Happy Lady Sauce Homemade Chinese Spicy Chili Crisp packs a wallop of heat, to be sure, but it is the amazing depth of flavour that keeps you coming back for more and more and more!
The only thing better than having had a best friend who has been your bosom pal for more than twenty five years is when that same friend possesses a finely tuned sense of irony. So it goes with my dear Ali. We met in my freshman year/her junior of high school and have been more or less inseparable since, sharing all of life’s ups and downs whether geographically close or quite literally separated by an entire country. When her brother married a lovely woman he met while working in the Sichuan province of China, and she started passing along honest-to-goodness Sichuan recipes to Ali, I was thrilled beyond compare because -naturally- those recipes started making their way into my recipe box. Along the way, Robin introduced Ali and her gang to a condiment called “Spicy Chili Crisp”. I’m going to go ahead and admit to you right now that until a year ago, I had NO idea what the real name of it was because it’s in tiny little letters at the bottom of the label. Instead, my family referred to this fabulous, sweat-inducing combo as “Happy Lady Sauce”. This name comes courtesy of the aforementioned ironic sensibilities of my bestie. How is it ironic?
Let’s just examine this label shall we? The ‘Happy Lady’ takes center stage here. I’ve seen other homemade versions of this refer to it as “Angry Lady Sauce” but I don’t feel the Happy Lady is enraged so much as she’s very ‘meh’ about the whole thing. And how she could be anything less than ecstatic over her sauce is beyond me. We are talking about the perfect blend of umami-packed spice, salt, and oil. Why is that so special? You scoop a little of the crispy chili-pepper bits over whatever you’re eating and the oil dribbles down into the dish and flavours it and makes me one seriously Happy Lady. I’ve served it on food here on FwF before and I’m sure you’ve seen the pictures. In fact, I’ll include a list of links to recipes that would be MAGNIFICENT with a hint of Happy Lady on it.
It’s not burn your face off hot, but you need to be made of sturdy stuff to eat Happy Lady Sauce in any large quantities. Most folks dip their chopsticks in and stir it into soup or drizzle the oil over their food. My people scoop it on with wild abandon. I can’t answer for their antics, but I do promise it’s good.
Why homemade? Why not just buy the stuff?
This is pretty much my husband’s fault. I don’t even know if I should admit publicly how much Happy Lady Sauce he and the boys consume as a unit. We’re talking about at least one jar every 5 days or so. Even at our local Asian market where the jars are a wickedly affordable $2.50, that still adds up pretty quickly. And I may have mentioned once or fifty times how far we LIVE from civilization, right? That’s a 3 hour round trip to stock back up on Happy Lady. Yes, I clear the shelves every time I go (and blush furiously when the clerk has to ring up 15 jars at the register), but it’s still not enough to keep us in the good stuff between trips. So the homemade solution was the obvious one. There’s a little more to it, though.
Let’s scoot that jar around and look at the ingredient label, shall we? Hmmm. Given the VAST quantities of this that my menfolk like to ingest, I’m pretty not okay with that level of Monosodium Glutamate (MSG), Sulfur Dioxide, and Sodium Sulfite. All that being said, my fellows really, REALLY love the homemade version and I’m so pleased to give them a healthier version of something we all love.
Warning. Happy Lady is habit forming. And unlike the model for the label, you’re actually going to SMILE when you eat it.
Cook’s Notes
- Do me a favour, would ya? Please don’t put your face anywhere near that grinder when you open it up after pulsing the hot peppers or you will -in all likelihood- cough up a lung and your face may melt off. Before opening the grinder, take a deep breath and hold it, then peek in there to see that it’s all good and dump it into a bowl before TURNING AWAY to breath. Otherwise, see previous caution. This is because hot pepper dust irritates the TAR out of your lungs. A nice strategy if you’re trying to break up some muck down there, but undesirable if you’re otherwise healthy.
- I’m well aware that guajillo peppers are really not so very Chinese, but they do lend a little sweetness to the party and keep the Happy Lady from torching you from the inside out. If you really like pain and/or want to have a sauce that is truly Sichuan level in spiciness, omit the guajillos and substitute in another 1/4 cup of the Chinese Dried Chili Red Peppers 5.2oz.
- You’ll want a spice grinder, blender, or food processor to pulse the dried chili peppers until they look like the picture above.
- The label specifies soybean oil, but I prefer to use peanut oil for a multitude of reasons, not the least of which is that I think it tastes best. Besides, I’ve already discussed how truthful I think Mrs. Happy Lady is in her labeling.
- Don’t forget the Soy Nuts that are MOST DEFINITELY in there. This adds some body, some crunch, some textural interest, and most importantly, some SOY FLAVOUR. I order a big old bag because my kids like to munch on them for snacks, too. Besides that, they last pretty close to forever.
- Speaking of the soy nuts, you don’t have to pulverize them before adding them to the mix. You really do want recognizable bits of them in the final product. I find that pulsing it in a clean spice grinder 4 times does the job. Alternatively, you could crush them lightly with a meat tenderizer or with a heavy pan.
