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Home ❯ Recipes ❯ Vegetables ❯ Smashed Chilies with Century Eggs (擂辣椒)

Smashed Chilies with Century Eggs (擂辣椒)

Judy

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Judy

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Posted: 9/18/2022
Smashed roasted peppers with century eggs

Smashed Chilies with Century Eggs, or léi làjiāo (擂辣椒) is a Hunan dish with strong, spicy flavors. I’ve enjoyed it at Hunan restaurants in China as an appetizer, and it left a lasting impression! With so many peppers coming out of our garden right now, I knew it was time to make this dish. 

Why SmashED Peppers

The word “擂”, léi, means to smash, or pound something. This dish is made with a mortar and pestle, and the ingredients are mashed together until the flavors meld, and you get something more delicious than the sum of its parts. Not to mention, it’s also a fun dish to make! 

There’s something about “smashing” vegetables that just makes them taste better. Like our popular Smashed Asian Cucumber Salad, it opens up plenty of nooks and crannies for sauce and seasonings to penetrate. It also gives the food a unique and pleasant texture as you chew. 

Sometimes this dish is also made with steamed or roasted eggplant, another vegetable that tastes delicious when mashed, so you can add that to the recipe as well if desired. But since we’ve got so many peppers on hand, I made this version just with peppers and saved our garden eggplant for dishes like Eggplant with Garlic Sauce. 

garlic cloves, charred peppers, and century eggs

Watch: how to prepare Century Eggs

Watch Bill peel and cut century eggs!

YouTube video

Another Hunan Recipe

While over the years, we’ve explored many of China’s 8 great cuisines as well as the ones in between, we still have only just scratched the surface of Hunan cuisine. 

Some recipes you might recognize are Hunan Beef and Hunan Steamed Fish with Salted Chillies – Duo Jiao Yu, one of our favorites that we go back to again and again (so much so that we even made a plant-based version with mushrooms!). But this smashed pepper recipe is one of my new favorites! 

Choosing Peppers

This dish is most often made with long hot green peppers, which can be a Russian roulette of spice. You never know when you’re gonna get your socks knocked off. 

The peppers we’re using look like miniature versions but are consistently mild; they’re called fushimi peppers. Don’t limit yourself—use what’s available to you and/or what you prefer eating! 

Also, it is best to char the peppers over open hot coals, but that can be pretty inconvenient, so the next best option is an open flame over the stovetop. You could also dry fry the chilies in your wok, charring the skin as we do in our recipe for Tiger Skin Peppers. 

Recipe Instructions

Wash the peppers, shake off excess water, and pat dry. If your chilies are very spicy, it’s a good idea to remove some seeds before charring.

Put a metal rack over your stove grate (I just used the rack from my toaster oven!), and turn the heat on at medium-high. Char the peppers in batches over the open flame until the skin is just charred and wrinkly, turning often. Avoid overcooking them. The main goal is to char the skin. 

charring peppers over the stove

Let sit at room temperature until cool enough to handle.

charred peppers

For this next step, you can wear food grade gloves if your chilies are very spicy. Peel off the pepper skin. You can leave a little behind for a little extra charred flavor or get rid of it entirely. 

peeling away charred skin of peppers

With a mortar and pestle, smash the raw garlic.

smashed garlic in mortar

Then add the roasted peppers along with the light soy sauce, rice vinegar, sesame oil, and sugar. Continue mashing until well-combined. 

charred peppers in mortar and pestle
charred peppers in mortar and pestle
charred peppers in mortar and pestle

A Note on Vinegar

After perusing other recipes for this dish, I’ve seen that it’s common to call for black Chinese vinegar. It has a strong and unmistakable aroma. However, I prefer rice vinegar, as it’s milder and more agreeable. It also lets the peppers and century eggs shine. 

Peel and cut century eggs into smaller pieces using a knife (or clean cotton thread or unwaxed dental floss).

wrapped century eggs
sliced wedges of century eggs

Add them to the mortar, and mix them in with the peppers. Salt to taste, and use a rubber spatula to mix everything well before serving. 

