Recipes From Yunnan

Popular Searches:


Browse Dishes

Side, Snack, Appetizer

Adzuki beans

Vigna angularis, also known as the adzuki bean (japanese: 小豆 (アズキ), azuki, uncommon アヅキ, adzuki), azuki bean, aduki bean, red bean, or red mung bean, is an annual vine widely cultivated throughout east asia for its small (approximately 5 mm or 1⁄4 in long) bean. the cultivars most familiar in east asia have a uniform red color, but there are also white, black, gray, and variously mottled varieties. scientists presume vigna angularis var. nipponensis is the progenitor.

Side, Snack, Appetizer

Baba

Baba (chinese: 粑粑) is a type of thick, round, heavy bread that is prepared either plain or with various fillings by the naxi people of north-western yunnan, china. it can be sweet or savory.sometimes marketed to tourists as "chinese pizza," it is said to have been invented during the qing dynasty and can vary greatly from one part of yunnan to another. because of its versatility, baba can be eaten plain, cut into pieces, and turned into a spicy snack or as a popular street food, particularly for breakfast.

Main

Bahan chicken

Sour chicken soup

Main

Baked ham

Ham is pork from a leg cut that has been preserved by wet or dry curing, with or without smoking. as a processed meat, the term "ham" includes both whole cuts of meat and ones that have been mechanically formed. ham is made around the world, including a number of regional specialties, such as westphalian ham and some varieties of spanish jamón. in addition, numerous ham products have specific geographical naming protection, such as prosciutto di parma in europe, and smithfield ham in the us.

Main

Bamboo chicken

Bamboo chicken is a chicken curry prepared by stuffing chicken in bamboo segments and then cooking it on charcoal. bamboo chicken is an oil free and nutritionally rich dish.

Main

Boluo fan

Boluo fan (chinese: 菠萝饭; pinyin: bōluófàn) or pineapple rice is a method of preparing rice for consumption that is used by the dai people, a tai cultural group residing in yunnan province, southwest china.

Main

Braised mushrooms

Stir fried mushrooms, jizong mushrooms, shiitake mushrooms

Main

Brewing snow pears

Main

Bronze drum chicken

Drink

Bronze drum wine

Main

Casserole dog meat

Dog meat casserole

Side, Snack, Appetizer

Choudoufu

Stinky tofu (chinese: 臭豆腐; pinyin: chòu dòufu) is a chinese form of fermented tofu that has a strong odor. it is usually sold at night markets or roadside stands as a snack, or in lunch bars as a side dish, rather than in restaurants. traditionally the dish is fermented in a brine with vegetables and meat, sometimes for a period of months. modern factory-produced stinky tofu is marinated in brine for one or two days, to add odor.

Side, Snack, Appetizer

Chuan

Chuan (chinese: 串, dungan: чўан, pinyin: chuàn, "kebab"; uighur: كاۋاپ, кавап, "kawap"), especially in the north-east of china referred to as chuan'r (chinese: 串儿), are small pieces of meat roasted on skewers. chuan originated in the xinjiang region of china. it has been spread throughout the rest of the country, most notably in beijing, tianjin, jinan and jilin, where it is a popular street food. it is a product of the chinese islamic cuisine of the uyghur people and other chinese muslims.

Main

Chunjuan

Spring rolls are rolled appetizers or dim sum commonly found in chinese and other southeast asian cuisines. the kind of wrapper, fillings, and cooking technique used, as well as the name, vary considerably within this large area, depending on the region's culture. they are filled with vegetables and other ingredients.

Main

Eel cold rice noodles

Breakfast

Erkuai

Erkuai (chinese: 饵块; pinyin: ĕrkuāi; lit. 'ear piece') is a type of rice cake particular to the yunnan province of southwest china.the name literally means "ear piece," a reference to the shape of one of its common forms. it is often served stir-fried with vegetables, and málà (麻辣) sauce, which is a mixture of dried red chilis, sichuan pepper, and salt. it is also sold as the popular street food kăo ĕrkuāi (烤饵块) or shāo ěrkuāi grilled and rolled around a yóutiáo (strip of fried dough), with sweet or savory condiments added, making a rolled-up snack resembling a mexican burrito. the sweet type contains a sweet brown sauce and peanuts, while the savory type is spread with lǔfǔ and bean sprouts, and various other toppings. kăo ĕrkuāi is particularly popular in the tourist area of dali. its peculiar name has led to it being called one of the eighteen oddities in yunnan.

Main

Erkuai

Erkuai (chinese: 饵块; pinyin: ĕrkuāi; lit. 'ear piece') is a type of rice cake particular to the yunnan province of southwest china.the name literally means "ear piece," a reference to the shape of one of its common forms. it is often served stir-fried with vegetables, and málà (麻辣) sauce, which is a mixture of dried red chilis, sichuan pepper, and salt. it is also sold as the popular street food kăo ĕrkuāi (烤饵块) or shāo ěrkuāi grilled and rolled around a yóutiáo (strip of fried dough), with sweet or savory condiments added, making a rolled-up snack resembling a mexican burrito. the sweet type contains a sweet brown sauce and peanuts, while the savory type is spread with lǔfǔ and bean sprouts, and various other toppings. kăo ĕrkuāi is particularly popular in the tourist area of dali. its peculiar name has led to it being called one of the eighteen oddities in yunnan.

