Zha Jiang Mian (炸酱面 — Beijing Noodles with Meat Sauce)
Beijing, China — traditional Beijing home cooking, rooted in northern Chinese wheat noodle culture
Zha jiang mian is Beijing's answer to bolognese: a rich, slow-cooked meat sauce made primarily from fermented soybean paste (zha jiang, meaning 'fried sauce') served over thick wheat noodles with an array of cold, crunchy vegetable accompaniments that are tossed together at the table. The dish is emblematic of Beijing home cooking and holds deep cultural resonance — it is the food eaten after school, on cold days, at family gatherings. The sauce is the centrepiece: diced pork belly or minced pork is cooked slowly with yellow soybean paste (huang dou jiang) and sometimes sweet bean paste (tian mian jiang), the pastes caramelising in the rendered pork fat until they turn dark, glossy, and intensely savoury. The noodles are fresh, thick, and chewy — pulled or hand-cut — and served in a tight portion topped with a generous spoonful of the sauce. Surrounding the sauce come the accompaniments in individual small piles: julienned cucumber, blanched bean sprouts, shredded radish, sliced spring onion, and optionally edamame and shredded tofu. The ritual of tossing all components together at the table is inseparable from the dish.