Schezwan Noodles
Updated: May 19, 2024, By Swasthi
These Schezwan Noodles are a favorite from the Indo-Chinese Cuisine. Al dente cooked noodles are tossed in a spicy, sweet, hot and tangy homemade schezwan sauce. It is a very popular dish served in the Indian-Chinese restaurants. In this post I show you how to make these delicious noodles at home from scratch (without using store bought sauce). All this gets done under 30 minutes and no blending required.
Schezwan sauce is made with a blend of red chilies, soya sauce, vinegar, ginger, garlic, onions and Sichuan pepper corn. You will also find variations where tomato ketchup and celery are used. With all these ingredients easily available in your pantry you don’t need a store bought bottled or premade schezwan sauce.
You can make these schezwan noodles from scratch like the way I have made it here. We love everything homemade so I often make a jar of this yummy Scehzwan Sauce which I use up in so many ways. But I follow the recipe from this post when I don’t have the premade sauce.
This homemade version has no MSG included but still your Schezwan Noodles tastes great, though you will miss the smoky flavors you get from the restaurant foods. Larger burners, high heat cooking techniques and a carbon steel wok contribute to the smoky flavors. However for a homemade version it is hard to replicate that but using a carbon steel wok and high heat does the job to some extent.
A lot of people also use liquid smoke to mimic the flavors but I don’t. I have shown the vegetarian version in the pictures but also shared the variations to make it with eggs.
What you need
Noodles: Like in the Hakka noodles, refined flour noodles or egg noodles are the staple in this dish. I try to limit the refined version so I used flat noodles made with wheat flour but we often use the soba or udon noodles which also go well. You may also use spaghetti in a pinch it works though it tastes different.
Red chilies are a key ingredient used in the sauce but for convenience I use ground red chilies aka red chili powder which works perfectly here. So you don’t need to soak or grind the red chilies.
Schezwan Peppers: The unique flavor in schezwan dishes comes from the schezwan peppers and they add citrusy notes to the dish. However if you can’t find, you may simply omit them or use Sichuan oil that is readily available in the Asian/Chinese stores.
Soya Sauce: Please use organic soya sauce or tamari for a gluten-free version. If organic is not available where you live at least use a naturally brewed soy sauce and avoid chemically made product.
Vinegar: Rice vinegar imparts a flavor along with a slight tang. But a lot of times I use apple vinegar and don’t find a lot of difference. You can also use lemon juice if you are allergic to vinegar.
More Noodles Recipes you may like
Veg noodles
Hakka noodles
Egg noodles
Chicken noodles
Photo Guide
How to make Schezwan Noodles (Stepwise Photos)
Preparation
1. Bring 6 cups of water to a rolling boil in a large pot. Add 160 to 180 grams (6 ounces) noodles (or 2 servings). Cook al dente following the instructions on your pack. While they boil,
- prepare 1¼ cup chopped mixed vegetables (1 medium carrot, 1/3 cup capsicum, 8 to 10 green beans). You can also use cabbage or mushrooms if you want.
- Also fine chop 3 to 4 garlic cloves and half inch peeled ginger.
- chop ¼ cup onions from 1 small onion
- fine chop 2 sprigs spring onions (optional, greens and whites separated)
2. When the noodles are cooked perfectly, drain to a colander. If you want you may rinse them and spread a teaspoon oil.
3. Make a red chili paste by mixing 1 tablespoon Kashmiri red chili powder with a few tsps of water. Please note that the red chili powder must be of good quality and less hot. You can also soak 15 deseeded Kashmiri red chilies and blend them to a paste.
4. Heat a pan with 2 tablespoons oil. Saute ginger and garlic until they turn aromatic. Add finely chopped onions. Saute until they turn golden.
5. Add the red chili paste, 1 tablespoon tomato sauce (optional) and very little salt.
6. Pour 1 tablespoon soya sauce, 1 teaspoon vinegar and add 1 teaspoon sugar.
7. Add 2 tbsp water and mix well. Add ¼ to ½ teaspoon crushed Sichuan pepper. If you don’t have them replace it with regular pepper.
8. Cook until the oil begins to separate. Set this aside.
Make the Noodles
9. In restaurants, broken red chilies are used to make schezwan noodles or fried rice. If you like that, you can fry the red chilies first until crisp at this stage. Add spring onion whites and saute for 1 minute. Add chopped veggies and saute until on the highest flame until they are half cooked yet crunchy.
10. Add the sauce we kept aside & the noodles. Mix and fry on a high flame for 2 to 3 minutes. Taste test and adjust salt or sauce to your taste.
