There are four major cooking styles in China: Sichuan, Cantonese,
Shandong and Huaiyang, with each having dozens of branches. All styles are represented in
Beijing with thousands of restaurants. In addition, recent years have seen the emergence
of restaurants offering French, Russian and Italian foods as well as American fast food.
Peking Duck
Peking Duck has the reputation of being the most delicious food in the world.
The Chinese have a saying: Visitors to Beijing must do two things: climb the Great Wall
and eat Peking Duck. While at Quan JuDe, ducks are roasted directly over flames from
fruit-tree wood, at Bian Yi Fang roasting is done in closed containers fired with crop
stalks. The best places to go for Peking Duck are Qianmen, Hepingmen and Wangfujing.
Royal Court Food
Over 800 years when Beijing served as the nation's capital, a cooking style
catering to the royal court developed into a major school on a par with other national
cuisine. Today, ordinary people can sample food of this cooking style, which was formerly
reserved for royals only. The best restaurants offering court food are Fang Shan in Beihai
Park and Ting Li Guan in the Summer Palace. Restaurants specializing in court food are not
only meticulous about the quality of raw food selected, but lay great emphasis on the
ambiance and decoration of the dining rooms.
Feast of Complete Manchu-Han Courses (Man Han Quan Xi)
One evening in early 1993,35 Chinese and foreign tourists clad in clothes
that made them the look-alikes of a Qing emperor, his queen,his concubines and court
officials filed into the Fang Shan Restaurant. They were the fifth group to sample Man Han
Quan Xi, or Feast of Complete Manchu-Han Courses, in the 70-year history of the
restaurant. Man Han Quan Xi foods include bears' paw, hedgehog hydnum, tiger kidney,
David's deer, ginseng, bracken, camel hump, shark fin, soft-shell turtle and fish skin, to
name only a few. As many raw dishes come from wild life now under state protection, these
courses are no longer available.
Hot Pot
The majority of restaurants in Beijing, big or small, serve huoguo, or hot
pot. Customers sit around a table on which is place a hotpot. When the water in the pot
boils,they dip paper-thin slices of mutton in the water and , seconds later,get the cooked
mutton out of the opt and mix them with a sauce that contains sesame butter, salted leek
and a dozen other ingredients. People also cook frozen bean curd,Chinese cabbage and
vermicelli in the hot pot.
Moslem Flavor
After the Jin and Yuan dynasties(1115-1368), with more Hui people settling in Beijing,
Moslem food consisting mainly of beef and mutton became increasingly popular in the city.
Beef and mutton are cooked in many ways. Cooked mutton alone comes in dozens of varieties,
including instant stewed mutton and mutton cooked in sly sauce. The best restaurant
offering Mongolian hot pot in Beijing is DongLai Shun on Wangfujing Street; and the best
roast mutton restaurant is the 145-year-old Kao Rou Ji beside Lake Shichahai. Also, the
You Yi Shun Restaurant at Xidan is known for its fried mutton and the nearby Hong Bin Lou
Restaurant for its all-mutton feast.
Folk Snacks
A Beijinger who has long resided abroad says: What miss most are the numerous
snacks back home. Douzhi, pagao, ludagun, chatang and zhaguanchang all make the mouth
water. Douzhi is a fermented drink made from ground beans; pagaois a cold food made from
buckwheat flour; ludagun is a sweet millet flour cake coated, after steaming, with a layer
of soy bean flour,chatang is a thin, hot gruel of sorghum flour; and zhaguanchang is fried
sausage.