Side, Snack, Appetizer

Erkuai

Erkuai (chinese: 饵块; pinyin: ĕrkuāi; lit. 'ear piece') is a type of rice cake particular to the yunnan province of southwest china.the name literally means "ear piece," a reference to the shape of one of its common forms. it is often served stir-fried with vegetables, and málà (麻辣) sauce, which is a mixture of dried red chilis, sichuan pepper, and salt. it is also sold as the popular street food kăo ĕrkuāi (烤饵块) or shāo ěrkuāi grilled and rolled around a yóutiáo (strip of fried dough), with sweet or savory condiments added, making a rolled-up snack resembling a mexican burrito. the sweet type contains a sweet brown sauce and peanuts, while the savory type is spread with lǔfǔ and bean sprouts, and various other toppings. kăo ĕrkuāi is particularly popular in the tourist area of dali. its peculiar name has led to it being called one of the eighteen oddities in yunnan.

Main

Fried onion

Side, Snack, Appetizer

Fried potato

Main

Ginger hare

Main

Grandma's potatoes

Mashed or chopped potatoes mixed with green onions, seasonings

Main

Guo qiao mi xian

Chicken broth soup with rice noodles, chicken, pork, quail eggs, shrimp, ham, bean sprouts

Side, Snack, Appetizer

Jinhua ham

Jinhua ham (chinese: 金華火腿) is a type of dry-cured ham named after the city of jinhua, where it is produced, in the zhejiang province of eastern china. the ham is used in chinese cuisines to flavour stewed and braised foods as well as for making the stocks and broths of many chinese soups. the ham was awarded first prize in the 1915 panama international merchandise exhibition. it is a well-known ham in china.

Main

Liangfen

Liangfen (simplified chinese: 凉粉; traditional chinese: 涼粉; pinyin: liángfěn; lit. 'cold powder'), also spelled liang fen, is a chinese legume dish consisting of starch jelly that is usually served cold, with a savory sauce, often in the summer. it is most popular in northern china, including beijing, gansu, and shaanxi, but may also be found in sichuan and qinghai. in tibet and nepal it is called laping and is a common street vendor food. in kyrgyzstan it is an ingredient in a noodle dish called ashlan fu.liangfen is generally white or off-white in color, translucent, and thick. it is usually made from mung bean starch, but may also be made from pea or potato starch. in western china, the jelly-like seeds of plantago major were formerly also used. the starch is boiled with water and the resulting sheets are then cut into thick strips.liangfen is generally served cold. the liangfen strips are tossed with seasonings including soy sauce, vinegar, sesame paste, crushed garlic, julienned carrot, and chili oil. in lanzhou it is often served stir fried. in sichuan, a spicy dish called chuanbei liangfen is particularly popular (see photo above).similar foods include the korean muk made with buckwheat, mung bean, or chestnut starch and japanese tokoroten.jidou liangfen, a similar dish from the yunnan province of southwest china, is made from chick peas rather than mung beans. it is similar to burmese tofu salad. in northeast china, it is called lapi (拉皮) and is served mixed with julienned vegetables.

Side, Snack, Appetizer

Lijiang crackers

Side, Snack, Appetizer

Lufu

Lufu (chinese: 卤腐; pinyin: lǔfǔ) is a type of fermented bean curd from yunnan province in southwest china. it is colored reddish yellow, it has a soft texture, and it has a savory flavor. it is used as a condiment for kăo ĕrkuāi or made into a sauce for yunnan-style barbecue or stinky tofu.

Main

Mala xue wang

Spicy stir fried coagulated pork, chicken or duck blood

Side, Snack, Appetizer

Migan

Migan (chinese: 米干; pinyin: mǐgàn) is a type of rice noodle from the dai people, a tai cultural group from yunnan province, china. it is made from ordinary non-glutinous rice, and it is only sold fresh.

Main

Mixian

Mixian (simplified chinese: 米线; traditional chinese: 米線; pinyin: mǐxiàn) is a type of rice noodle from the yunnan province, china. it is made from ordinary non-glutinous rice, and it is generally sold fresh rather than dried.

Side, Snack, Appetizer

Mixian

Mixian (simplified chinese: 米线; traditional chinese: 米線; pinyin: mǐxiàn) is a type of rice noodle from the yunnan province, china. it is made from ordinary non-glutinous rice, and it is generally sold fresh rather than dried.