11. Garnish with spring onion greens.
Serve schezwan noodles hot.
Variations
This recipe can also be used to make spicy egg noodles. Just beat 2 eggs and pour it to the pan once the veggies are fried. Scramble & fry until the egg is cooked completely. Increase the amount of soya sauce, vinegar and chilli. You can also use boiled egg or shrimps.
Related Recipes
Recipe Card
Schezwan Noodles
For best results follow the step-by-step photos above the recipe card
Ingredients (US cup = 240ml )
- 160 grams (6 ounces) noodles (2 servings)
- 3 tablespoons oil (divided)
- 1 ¼ cup mixed vegetables chopped ( carrots, capsicum,beans, mushrooms)
- 2 sprigs spring onions ( separate greens and whites)
For the sauce or use 2 to 3 tbsp schezwan sauce
- 1 tablespoon Kashmiri red chili powder (mixed with little water)
- 1 to 1½ tablespoon tomato sauce (optional)
- ¾ tablespoon (3 to 4) garlic cloves chopped finely
- ¾ tablespoon (½ inch) ginger peeled and chopped finely
- ¼ cup (1 small) onion chopped finely
- ½ teaspoon salt (adjust as needed)
- 1 teaspoon sugar
- 1 tablespoon soya sauce (naturally brewed)
- 1 teaspoon vinegar
- ¼ to ½ teaspoon sichuan pepper crushed gently
Instructions
Preparation
- Bring 6 to 8 cups of water to a rolling boil in a pot. Add the noodles and cook al dente. Follow the instructions on the pack for exact cook time. While the noodles cook, chop all the veggies.
- When they are done, drain them to a colander and rinse under running water. Drain well. Drizzle 1 tsp oil and run your fingers through the noodles to keep them non-sticky.
- Mix chili powder with little water to make a thick paste.
Make the sauce
- Pour 1½ tablespoon oil in a pan and saute ginger and garlic until they smell aromatic.
- Add the onions and saute until golden. Reduce the flame. Add red chili paste, tomato sauce, salt, sugar, soya sauce, vinegar, Szechwan pepper and 2 tbsps water. Let cook until it smells aromatic & releases oil on the sides.
- Taste the sauce and add more red chilli paste, soya or salt to suit your taste. Keep this aside in a bowl.
How to make Schezwan Noodles
- Pour the rest of the oil and add spring onion whites and vegetables. Sauté until they are tender yet crunchy.
- Add the noodles, schezwan sauce and spring onion greens. Stir fry on a high heat for 2 to 3 mins. Adjust salt and sauce to taste.
- Serve veg schezwan noodles hot.
Notes
NUTRITION INFO (estimation only)
© Swasthi’s Recipes
The recipe shared above makes 2 servings, please do not gauge the quantity of ingredients in the step by step photos since I had doubled the recipe here.
About Swasthi
I’m Swasthi Shreekanth, the recipe developer, food photographer & food writer behind Swasthi’s Recipes. My aim is to help you cook great Indian food with my time-tested recipes. After 2 decades of experience in practical Indian cooking I started this blog to help people cook better & more often at home. Whether you are a novice or an experienced cook I am sure Swasthi’s Recipes will assist you to enhance your cooking skills. More about me
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Comments
Hi what type of beans do you use please?
Thanks
Hi,
Use fine green beans. If you don’t get then use French beans
I will be making this tonight. I do not have dried red chillies. Can I use frozen reconstituted red chillies?
Hi Bb,
Yes you can use them. You can skip the soaking. Defrost and blend.
There’s no ginger in the ingredient list but the instructions say to saute ginger and garlic. How much ginger (fresh? powder?) is used? Maybe a typo?? 1t garlic is shown twice in the list.
AND
How many noodles?–weight wise (grams) would be good to know. “Two packs” is not an amount., especially when noodles are sold in one pound packages (here).
Hi Leo
yes its a typo.
use fresh ginger
Approximately 80 grams is a serving size. You may set aside some cooked noodles . Stir and then if needed add up the one that was set aside.For this recipe you may need to use about 150 to 160 grams of noodles.
Hi Swasthi, thanks for this recipe. I want to try it soon — have been craving noodles! I’m wondering, which kind of noodles did you use here? I like the looks of them and would like to use the same kind. Thanks again.
Hi Lisa
You are welcome. These are called flat noodles. The ones I used are made of white wheat. Do try the recipe. It works well with any kind of noodles.
awesome recipies.really well explained.i am gonna try as amny as i can soon ..:-)
Thanks Anuradha
Do try them and share with us how they turned out
🙂
Most wanted recipe love to have this whole plate
Thank you
It was awsom
Thank you