From Grits to Chopsticks

Southern Folks Living in Southwest China

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A Chinese Marathon

June 17th, 2013 · 4 Comments · Uncategorized

Timothy’s time in China is drawing to a close, so we decided that it would be appropriate to do a “Chinese marathon” on Saturday night.  To dispel any confusion, this has nothing to do with running, but actually an attempt to eat as many different kinds of food for dinner as possible.  He started early with a large plate of noodles while sharing some of my duck-rice:Duck Rice and Noodles2

These Muslim noodles were a favorite of his when he used to live in Chengdu:Muslim Noodles

As we walked to our next restaurant, the streets of the school village were starting to fill with people:School village street

On the north end of the village is a good place to eat jiaozi (Chinese dumplings):shuijiao

Susan Jiaozi

On the way back, we stopped for some street food, partaking in a local specialty of ground rice and raisins:Street Food

We topped off the evening with some “shaokao” (barbeque) in the market next to our apartment.  There are so many choices of interesting things to eat:too many choices

We settled in on some “normal” things:shaokao

eating shaokao

Of course, one of the highlights of a Chinese marathon often comes later that night (when running can become part of the process).  Fortunately, we had a good rest and even felt up to eating some “zongzi” the next day.  Zongzi, a special food eaten during the Dragon Boat festival (last week), is made from sticky rice wrapped in bamboo leaves, usually containing some beans, nuts, or meat:zongzi

plum zongzi

As a holiday gift, our school had kindly given us some salted duck eggs to eat along with the zongzi, but by this time, we’d had our fill…assaulted duck eggs

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4 Comments so far ↓

  • S

    Looks delicious. 🙂

    Atlanta food just won’t be able to compare when you return… maybe if we hit the backwoods of rural Georgia we can find something equally sketchy.

  • laurie

    These pictures are great! Also, I actually remember liking some zongzi we had back in the day. I don’t think I could stomach any of that now…

  • Karen Little

    Thanks for the food “trip” and the humor, too! Looks like y’all had some fun for sure. 🙂 I do admire you…..I eat a wide variety of food and am not “picky” but I would have a hard time with some of those food items. So glad you’ve adapted so well!

  • admin

    There’s nothing like the feeling of a freshly roasted squid tentacle going down your throat!

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