happy, no one else in family is following me pic.twitter.com/fqQXsxbpR5

— Scott Stein (@jetscott) November 29, 2020

When Chanukah came, I added it to latkes. It worked, again. Sour cream and chili crisp. I huddled with my family and ate.

How spicy chili crisp can change your life: A pandemic story (2)

When New Year's came, I bought cheap caviar online and mixed the two together. On a bagel. Because, why not -- what matters anymore? No regrets at all.

How spicy chili crisp can change your life: A pandemic story (3)

I tried oatmeal with peanut butter and chili crisp. Oatmeal, peanut butter, chili crisp and Captain Crunch. I told myself I was becoming the David Chang of home snacks. I think I was just having my own little nervous breakdown.

How spicy chili crisp can change your life: A pandemic story (4)

Along the way, I made friends. Or rekindled friendships. I found it weird how many people I knew who started becoming chili crisp-curious. Or looking for my advice on which chili crisp to get, or what to use it on. I regularly post articles on VR headsets, watches, iPads, games ... but what they really cared about were my thoughts on chili crisp. People started buying jars and trying my suggestions. A little chili crisp club was starting to emerge.

@jetscott you have corrupted me. And I'm ok with that. pic.twitter.com/lkOjmTahg9

— dallasdickinson (@dallasdickinson) January 3, 2021

I started buying other chili crisps. I got one made by Momof*cku and started putting that on pizza and breakfast tacos.

How spicy chili crisp can change your life: A pandemic story (5)

Did I play into the Facebook algorithm that rewarded me for my chili crisp photos? Did I post more because people seemed to care? Probably. Did the algorithms guide my chili crisp life? Perhaps. I still have friends asking how the chili crisp experiments are going. I tell them about varieties I've tried.

For Valentine's Day, my wife bought me chili crisp T-shirts. A friend asked me if I wanted to do a chili crisp podcast. Now, a year into the pandemic, still at home, surrounded by snow, I look at the new jars I've ordered and think to myself… how did I get here?

I've let chili crisp carry me down the road. It's given me happiness and somehow become part of my identity. I still think it's a fantastic condiment. I'm just really confused about my journey here.

My 3 go-to chili crisp combinations

If you're not familiar with chili crisp, I can offer some suggestions of ones I've tried below. You should get at least one jar from somewhere. Other good lists of suggestions: read this, and this.

Lao Gan Ma: The Guizhou, China-based company is considered the iconic chili crisp. If you get one, get this. Lao Gan Ma makes a variety of condiments: fried chilis in oil, chili oil with black beans. I've only tried the spicy chili crisp, and it's wonderful. The most addictive and all-around useful one I've tried, and it's the gold standard. Flavors: funky, tingly, oniony, a bit salty, sensation of fermented soy.

Momof*cku Chili Crunch: David Chang's online shop, Peachy Keen, sells batches of this chili crisp-like mix. It's made with Mexican chilies, crispy onions and garlic, and coconut sugar. I've gotten really into it, and the flavor profile is completely different. The crunchy onions remind me of everything bagel spice, and the spice level is higher than Lao Gan Ma, with more chilies. The coconut sweetness is beautiful. I use it everywhere, especially eggs and sandwiches.

Fly by Jing Sichuan Chili Crisp: My wife bought me a surprise gift box of sauces and chilies from Fly by Jing, which has amazing chilies and spice rubs. Their chili crisp is very different, and to me less universally applicable. I taste five-spice and black beans when I eat it, and it's less crunchy, more saucy. But I've started finding myself appreciating its complexity. It feels particularly good with pork and other meats.

How spicy chili crisp can change your life: A pandemic story (2024)

FAQs

What is spicy chili crisp good for? ›

The chili crisp sauce

GOOD ON NOODLES, PIZZA, EGGS, SALADS, DUMPLINGS, ICE CREAM, SERIOUSLY EVERYTHING.

What is the history of spicy chili crisp? ›

Modern chili crisp

But though the condiment was brought to the United States and served at Chinese restaurants, it took until 1997 for chili crisp to be produced and sold on a commercial scale. That year, restaurateur Tao Huabi began selling Lao Gan Ma Spicy Chili Crisp from China's Guizhou Province.

Why is chilli crisp so addictive? ›

Monosodium glutamate has become a modernist-cuisine addition now, as opposed to the feared additive it was decades ago. Basically, it's the umami flavor. A funky, addictive part of the taste spectrum.

Does chili crisp have MSG? ›

Chili Crisp Flavor Add-Ins

Both the MSG and the mushroom powder give my chili crisp the mouthwatering and addictive quality found in the original Laoganma version. If you prefer not to use MSG, you can also omit it.

Why does chilli make you feel good? ›

They say it's because the body cannot distinguish between spiciness and pain, and pain releases endorphins in the brain which register as pure happiness. This is called the "Pepper High Effect".

Why is chili crisp so popular? ›

Lao Gan Ma, a brand of chili sauces, is credited with popularizing chili crisp. It was first bottled in China's Guizhou province in 1997 and became a favorite condiment in recent years due to the influx of new Asian restaurants and recipes on social media that included it as an ingredient.

Is chilli good for your mental health? ›

Chillies boast high levels of vitamins and minerals, including niacin and vitamin B, which are known to help reduce stress. Chillies can also help boost the body's production of feel-good hormones, such as serotonin, which can help reduce anxiety, calm nerves, and give your mood a boost.

Why do addicts like spicy food? ›

Spicy Food Can Cause a “High”

As our body responds to the burn of capsaicin, it releases dopamine, a neurotransmitter associated with pleasure and reward. This surge of dopamine contributes to the pleasurable sensations we experience while eating spicy food, further cementing our craving for that unique heat.

Is chili crisp Chinese or Japanese? ›

In 1997, Chinese restaurateur Tao Huabi began the first commercial production of chili crisp in Guizhou under the Lao Gan Ma brand, which quickly became popular and eventually became a Chinese pantry staple.

Does spicy chili crisp go bad? ›

While it will rarely go bad, it's a good idea to keep chili crisp in a cool dry place, like a pantry, and to keep the lid tightly sealed (which keeps out bacteria).

Do I need to refrigerate chili crisp? ›

And while some brands say it is okay to store chili crisp at room temperature, it is best kept in the refrigerator once opened, for maximum freshness and flavor.

What is a good substitute for chili crisp? ›

To substitute, you can use red pepper flakes instead. Gochujang (コチュジャン) – this is a fermented chili paste popular in Korean cooking. Gochujang is a great condiment to use for savory, spicy and slightly sweet flavors. It's sold in any Asian supermarket or online.

What is Chile Crunch used for? ›

Chile Crunch is made in small batches from a savory blend of roasted chiles, garlic, onion and spices. The perfect partner for steak, chicken, fish, eggs and roasted vegetables. Also great on everything from pizza and pasta to burgers and tacos.

Do you refrigerate spicy chili crisp? ›

And while some brands say it is okay to store chili crisp at room temperature, it is best kept in the refrigerator once opened, for maximum freshness and flavor.

Can I use chili crisp instead of chili oil? ›

CHILI OIL VS CHILI CRISP – WHAT'S THE DIFFERENCE? Chili oil is a good choice if you want to add a spicy kick to your dishes without adding too much texture. Chili crisp, on the other hand, is a good choice if you want to add some texture and crunch to your dishes in addition to a spicy kick.

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