Ban Zhao’s menu
炙 (zhì) — grilled meat for official feasts

Zhì — Grilled Skewers with Sichuan Pepper

FestiveDocumented🍄 🧂 🌶️moyen30 min (+ marinade)

Pieces of meat marinated in jiàng and millet wine, perfumed with Sichuan pepper and ginger, then grilled over coals until caramelized. The controlled splendor of a palace banquet.

Why this dish? Ban Zhao frequented the Luoyang palace and was summoned to the court of Empress Deng. During imperial feasts, grilled meats (zhì) were a prestige dish—Han funerary bricks show servants turning skewers over coals. Here is the court dish she knew, in contrast to her domestic frugality.
At the palace, during grand feasts, these grilled meats were brought over the coals, and the scent of pepper rose to the painted beams. I will tell you the way: let the flesh rest in jiàng and a dash of millet wine, sprinkle the peppercorn that tingles and numbs the tongue, then turn the skewers with a patient hand over the lively fire. Sit upright to eat, as befits such company: the court table demands as much measure in pleasure as in duty.
Ban Zhao
Ingredients
  • Pork or lambin pieces (main grilled item)
  • Jiàng (fermented cereal/soybean paste)a few spoonfuls (umami marinade, signature)
  • Sichuan pepper (huājiāo)generously (emblematic spice, numbing)
  • Ginger and scallionchopped (aromatics)
  • Millet winea dash (tenderize, perfume)
How it was made : Zhì (meat grilled on skewers) is one of the most represented cooking techniques in Han funerary art. Sichuan pepper, native and very ancient in Chinese cuisine, provided the characteristic numbing sensation—it has nothing to do with New World chilies, which are forbidden here. Grilling was done over a bronze brazier.