This is what real Kung Pao Chicken should look like—more than just peanuts. There are so many types of nuts in this that I don’t even sure I know what theyre all called. (I see peanuts, almonds, and cashews). This one was kind of sweet and actually not spicy at all.
Some of my fav (and least fav haha) foods from China…I think it was a bad idea to do this right before my year of being independent. Before I came to China, I used to not eat spicy food (as in seek it out b/c I could eat spicy food, just usually avoided it), no lamb, squid, drank only soda (and then water and lemonade or apple juice), and wouldn’t even consider trying something if I didn’t know what it was (still kind of wish I did…but I did not die…). I don’t know what I used to eat before…
一麻一辣 (I think this would be called Something Numb, Something Spicy instead of One Numb (spicy))
I think this has to be one of my new fav restaurants in China. You pick a spiciness level (not spicy, mildly spicy, super spicy, and insanely spicy)—we go with mild b/c US mild = not even considered to be spicy in China. My colleague insists that we’ve had super spicy at lunch once and I had to stop eating because I just couldn’t eat anymore. Then you pick all your fav veggies and other random stuff (we get the this, in the descending tastiness: chicken wings > beef balls >> shrimp balls) and they stir fry it for you with tons of peppers. There are tons of these kinds of restaurants in China but this one has the best flavoring and THE best 酸梅汤(suan mei tang)in Beijing—pretty sure it’s plum juice? I ended having酸梅汤 almost everytime I went somewhere with spicy food (b/c it’s like milk and takes some of the heat off) and they all tasted horribbllee.
Apparently you can’t try this at home because the peppers are not the kind you can just buy at the grocery store...check out how many peppers there are.
金鼎軒(Jin Ding Xuan) This is a chain restaurant that we came to for amazing and pretty cheap dim sum. The building has four floors and is one of the few places in Beijing (/probly China all together) that’s open 24 hours a day. There are 4 floors and they have 100 chefs who work for them…I was kind of jealous of Ivy b/c there’s a smaller version of the restaurant on the finance street of Beijing, right next to Ivy’s office. See--part of what I ate when I visited her at her office. Shrimp-pork shumai, bbq pork buns, shrimp wontons with noodles
As cheap as this place is (compared to the US --hahah I think like $6-7 for the meal), I would not have been able to spend that much money for lunch everyday...more on my daily lunch later)
三证 (San Zheng) is your typical Chinese restaurant where they have a million choices and its all standard Chinese (in China) food. This place is just outside of our neighborhood and I've come here quite a few times because it's good and cheap for eating out. In fact, for my last meal in China, I thnik we had a soup, 5 dishes, and a fish--which also comes with a free fish soup from your fish(the one below) for a total of 150 yuan...That's about how much the it cost when I went to the other two restaurants with my uncle and aunt, and we fed 5.5 people (and altho not quite like an american, for old ppl my grandparents can really eat).
This is the fried fish that we always get. It's kind of sweet and tastes amazing with rice. I have no idea what this translates to, but in chinese i think it's called song shu yu, which i always translate to squirrel fish, but im pretty sure that's not right...
Xinjiang food:Xinjiang is the province in northwestern china that made the news quite freq two years ago b/c of the ethnic tensions and fighting—the Uyghur unrest. They apparently eat a lot of lamb here b/c practically everything comes with lamb, like this chao mian pian-er dish, which is also the only dish where i've ever actually thought celery tasted good because normally i think it tastes abs horrible. The sauce tastes tomatoe-y, but a little sweeter than tomato sauce and it has little chunks of lamb in it. mmmm. the best part is that it's super cheap. i think this big plate was 10 yuan, which is on the expensive side for this dish b/c i think its usually like 6 yuan for a big plate of chao mian pianer.
A few weeks after I went to Mao's House [hahah i just wanted to say that], I went to HaiDiLao, which is this super famous hot pot place. This is what I ate (not the mini tomatoes, but mainly corn on the cob, popcorn (bottom left corner) and oranges) because my host ordered really really weird things...
like this pig brain...apparently it's high in cholesterol, so my host only had half, while the father of the other family had 1.5 brains...-_-. I didn't eat this. i kind of had enough after i ate a baby octopus and duck intestines (which are really skinny, long and narrow like noodles...except theyre red like meat and feel like eating tofu skin).
~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*
Lunch at Work
I think I spent like $2 every day for lunch because for I dont know how many weeks in a row, we went to Shaxian for lunch liek 4 times a week and I would order Ji-tui-fan aka Chicken Leg Rice for 12 yuan. Then afterwards, on the way back I'd buy either a popsicle or a peach from the Korean grocery store on the way back. haha for some reason, I never got sick of it until like the day or two before my last day. The rice comes covered in some sauce or juice that's got the same flavor as the chicken. I dont know what's in the small part of the plate (my colleague actually ate my portion every time), but it comes with bok choi w/bean sprouts, a hard boiled egg (i forget what this style is called but it makes it delishhiouss and this thick like tofu skin thing.