- Do YOURSELF a favour and take the time to mince your onions and garlic as finely and evenly as possible. That makes the process of removing the moisture from them that much easier. You’re going to be adding them to some pretty hot oil (250°f) to slowly get the water out of them and toast them in the process. You’ll get a much more even (read: tastier) result if you take the time to cut the onions and garlic VERY small and very evenly.
- A word about storage. If you’ve done the job correctly and removed all the moisture from the onions and garlic, this should be okay at room temperature. Because I believe in caution, though, I’d advise storing it in the refrigerator, although how anything nefarious could grow in an environment that spicy is beyond me. (Which is just lousy science… I know…)
Use these to make Happy Lady Sauce Homemade Chinese Spicy Chili Crisp
- Food processor
- spatula
- saucepan
- jars
- dried chinese chiles
- dried guajillo peppers
- Sichuan peppercorns a.k.a. prickly ash
- soybean nuts
I think my label needs a little work. What do you think?
Happy Lady Sauce {Homemade Chinese Spicy Chili Crisp}
Rate RecipeIngredients
- 1 1/2 cups pure peanut oil
- 1 small onion peeled, trimmed of root and blossom ends, and evenly minced very small
- 1 large garlic clove peeled and evenly minced very small
- 1/4 cup roasted salted soy nuts, lightly broken up
- 2 cups of Chinese Dried Red Chili Peppers or Japones peppers, stems removed, and pulsed to break up in a blender, food processor, or spice grinder
- 6 dried Guajillo chiles stems removed, and pulsed to break up in a blender, food processor, or spice grinder
- 1 tablespoon Sichuan peppercorn ground finely
- 2 tablespoons raw sugar
- 1 1/2 teaspoons kosher salt
Instructions
- Heat the peanut oil to 250°F in a heavy-bottomed 2-quart saucepan. Add the onions and garlic to the oil and cook the mixture, stirring frequently, until the bubbling slows down to almost nothing and the onions and garlic are a light toasted, golden brown colour. Add the lightly broken soy nuts and cook for 1 more minute. Remove from the heat and add in the ground chili peppers, Sichuan peppercorn, and sugar. Let cool to room temperature, uncovered. Stir in salt, transfer to a pint jar with a tight fitting lid.
Nutrition
Nutritional information is an estimate and provided to you as a courtesy. You should calculate the nutritional information with the actual ingredients used in your recipe using your preferred nutrition calculator.
did you make this recipe?
Make sure to tag @foodiewithfam on Instagram and #hashtag it #foodiewithfamily so I can check it out!
Recipes that would be great with Happy Lady:
Korean Miso and Honey Glazed Salmon
Slow-Cooker Korean Style Beef Tacos
Chinese Style Barbecued Pork (Char Siu)
Sweet and Sour Ham Ball Stir Fry
JangsangJeok {Korean Simmered Teriyaki Beef Patties}
Sticky Garlic and Ginger Venison {or beef} Stir Fry
Happy Lady Homemade Chinese Spicy Chili Crisp was originally published in September 2014 and was updated in September 2017.
Reader's Thoughts...
Monica says
I’m so excited to try this out. I was unable to find whole guajillo chiles. How much would you recommend if it is Pre-ground up? Thanks.
Rebecca says
Hi Monica! I’m not quite sure! Most pre-ground options will let you know how much is roughly equivalent to a whole chile. I’d look at the packaging to see if it mentions it somewhere!
Rebecca says
As an aside, you can get whole guajillo chiles from Amazon!
S. Squire says
Oh man, I eat Happy Lady Sauce (Spicy Chili Crisp) right out of the jar. I will definitely try this recipe. Look forward to being able to tweak it to the level of spiciness I like. Yum!!!
Lindsey says
Happy Lady Popcorn:
Pop 3/4 cup kernels (or enough to fill a big ol’ bowl)
In a small sauce pan (or in the microwave), melt together 2 tbsp butter or margarine, 1 tsp Happy Lady Sauce, 1 tsp sesame oil, a small splash of rice wine vinegar*, a splash of soy*, a splash of fish sauce*. Pour over kernels, and then shake with pepper and a good tbsp of nutritional yeast. Never eat popcorn any other way again.
*optional, use all or one, depending on your mood/availability/level of popcorn drench you like.
Rebecca says
Hot DIGGITY!!!! This sounds amazing!
Born and raised in Sichuan says
Great effort! However, the most important ingredient is missing from your recipe. It’s called “Dou Chi”, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Douchi. It is the heart and soul of this fine sauce. Soybeans may be a workaround, I wouldn’t call it authentic without Dou Chi.
Tom says
Happy Lady (Lau Gan Ma) has several similar products. This recipe is similar to the “Chili Crisp” rather than the “black bean”, which include fermented black beans (Dou Chi). I like this recipe better than either Happy Lady products I’ve been regularly using for decades.
Rebecca says
Thank you, Tom!! I really appreciate the input and that you took the time to rate the recipe!
Betty says
2 cups of peppers in flake form, or pre-flake form? I’m trying to see how much of my own peppers I will have to use
Rebecca says
Hi Betty- I refer here to a pre-flake form. You start with 2 cups and pulse them down to flakes.