Lei Lajiao (smashed peppers with century eggs)
Lei Lajiao (roasted peppers smashed with pidan)
picking up smashed hunan peppers with chopsticks

Don’t have a mortar & pestle?

No worries. Just smash and roughly chop the garlic, then add it into a sturdy bowl along with the rest of the ingredients. Use the end of a rolling pin or a wooden spoon to smash the mixture together. 

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Recipe

Smashed roasted peppers with century eggs
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5 from 2 votes

Smashed Chilies with Century Eggs (擂辣椒)

This Smashed Pepper with Century Eggs, or léi làjiāo (擂辣椒) is a Hunan dish with strong, spicy flavors.
by: Judy
Serves: 4
Prep: 20 minutes mins
Cook: 10 minutes mins
Total: 30 minutes mins

Ingredients

  • 1 pound chilies or peppers of your choice (such as a mix of long hots, jalapeños, anaheim chilies, fushimi or other peppers)
  • 6-8 cloves garlic
  • 1 tablespoon light soy sauce
  • 1 tablespoon rice vinegar
  • 2 teaspoons sesame oil
  • 1/2 teaspoon sugar
  • 2-3 century eggs
  • salt (to taste)

Instructions

  • Wash the peppers, shake off excess water, and pat dry. If your chilies are very spicy, it’s a good idea to remove some seeds before charring.
  • Put a metal rack over your stove grate (I just used the rack from my toaster oven!), and turn the heat on at medium-high. Char the peppers in batches over the open flame until the skin is just charred and wrinkly, turning often. Avoid overcooking them. The main goal is to char the skin.
  • Let sit at room temperature until cool enough to handle. For this next step, you can wear food grade gloves if your chilies are very spicy. Peel off the pepper skin. You can leave a little behind for a little extra charred flavor or get rid of it entirely.
  • With a mortar and pestle, smash the raw garlic, then add the roasted peppers along with the light soy sauce, rice vinegar, sesame oil, and sugar. Continue mashing until well-combined.
  • Peel and cut century eggs into smaller pieces. Add them to the mortar, and mix them in with the peppers. Salt to taste, and use a rubber spatula to mix everything well before serving.

Nutrition Facts

Calories: 125kcal (6%) Carbohydrates: 10g (3%) Protein: 5g (10%) Fat: 7g (11%) Saturated Fat: 2g (10%) Polyunsaturated Fat: 1g Monounsaturated Fat: 3g Cholesterol: 309mg (103%) Sodium: 681mg (28%) Potassium: 105mg (3%) Fiber: 4g (16%) Sugar: 5g (6%) Vitamin A: 236IU (5%) Vitamin C: 15mg (18%) Calcium: 32mg (3%) Iron: 2mg (11%)
Nutritional Info Disclaimer Hide Disclaimer
TheWoksofLife.com is written and produced for informational purposes only. While we do our best to provide nutritional information as a general guideline to our readers, we are not certified nutritionists, and the values provided should be considered estimates. Factors such as brands purchased, natural variations in fresh ingredients, etc. will change the nutritional information in any recipe. Various online calculators also provide different results, depending on their sources. To obtain accurate nutritional information for a recipe, use your preferred nutrition calculator to determine nutritional information with the actual ingredients and quantities used.
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Judy

About

Judy
Judy Leung is the matriarch of The Woks of Life family, working on the blog alongside husband Bill and daughters Sarah and Kaitlin. Born in Shanghai, China, she immigrated to the United States at sixteen. Fluent in both English and three Chinese dialects, she also plays the important role of researcher and menu translator! Drawing from over four decades of cooking experience and travel, Judy aims to bring Chinese culinary traditions to readers and preserve recipes that might otherwise be lost to time. Her expertise spans from Shanghainese cooking and everyday homestyle dishes to a variety of regional foodways, showcasing the depth and breadth of Chinese cuisine for a global audience. Over the last decade, she’s helped transform The Woks of Life into what Saveur Magazine has deemed “the internet’s most popular Chinese cooking blog,” co-written a New York Times bestselling cookbook, and become convinced that we will never run out of recipes to share!
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