Hoisin Sauce – meaning & use in Chinese cuisine
Hoisin Sauce – Guangdong's Sweet Soul
Hoisin sauce („Hǎixiān jiàng“) – despite its name meaning „seafood sauce“, contains no seafood whatsoever! The term originates from Cantonese describing its deep, umami-rich character. In Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM), this fermented soybean base acts warming and Qi-strengthening. Fermented beans (Dòu Chǐ) open the Spleen meridians, resolve stagnation and enhance digestion. Sweet potato and sesame gently nourish Yin, while garlic and chili dispel cold. Lee Kum Kee’s Hoi Sin Sauce achieves perfect balance: sweet-spicy, velvety and rich in natural depth – ideal for marinating duck or as a dip for spring rolls.TCM note: Due to high sugar content (61 g/100g), use moderately – excess sweetness creates „dampness“ (Shī) in TCM, burdening the Spleen. Always pair with fresh vegetables or ginger for balance.
TCM Properties Explained
The sauce carries a sweet-spicy flavor with neutral-warm thermal nature. It primarily enters Spleen and Stomach meridians: strengthens Middle Jiao Qi, transforms food into energy (Gu Qi), and resolves mild stagnation. Fermentation gives it an "ascending" quality – ideal before meals to stimulate appetite. Caution: excess sweetness may generate dampness – always balance with pungent or bitter ingredients.
Ingredients & Allergens
Sugar, water, fermented soybean paste (water, salt, SOYBEANS, WHEAT flour), salt, corn starch, dried sweet potato, rice vinegar (water, rice, sugar, salt), dried garlic, SESAME paste, spices, salted chili peppers.Allergens: Contains SOY, WHEAT and SESAME. Free from fish, shellfish and artificial preservatives – despite the misleading name „Hoisin“ (seafood).
Nutritional Profile per 100 ml
Energy: approx. 310 kcal | Fat: 1.7 g (saturated 0.3 g) | Carbohydrates: 67 g (sugars 61 g) | Protein: 1.5 g | Salt: 8.4 g. High carbohydrate content comes mainly from natural sugars and fermented beans – valuable as Qi source in TCM, but use moderately to avoid dampness accumulation.
Culinary Application
1–2 tbsp stirred in just before serving or as marinade (30 min). Never boil vigorously – fermented aromas and TCM properties are heat-sensitive. Classic for Peking duck, grilled pork or as dip with fresh ginger for Yin-Yang balance.
TCM Balance Tip
Always pair hoisin with "drying" or "cooling" ingredients: scallions neutralize sweetness, fresh cilantro cools, bamboo shoots resolve dampness. Creates harmonious dishes that strengthen Spleen/Stomach without generating dampness.
Cultural Heritage
Born in Guangdong cuisine as companion for grilled meats. The name "Hoisin" (Cantonese for "seafood") is a historical misunderstanding – actually completely plant-based, embodying the sweet, spicy soul of southern Chinese cooking.
Storage & Quality
Refrigerate after opening. Natural consistency without preservatives reflects the TCM principle of "pure transformation" – only fresh, high-quality ingredients generate potent Qi.
Flavor Profile & Versatility
Velvety texture with complex sweet-spicy character: depth from fermented beans, warmth from garlic/chili, roundness from sesame. In TCM, its balanced five-flavor profile is ideal for harmonizing diverse ingredients within one dish.
Summary
Hoisin sauce is a versatile, sweet-savory staple essential to many classic Chinese dishes.