Bob says
“Old Step-Mother” or “Old Godmother”, not “Happy Lady”.
Rebecca says
Bob- I think you missed the joke. I am fully aware it doesn’t mean Happy Lady. It is meant to be silly since she looks anything but happy. I thought I explained (or at least implied) it pretty clearly in the post 🙂
Teresa D says
I am making my third batch this weekend….we put it on everything or just eat it right out of the jar. LOVE IT!
Thanks for the recipe!
Eric says
I’m a cook for a small high school in Ohio and my students go crazy for Lao Gan Ma. There must be 40 jars in my dining room. In an attempt to discourage the clutter I made a test batch of your recipe and put it out 15 minutes ago for lunch. There are only 40 students here and they’ve already eaten half a pint of it! Two of my Chinese teenagers have come into the kitchen to say it’s better than the stuff in the jars! Thanks for the recipe! I’ll have to dive deeper into your blog and find some more stuff to try.
Vic says
I’m going to make a double batch of this recipe! I bought all ingredients but one yesterday–I was unable to find roasted soy nuts. Should I up the salt content in the rest of the recipe? Use less oil or more of something else? Thanks!
Rebecca says
Hi Vic- I can’t give a substitute because I haven’t made it without them. The roasted soy nuts also serve as some body, so I would highly recommend ordering them. Amazon carries them! So does nuts.com!!
Michael says
I live in China 4 months per year. I am not fluent in Mandarin. But I would translate lao ganma as “venerable godmother.”
Rebecca says
Cool information, Michael! I promise I didn’t think Lao Gan Ma meant ‘Happy Lady’, but rather we call it that because her face looks so, er, UN-happy.
jack says
Recipe sounds amazing. Can’t wait to try. How long do these keep for? Any canning required or storage tips? What about botulism?
Sorry for all the questions but I always get scared when it comes to storing food into oil.
Rebecca says
Hi Jack- I store it in a tightly lidded jar in the refrigerator, though I’m fairly confident that between the extended raised temperature of the oil and the fact that you’re frying all the moisture out of the onions and garlic (which are the only things there that would be problematic) would preclude any pathogen growth!
jack says
how long do you keep them for?
Rebecca says
I’m afraid it’s a bit of a non-answer, because we eat it quickly, but we’ve never had a batch last beyond two weeks. I believe it would be safe, if refrigerated, for up to a month, though.
Darren Douglas says
I lived in Mainland China for 5 years and every noodle house and dumpling shack had “angry lady sauce” available. I was so happy to find this sauce at an Asian Supermarket a few years ago. It is very authentic Chinese and it’s nice to have a taste of the land I loved available in America.
Lisa says
Found you on Pinterest. Your story cracked me up (happy lady image was priceless). I can completely relate to the ingestion of mass quantities of Asian hot sauce. My favorite is Sambaal Olek. Have any DIY recipes for that? Can’t wait to try this one. Will be rounding up the ingredients on my next Asian market trek.
Spam Sorenson says
I wonder if sesame oil would give it a kick.
I imagine the cost of production is the reason they use soy or canola or clear vegetable oil. But Chinese vermicelli (clear nylon noodles) with fried hamburger, and stir fried veggies in sesame oil with or without angry woman is delightful.
I will try this with sesame oil.
Thanks, Oh, I don’t care for the dried soy beans.
Vic says
Hey Spam, did you end up making this without the dried soy beans? Curious to know. Thanks!
Sarah Walker Caron (Sarah's Cucina Bella) says
I love the irony of what you call this sauce. Also, can’t wait to try it — sounds right up my alley.
Tammy Nguyen says
Sooooo glad I found your website. Have always wanted to try and make this chili oil at home. Made it today, great flavor, but it’s soooooo spicy! What can I do to “fix” it? To lessen the spice level?
Rebecca says
Well? It’s supposed to be wicked spicy! If you want it less spicy, I’d say maybe the next time you make it you could use some less spicy dried chiles, like up the amount of guajillos, perhaps?
Liz @ The Lemon Bowl says
OMG!! I’m DYING for this!!!!!
Monique says
Thank you for what looks like a great chili sauce and i really want to try this recipe. Is there a substitute for the soy nuts? Are peanuts ok? And would any dried chillies work as I am from Malaysia and we have tons of different dried chillies and they do not specify their origins. Could likely be local, indian, thai, indonesian or chinese! Are your chinese dried chillies skinny and crinkly and a dark oxblood colour? Thanks!!
Rebecca says
That is a perfect description of my chilis, Monique! And if you can’t find soy nuts, peanuts are a good second choice. It won’t be exactly the same, but it’ll be good!
Paula - bell'alimento says
This makes me happy happy happy
Angela {Mind Over Batter} says
This sauce is kick ass! And the Happy Lady looks like she can kick someone’s ass. I’m a little scared of her. As the only person in my house who consumes hot anything, I would make jars of this stuff and have it around me. Just ’cause… P.S. I’ve made hot sauce before and opened the food processor to take a sniff. Wasn’t pretty.