"Small cakes are like chewing the moon, with crispy and sweet fillings in them"
"I would go around the wheat fields looking for wild shepherds, and force myself to cook mountain soup for the monks"
"When the Yangtze River goes around Guo, you will know the beauty of the fish, and the mountains with good bamboos will smell the fragrance of bamboo shoots."
"When will the bright moon come? Ask the blue sky for the wine." If you get the taste of wine, you can always hold an empty cup."
"If you eat three hundred lychees a day, you may grow up to be a Lingnan native. "
: "The jade color is uniform when rubbed with delicate hands, and the green oil is fried into a tender yellow color. When spring comes at night, I know the importance of sleeping, and the gold wrapped around the arms of a beautiful woman is flattened. ”
“When autumn comes, frost and dew cover the east side of the garden, and the reeds bear children and mustards bear grandchildren.” I am full of hatred, and I don't know why I eat chicken and dolphins. "
, "Three or two branches of peach blossoms outside the bamboo are a prophet of the warmth of the spring river. The ground is covered with wormwood and the reed buds are short, which is when the puffer fish is about to come out."
Su Dongpo was not only a famous scholar, but also a famous gourmet. Therefore, it is said that there are many famous dishes directly related to him, bearing his name. There are more named dishes, such as "Dongpo elbow", "Dongpo tofu", "Dongpo jade grits", "Dongpo leg", "Dongpo sprouts", "Dongpo black carp", "Dongpo cake" ", "Dongpo crisp", "Dongpo bean curd", "Dongpo meat", etc.
"Dongpo Collection" contains: "Sichuan people value celery sprouts and spinach, and mixed dove meat for it." . Spring dove breast is stir-fried turtle dove breast with celery, later called Dongpo spring dove breast.
Three sacrifices and five tripods
Word meaning:
Old description of sacrifices. Plenty. Later, it was also used to describe food as beautiful.
Sān shēng wǔ dǐng
The food is never tired of fine food.
shí bù yàn jīng, kuài bù yàn xì
Idiom allusion: disgust: satisfaction; 脍: finely chopped meat. The more refined the grain, the better. The finer the meat, the better. Do it carefully.
The source of the idiom: "The Analects of Confucius Xiangdang": "When you eat, you must change your food, and when you live, you must move your seat." I never tire of fine food, and I never tire of fine food. ”
Example sentence: “Don’t eat until you cut it straight” is the old-fashioned rule of his old man, but the rule of “never tire of fine food, never tire of fine meat” is a bit strange. (Lu Xun’s "Nan Qian Bei Diao Collection· By Chinese Women" Feet...》)
Eating Ai pear with steam
āi lí zhēng shí
Idiom allusion: Eating Ai pear with steam is a metaphor for being ignorant. The land wastes good things.
The source of the idiom: "Shi Shuo Xin Yu Qing Slander" written by Liu Yiqing in the Southern Song Dynasty: "Whenever Huannan County sees someone unhappy, he often says: 'You have to mourn your family's pears, so you should pay them back.'" Do you want to eat it without steaming it? '"
Eight Treasures and Jade Food
bā zhēn yù shí
Idiom allusion: generally refers to exquisite delicacies.
Accompanying the Prime Minister
bàn shí zǎi xiàng
Idiom allusion: accompany others to eat together. Used to ridicule incompetent officials.
Idiom origin: "Old Tang Book: Biography of Lu Huaishen": "In the third year of Kaiyuan, he moved to Huangmen Prison. Huaishen and Ziwei ordered Yao Chong to be in charge of the Privy Council. Huaishen thought that he was not as good as Chong, so he gave way to everything, and people at the time called him the Prime Minister. ”
Full food and warm clothes
bǎo shí nuǎn yī
Idiom allusion: Full food: to eat enough; warm clothes: to wear warm clothes. Describes a well-off life, food and clothing Abundance.
The source of the idiom: "Mencius Teng Wengong 1": "The way a man should be: if he has enough food and warm clothes, and lives in comfort without education, he is like a beast. ”
Drink enough and eat enough
jiǔ zú fàn bǎo
Idiom allusion: After drinking as much wine as possible, the rice is also full. It describes eating and drinking enough.
p>
The source of the idiom: The first chapter of Yuan Gao Wenxiu's "Xiangyang Hui": "I will arrange a banquet of good wine here..., and I will make him drunk and full, unable to walk." ”
Feed all day long
bǎo shí zhōng rì
Idiom allusion: All day long: all day long. Eat full food all day long, don’t use your brain, and don’t do anything serious.
The source of the idiom: "The Analects of Confucius·Yang Huo": "It is difficult to have a full day without any intention! ”
Example: If a person is full of food all day long and has no intention, he is the most hopeless person.
Relish the taste
Eat salt in the morning and evening, swallow dates wholeheartedly, feast with great joy, the fragrance is overflowing, never tire of fine food, never tire of delicious food, luxurious clothes and delicious food