Meet Laoganma, “The Godmother”: China’s Best Chili Oils + Sauces
Published Jan 31, 2015, Updated Oct 27, 2025

Godmother to the Rescue
Eleven-year-old Fongchong had been in the United States for a week in February 2011 and had found almost nothing she liked about it. Everything was foreign and strange in the extreme—the language, the food, her house, her parents. Now she was having dinner with people who looked like her and talked like her, but still it was weird.
The food these college girls had made for her was familiar, at least—sweet-and-sour ribs, red-braised pork—and somewhat comforting, but Fongchong remained quiet and standoffish, unsure about everything, her perpetual grimace firmly in place.
That is until she got a taste of the mapo doufu.
There it was! The big intense flavor and mala burn that she loved so much. A taste that made her remember her favorite foods from home. Her face brightened as the soft tofu melted like a cloud in her mouth and the spicy bean sauce electrified her brain and speech. She began to laugh, and even joke, turning on the playful charm her dad and I had glimpsed a few times in China as we adopted her—in other words, turning on the real Fongchong.
I liked the mapo doufu too, even though I knew it wasn’t authentic—meaning made the way it is in Sichuan—because I had already logged many hours in Chengdu cooking schools and home kitchens as a journalist and organizer of Sichuan culinary tours. I could detect no doubanjiang, or chili bean paste, which is the earthy-chili soul of mapo doufu, made of fermented broad beans and chilies in Pixian County.
But my Taiwanese-American friend’s mapo doufu had its own irresistible chili bean allure. I quizzed her, and she graciously revealed her secret ingredient—a bright red jar featuring a photo of stern-faced Laoganma, literally “Old Dry Mom” but idiomatically “Godmother.” She let Fongchong and me sample some of the black bean sauce straight from the jar, and we were both instantly hooked.
That was the night Fongchong met The Godmother—”her” godmother—and the first of hundreds of times she would be both soothed and thrilled by her over the next four years of her new life. As my daughter’s personal Chinese cook, I too was soothed and thrilled as I learned about all the Laoganma chili oils and sauces and their infinite uses as ingredients, condiments and shortcuts.

I learned that Laoganma devotees (in America, mostly Asians at that time) swore by Laoganma’s Spicy Chili Crisp—a super complex chili oil condiment, with abundant shallot crisps, Sichuan pepper bits and preserved black soybeans (douchi). We became addicted to that one too, but our first love was the company’s Black Bean sauce, which does away with the onion crisps and doubles down on the pungent douchi, or, in other words, pure umami. They are both spicy hot, but in a good, easily edible way. (There are others as well, including a chili oil with peanuts, one with rutabaga and beancurd and, in China, some with meat as an ingredient. The company also does a mean mala hotpot sauce.)
Fongchong is a Cantonese with an outlier palate who prefers everything bold and spicy, so Laoganma became her go-to condiment for anything I made her with insufficient kick. When I was still figuring out how to feed her three meals a day of real Chinese food in a city that doesn’t have any readymade, I quickly learned that either sauce is a shortcut to flavor in a simple stir-fry or noodle sauce.
I love the Chili Crisp in any Sichuan cold noodle or cold chicken dish or as a topper for fried rice. (Note that Chili Crisp is not directly substitutable when recipes call for chili oil because it is packed with chilies and has little oil; use it in addition to chili oil.) The Black Bean sauce pairs well with stir-fried noodles, chicken, pork or vegetables. Go here for my Laoganma Black Bean Chicken recipe.
If I don’t include one as I cook, Fongchong loads it on her snacks herself: Black Bean goes on stir-fried greens, or directly on top of boiled wheat noodles as a sauce; Spicy Chili Crisp goes in wonton soup or as part of a dumpling sauce with soy sauce and black vinegar.

I almost couldn’t believe there existed such a shortcut to complex Sichuan flavors. None of the Sichuan-cuisine experts I know in Chengdu ever introduced me to Laoganma sauces, perhaps because they’re not actually from Sichuan but from the neighboring province of Guizhou, which has a similar love of mala—ma being tingly Sichuan pepper and la being chili pepper. But I’m sure my Sichuan friends cheat with them too, as they are wildly popular throughout China, and on my most recent trip to Sichuan I saw them on the shelves of every supermarket I visited.
Who Is The Godmother?
I was curious about The Godmother, and a little internet research revealed that she is one Tao Huabi, who as an illiterate, widowed mother opened a small noodle shop that gained a wide following due specifically to her chili sauce. In 1996, she shut down her restaurant to take her growing line of chili sauces into production. Turns out she got her Godmother nickname precisely because she was so motherly and protective of her employees.
Almost two decades later, China’s Chili Sauce Empress still runs the privately owned Guizhou company with her two sons. “For a woman who is illiterate and with no background in finance, Tao’s is the success story of all time,” said Women of China magazine. “She has made a five-yuan jar of chili sauce as famous as the top-rated Maotai liquor brand.”
Laoganma’s success spawned legions of imitators, the largest of which she has battled—and beat—in court over trademark infringement. A 2014 media report on the publicity-shy company said management is not interested in going public or seeking capital to expand. Good enough. As long as she can make enough to stock my local Chinese market and keep my child happy I’m fine with The Godmother not becoming a household name in America.
Though we’re certainly not the only Americans with a secret addiction to Laoganma. In a 2012 episode of The Mind of a Chef, Anthony Bourdain’s show that followed Momofuku chef David Chang on his food travels, Chang went to a market in New York’s Chinatown. He proselytized much as I am here about the life-changing products you can find there. He never mentioned The Godmother, but something in his cart caught my eye and I rewound to see that I was right: It was loaded up with jars of Laoganma.
The Godmother has seen us through all the ups and downs of adapting to adoption. Fongchong was still shell-shocked that first week in America, terrified and angry at the new, strange world she found herself in, and one of her first complaints to the Mandarin speakers at dinner was that we didn’t know how to cook and didn’t feed her.
I knew then that I had my work cut out for me. Even though I had been learning Chinese cooking for years before I even thought about adoption, I now had no confidence at all that I could match the three meals a day of home-cooked food she got at her foster home in Guangzhou.
There was a long road ahead, and I eventually got my footing, but The Godmother turned out to be a godsend in those early days.
Sourcing Laoganma
Laoganma sauces are pretty easy to find in Chinese supermarkets in the U.S. In fact, sometimes they are hard to miss, as in this photo of a display at Great Wall market in suburban Atlanta. They should retail in a store for around $2 per jar, which is without a doubt the most flavor you can buy anywhere for $2.