Side, Snack, Appetizer

Niunai mi bu

Smooth rice pudding

Side, Snack, Appetizer

Oden

Oden (おでん, 御田) is a type of nabemono (japanese one-pot dishes), consisting of several ingredients such as boiled eggs, daikon, konjac, and processed fishcakes stewed in a light, soy-flavored dashi broth. oden was originally what is now commonly called misodengaku or simply dengaku; konjac (konnyaku) or tofu was boiled and eaten with miso. later, instead of using miso, ingredients were cooked in dashi, and oden became popular. ingredients vary according to region and between each household. karashi is often used as a condiment. oden is often sold from food carts, though some izakayas and several convenience store chains also serve it, and dedicated oden restaurants exist. many different varieties are sold, with single-ingredient dishes sometimes as cheap as 100 yen. while it is usually considered a winter food, some carts and restaurants offer oden year-round. many of these restaurants keep their broth as a master stock, replenishing it as it simmers to let the flavor deepen and develop over many months and years.

Main

Po su bao

Bun stuffed with pork, bamboo shoots, yunnan ham and sugar

Drink

Pu'er tea

Dark fermented tea

Side, Snack, Appetizer

Rubing

Rubing (simplified chinese: 乳饼; traditional chinese: 乳餅; pinyin: rǔbǐng) is a firm, acid-set, non-melting, fresh goat milk farmer cheese made in the yunnan province of china by people of the bai and sani (recognized as a branch of the yi in china) minorities. its bai name is youdbap, meaning "goat's milk".

Side, Snack, Appetizer

Rushan

Rushan (chinese: 乳扇; pinyin: rǔshān; lit. 'milk fan') is a cow's milk cheese of yunnan, china. it is traditionally made by the bai people, who call it nvxseiz (or yenx seinp, in another dialect of bai), the etymology of which is unclear.freshly made cows’ milk curds are pulled and stretched into thin sheets, wrapped around long bamboo sticks and hung up until yellow and leather dry. rushan are served in a number of ways. one method uses a charcoal grill to warm and soften the milk fan. traditionally the inside is spread with rose petal jam. alternatively, the rushan is simply deep fried until golden and crisp. the mandarin name means "milk fan" as it is said to resemble a folding fan.when served grilled (often as a street food), it is usually spread with various sweet condiments and rolled around a stick, resembling an ice pop. some of the popular toppings include sweetened condensed milk, rose petal infused honey, chocolate syrup, and fruit preserves. if rushan cheese is served deep fried, the cheese changes its texture and becomes somewhat flaky.

Main

Satay sotong kering

Skewered and grilled squid

Side, Snack, Appetizer

Shao erkuai

Grilled erkuai rice pancake rolled around a youtiao (fried dough) with sweet or savory sauces and condiments

Side, Snack, Appetizer

Shiping tofu

Traditional bean curd (tofu) from shiping

Main

Steam pot chicken

Chicken steamed with vegetables and spices in a special pot

Main

Tengchong jar chicken

Main

Three slices salad with dried bacillus

Main

Tiger palm golden noodle

Main

Torch meat

Minced meat kabobs

Main

Xidoufen

Xidoufen (稀豆粉) is a chinese soup popular in yunnan province that is made of boiled pea meal, often flavoured with crushed garlic, ginger, coriander, spring onion, dry chilli flakes and sichuan pepper oil. it is often eaten with deep fried youtiao or chinese flatbreads, particularly cong you bing.

Main

Xizhou baba

Pan-fried flatbread made with minced pork, spring onions, sweet red bean paste

Side, Snack, Appetizer

Xizhou baba

Pan-fried flatbread made with minced pork, spring onions, sweet red bean paste

Side, Snack, Appetizer

Xuanwei ham

Xuanwei ham (chinese: 宣威火腿; pinyin: xuānwēi huǒtuǐ) is a dry-cured ham in qujing prefecture of yunnan province, china. xuanwei ham has a 250-year history dating back to 1766. in 1909 it was first mass-produced and gained popularity. in 1915 xuanwei ham won a gold medal at panama international fair. xuanwei ham enjoys a high reputation both internationally and locally. the ham is "rose-red" in color and similarly shaped to a pipa.

Main

Yiliang roast duck

Duck roasted with pine needles and branches

Main

Yi Township hot pot

Main

Yuannan-flavored fried noodles

Main

Zhe'ergen

Houttuynia cordata, also known as fish mint, fish leaf, rainbow plant, chameleon plant, heart leaf, fish wort, or chinese lizard tail, is one of two species in the genus houttuynia (the other being h. emeiensis). it is a flowering plant native to southeast asia. it grows in moist, shady locations. it was named after martinus houttuyn.

Side, Snack, Appetizer

Zheng er si

Main

Zhuang-style roasted duck

Side, Snack, Appetizer

Zongzi

Zongzi ([tsʊ̂ŋ.tsɨ]; chinese: 粽子), rouzong (chinese: 肉粽; pe̍h-ōe-jī: bah-chàng) or simply zong (cantonese jyutping: zung2) is a traditional chinese rice dish made of glutinous rice stuffed with different fillings and wrapped in bamboo leaves (generally of the species indocalamus tessellatus), or sometimes with reed or other large flat leaves. they are cooked by steaming or boiling. in the western world, they are also known as rice dumplings or sticky rice dumplings.

‹ Prev Next ›