Chongqing is the spice capital of China — a city where food isn't just sustenance, it's identity. With five days, you can go far beyond the tourist hotpot experience. This foodie itinerary takes you on a deep culinary journey: comparing hotpot styles across neighborhoods, crawling through wet markets at dawn, learning to cook Chongqing dishes from a local chef, and discovering the wild world of jianghu cai (folk cuisine). You'll also make a day trip to Dazu for a cultural reset. By the end, your spice tolerance will be forever transformed.
Start like a true Chongqinger — at a tiny noodle stall at dawn. Try wandou zamen (pea and mixed sauce noodles), the ultimate local breakfast. The sauce is a complex blend of chili oil, Sichuan pepper, fermented beans, and peanuts. The line wraps around the block before 8am.
Explore the massive wholesale market near the river confluence. The dried goods section is a spice lover's dream — mountains of dried chilies, Sichuan peppercorns, star anise, and doubanjiang (fermented chili bean paste). Buy small bags of huajiao (Sichuan pepper) to take home.
Walk through the food stalls around Jiefangbei sampling Chongqing street classics. Try suanlafen (sour and spicy glass noodles), liangpi (cold skin noodles), grilled tofu, and the famous Chongqing fried chicken. Pace yourself — there's much more eating ahead.
Your first serious hotpot. Find a traditional lao huo guo restaurant with the classic jiugongge (nine-grid) pot. The nine sections cook at different temperatures — put tripe in the center (hottest), beef in the middle ring, and vegetables at the edges. Try Zhu Guangyou or a similar local legend.
Walk off the hotpot and take the cable car across the Yangtze. The views are spectacular and the fresh river air helps with the post-hotpot food coma. Use this time to plan which late-night food spot to hit.
As night falls, the real eating begins. Jiaochangkou comes alive with food stalls — try kaolengmian (grilled cold noodles), chuanbei grilled fish, stinky tofu, and spicy roasted potatoes. End with a bowl of bingtangyuanzi (sweet rice balls in iced syrup) to cool down your burning mouth.