You can trust just about any authentic Laoganma product. We’ve lately become enamored of her spicy preserved cabbage-and-chili condiment, used as a topping for rice, congee or soup, but also tasty in a vegetable stir-fry. The Godmother never lets us down!
Do you love The Godmother? Let me know how.
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Until recently the only two Lao Gan Ma products I’ve seen around here (New England USA) are the Spicy Chili Crisp and Black Bean sauce discussed in this posting. But I recently found several other of the Godmother’s products:
Chili Oil
Fried Chili Oil
Chili Oil with Mushroom
The Chili Oil and Fried Chili Oil resemble the Chili Crisp, but with more oil and less of the crispy ingredients. The Fried Chili Oil is a bit more aromatic than the plain Chili Oil. I only just bought the Chili with Mushroom and haven’t had a chance to try it yet.
Thanks for the heads-up! I’ll keep a look out for the chili oils because it would be nice to have a version with more oil. It could be used in more recipes.
I was shopping in Boston’s Chinatown yesterday and found a new (to me, anyway) Lao Gan Ma product: Chile Bean Curd. The label was entirely in Chinese, but it looked like chunks of tofu in red oil, and you can’t go wrong with the Godmother, so I bought it. I was able to identify it today at Lao Gan Ma’s USA website. Can’t wait to try it!
Her sauce is an essential flavour in all of my cooking!
Thank you for a fantastic food blog. Using it all the time, in my own Sichuan culinary investigations. Every I’m at the asian supermarket to buy my stuff, I’ve noticed the Lao Gan Ma jars and thought that they look authentic and exquisite in some way, but I never bought them until today. I bought the black bean sauce and immediately googled it to find out more. I ended up on your website, where I’ve been a lot of times before, and read the whole story. Fantastic. Thank you very much for your insight and enthusiasm!
Thanks so much! It’s feedback like this that helps me keep finding the time to do this.
Funny that the night before I saw this I improvised a quick dish from what I had on hand–some beef, celery, onions, sweet red pepper–and made a super easy sauce of dark soy sauce, light soy sauce, chicken stock and LGM black bean. It was delicious. The Godmother makes it so easy!
I have never heard of this brand but then again, my family rarely strays from Lee Kum Kee because when we do, we are always severely disappointed.
But based on your write-up, very excited to try out the different flavors when I’m back for our annual summer vacation in the States. Always love a good chilli or black bean sauce.
I predict you’ll love them! Very different from LKK. No Chinese/Asian markets there?
My girlfriend introduced me to my ‘Spicy grandma’ addiction and has been making jokes about me having a older woman as a mistress since 😀 … I must admit my cupboard does contain about 8 different varieties of the sauce at any given moment and I really love the stuff.
Of course moderate use is advised since it does have a overwhelming flavor that can make everything tasting a bit the same as said earlier … but then again, I really really like how that flavor combines with some vinegar and soy sauce when eating homemade shrimp potstickers 😉
Spicy Grandma! I like that one. And I agree about not overdoing it. I save it mainly for a few uses: on fried rice or as a shortcut for a stir-fry sauce when I’m too tired to chop up ginger, garlic, scallions, peppers, douchi, etc.
Lee Kum Kee is pretty sweet …. But the Godmother sauce will rock your world
I use the chilli bean and pork mince jar..all the time! adding to my noodle soups..ive had the peanut one and the normal one but always my fave is the pork mince one. I am from australia but i visit taiwan once a yr..love it!
Interesting that you can get the pork mince LGM in Australia. I’ve never seen it here in the U.S., and I’m not sure it could even make it past the import police. They are tough on meat products here. I must get some next time I am in China! Thanks for the tip.
I have a problem with many of these products as they are mostly over loaded with salt. Most of our general cooking we add little or no salt. Are any of these codaments available low salt?
I don’t believe any of the LGM sauces are low-salt. Fermented bean sauces are made from beans that have been preserved with salt. However LGM doesn’t taste particularly salty (as Pixian douban jiang does, for example). LGM also has MSG.
Lao Gan Ma Black Bean Sauce was hugely popular in the lunch room of the factory I work with in China. I decided I had to bring some home to the States so I took a good look at the label, then went searching in the local supermarket after work. I found a shelf with about a dozen different products from Lao Gan Ma and about half of them looked the same. Of course the labels in China don’t have a word of English so I was stumped. The next day I took a photo of the jar in the lunch room, then made another trip to the supermarket and found a match.
I’m able to find it at the local Asian market at home so I always have a jar on hand now. I don’t cook Chinese but it goes on my eggs every weekend.
It’s true that Lao Gan Ma shouldn’t be reserved for only Chinese food. Enjoy!