A just tossed bag of hot nuts, maroon-brown with a sticky feel clinging to its skin, and fragrant with the aroma of toasted sugar: This is the sweet roasted Chinese chestnut.
0 comments - 1383 views - Tue, nov 03 18:41 2009
Orange cuttlefish or Orange squid is the most common English name used for the cuttlefish dish within Cantonese cuisine. It is one of the siu mei dishes, though it is not quite roasted.
0 comments - 1038 views - Thu, oct 29 10:14 2009
Bird's nest soup is a delicacy in Chinese cuisine. A few species of swift, the cave swifts, are renowned for building the saliva nests used to produce the unique texture of this soup.
0 comments - 973 views - Wed, oct 28 10:14 2009
Pig's ear, as food for human consumption, is literally the cooked ear of pig served as a pork offal dish. It is found in a number of cuisines around the world.
0 comments - 1551 views - Wed, oct 28 10:12 2009
Chicken feet are a part of chicken that is eaten in Chinese cuisine. The majority of the edible meat on the feet consist of skin and tendons, without much muscle.
1 comments - 948 views - Wed, oct 28 10:10 2009
Century egg, also known as preserved egg, hundred-year egg, thousand-year egg, and thousand-year-old egg, is a Chinese cuisine ingredient made by preserving duck, chicken or quail eggs in a mixture of clay, ash, salt, lime, and rice straw for several weeks to several months, depending on the method of processing.
0 comments - 1485 views - Tue, oct 27 14:40 2009
Stinky tofu is a form of fermented tofu that has a strong odor. It is a popular snack in East and Southeast Asia, particularly Hong Kong, Taiwan, Indonesia, and China, where it is usually found at night markets or roadside stands, or as a side dish in lunch bars.
0 comments - 1314 views - Tue, oct 27 14:26 2009
Snake wine (蛇酒, shéjǐu) is an alcoholic beverage produced by infusing whole snakes in rice wine or grain alcohol. The drink used in China during the Western Zhou dynasty and considered a important curative and believed to reinvigorate a person according to Traditional Chinese medicine. It can be found in China, Vietnam and throughout Southeast Asia.
0 comments - 775 views - Tue, oct 27 14:14 2009
How does one explain, in a few short paragraphs, something that's such an important part of Chinese life, like hairy crab? If you've spent any time in China, especially in the autumn, it's hard to look anywhere and not see specialty crab stores (with aquariums containing live crabs), as well as crabs in almost every menu in high end restaurants. Chinese gourmands—they all eat hairy crab.
0 comments - 2140 views - Thu, oct 22 09:11 2009
Beer in China (中国啤酒 Zhōnggúo píjǐu) has become increasingly popular, first in China in the last century, and then internationally in the last few decades. While most Chinese beers are pale lagers, other styles are occasionally found, such as Tsingtao Dark Beer.
2 comments - 1567 views - Mon, sep 21 13:37 2009
Chinese food therapy (食疗 Shí Liáo) is a practice of healing using natural foods instead of medications.
0 comments - 626 views - Mon, sep 21 11:33 2009
The spring roll is a traditional Chinese food originally eaten during the Spring Festival to symbolize hope.
0 comments - 721 views - Fri, sep 18 15:41 2009
A popular vegetarian option, this dish is quite common in China, both at home and in restaurants.
0 comments - 851 views - Fri, sep 18 15:36 2009
It's a delicious snack made of pumpkin.
0 comments - 699 views - Fri, sep 18 15:33 2009
It's very common dish in china, you can make fragarant fried rice by yourself with this recipe.
1 comments - 742 views - Fri, sep 18 15:30 2009
It's a nutrious soup with delicious taste.
0 comments - 668 views - Fri, sep 18 15:22 2009
This is a healthy recipe, fresh spinash can give you enough needed vitamins.
0 comments - 732 views - Fri, sep 18 15:13 2009
Fresh creamy cheese from the unlikeliest place, the surprising story from Shanxi, China.
0 comments - 515 views - Fri, sep 18 15:02 2009
Zhejiang cuisine (浙菜 or 浙江菜) is one of the Eight Culinary Traditions of China. It is derived from the native cooking styles of the Zhejiang region in China. Food made in the Zhejiang style is not greasy, having instead a fresh and soft flavor with a mellow fragrance.
0 comments - 534 views - Wed, sep 16 10:26 2009
Shandong cuisine (山东菜 Shāndōng cài) more commonly known as Lu cuisine (鲁菜 lǔcài) is one the Eight Culinary Traditions of China. It is derived from the native cooking styles of Shandong, an eastern coastal province of China.
0 comments - 609 views - Wed, sep 16 10:19 2009
Once Chinese traditional medicines are mentioned, Tongrentang is a household name both in China and all over the world. Surely, Tongrentang has created a splendid history over past 300 years.
Chinese traditional painting dates back to the Neolithic Age about 6,000 years ago. The excavated colored pottery with painted human faces, fish, deer and frogs indicates that the Chinese began painting as far back as the Neolithic Age. Over the centuries, the growth of Chinese painting inevitably reflected the change of time and social conditions. From Primitive to Modern
Chinese dragons are legendary creatures in Chinese mythology and folklore, with mythic counterparts among Japanese, Korean, Vietnamese and Turkic dragons. In Chinese art, dragons are typically portrayed as long, scaled, serpentine creatures with four legs. In contrast to European dragons that are considered evil, Chinese dragons traditionally symbolize potent and auspicious powers, particularly control over water, rainfall, and floods. In yin and yang terminology, a dragon is yang (male) and complements a yin (female) fenghuang "Chinese phoenix lord of demons".
“马前”与“马后”是戏曲界常用的术语。“马前”的意思是加快演出的速度,缩短原有的演出时间;“马后”则相反,是指放慢演出速度,延长原有演出时间。
Color in Chinese culture refers to the various colors that are considered auspicious (吉利) or inauspicious (不利). The Chinese character for color is 颜色 (Yan Se). In ancient China, the character more accurately meant color in the face. During the Tang Dynasty, Yan Se began to refer to all color. The Chinese idiom “Wu (five) Yan Liu (six) Se,” which is used to describe many colors, may also suggests colors in general.
In China, common names for China include "Zhonghua" (中华) and "Zhongguo" (中国) , while "Han" (汉) and "Tang" (唐) are common names given for the Chinese ethnicity. Other names include Huaxia, Shenzhou and Jiuzhou.
The Chinese yo-yo is a toy from China consisting of two equally-sized discs connected with a long axle.
Zhouzhuang is 30 km in the southwest of Kunshan City and 38 km to the southeast of Suzhou in Jiangsu Province. Lying quietly by the side of Dianshan Lake near the Daguanyuan Park in Shanghai, it has
