Chinese Starter

Liangpi

Cold Shaanxi wheat-starch noodles with chilli oil, vinegar, cucumber and springy gluten pieces.

3 hrPrep time
10 minsCook time
Serves 2Servings
AdvancedDifficulty
Liangpi
About this dish

Liangpi: the story on the plate

Cold Shaanxi wheat-starch noodles with chilli oil, vinegar, cucumber and springy gluten pieces. This version is written for a serious home cook: traditional in spirit, regional in detail and built around the ingredients and techniques that make the dish Chinese rather than generic.

Historical background

Liangpi is a north-western Chinese street-food classic that turns one dough into two textures: cool starch noodles and chewy gluten.

Why it is famous

It is famous for sour-spicy cold noodles that are refreshing but still filling.

Cultural significance

In Shaanxi, this dish helps show how varied Chinese food really is: wheat and rice traditions, banquet cooking, street food, festival symbolism and home comfort all have their own language.

Nutrition

Estimated nutrition per serving

Useful for meal planning and calorie-aware recipe browsing.

300Calories
9gProtein
52gCarbs
7gFat

Estimated from ingredient quantities and traditional serving style; review before publishing formal nutritional claims.

Ingredients

What you need

  • 175 high-gluten flour
  • 105 water
  • /2 tsp salt
  • 0.5 cucumber
  • 1 chilli oil
Method

Step-by-step method

Follow the recipe in order, tasting and adjusting seasoning where needed.

  1. Prep the toppings: Slice cucumbers, spring onions and greens into fine matchsticks so they mix easily through the noodles.
  2. Build the sauce: Combine soy, vinegar, chilli oil, sesame paste or bean sauce as the recipe requires, tasting for salty, sour, hot and nutty balance.
  3. Cook the noodles: Boil noodles in plenty of water at 100°C / 212°F until just tender, then rinse or toss straight into sauce depending on the dish.
  4. Finish quickly: Toss noodles with sauce while warm or chilled as appropriate, loosening with a splash of noodle water if needed.
  5. Serve with texture: Top with herbs, peanuts, sesame, crisp vegetables or minced sauce and serve straight away.
Cook smarter

Tips, storage and serving advice

Shopping tips

Shop for proper Chinese pantry ingredients: Chinkiang vinegar, Shaoxing wine, Chinese light and dark soy, Pixian doubanjiang, dried shiitake, sesame paste, glutinous rice flour, fresh ginger and spring onions. Buy fish and poultry as fresh as possible.

Ingredient quality

Use the named regional ingredients where they define the dish. Substituting generic chilli sauce for doubanjiang or ordinary vinegar for Chinkiang vinegar will flatten the result.

Common mistakes

The common mistake is treating every Chinese recipe like a generic stir-fry. These dishes need steaming, poaching, braising, resting, folding, pulling, chilling or reducing according to their region and technique.

Chef’s tips

Prepare everything before heat is applied, respect the core regional seasoning and do not drown the dish in generic sauce.

How to know it is cooked

Look for the traditional texture: springy noodles, tender fish, glossy braises, crisp duck skin, silky tofu, chewy rice cake, cold crunchy salads or flaky pastry depending on the dish.

Plating advice

Plate with restraint and context: rice with braises, pancakes with duck, vinegar with dumplings, syrup with sweets, and simple bowls for noodles and soups.

Make ahead

Sauces, fillings, braises and dessert components can often be made ahead; steamed fish, crisp pancakes, fried dough, fresh noodles and cold salads are best finished close to serving.

Storage and reheating

Store covered in the fridge for up to 2 days where suitable. Cool rice, seafood and tofu dishes quickly and reheat gently. Reheat braises gently with a splash of water or stock. Steam dumplings and rice cakes. Avoid reheating delicate fish, fresh cold salads and crisp fried items unless necessary.