
Sichuan pepper / hua jiao (花椒)
Zanthoxylum bungeanum
Edible plantPhoto credit: Tournasol7
Safety information
Safety information
Toxicity: Low — long-used culinary spice; large medicinal doses can irritate.
Contraindications: Yin-deficiency with heat (TCM); pregnancy caution at medicinal doses.
Interactions: None well documented.
Pregnancy & breastfeeding: Pregnancy caution at medicinal doses.
Evidence level
Supported by laboratory or animal studies; not yet confirmed in humans.
Preparations
powder · pericarp
Part used: pericarp
culinary spice · pericarp
Part used: pericarp
in formula · pericarp
Part used: pericarp
decoction · pericarp
Part used: pericarp
Traditional use: warms the middle, disperses cold, relieves pain, kills parasites/worms, stops itch; cold-pattern abdominal pain/vomiting/diarrhea, roundworm, topical itch
Proposed mechanism: alkylamides (hydroxy-alpha-sanshool — tingling/numbing principle), volatile oil, alkaloids — analgesic, anti-inflammatory, antimicrobial, glucose/lipid-metabolism effects
Associated conditions
Edibility
Edible parts: Pericarp is a classic culinary spice (the numbing half of Sichuan ma la). Seeds (black inner part) gritty/bitter and discarded.
Toxic lookalike warning
Harvest only known Zanthoxylum (prickly-ash) species; avoid confusing with unrelated thorny shrubs.
Nutritional notes
Aromatic oils, alkylamides; spice-level quantities (negligible macronutrition).
Healing traditions
Sources (1)
- [E33] Zanthoxylum bungeanum pharma-food phytochemistry/health-function systematic review