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CULTURE

CULTURE

The tastes of southern China

Rooted in Cantonese cooking, the food of the Greater Bay Area unfolds through delicate dim sum, pristine seafood and the ritual of morning tea, Li Yingxue reports in Guangzhou.

By Li Yingxue????|????China Daily????|???? Updated: 2026-02-26 09:51

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Seafood poon choi (large basin dish). [Photo provided to China Daily]

She adds that all sauces are made in-house, including the restaurant's signature yellow lantern chili sauce, blended from more than a dozen ingredients.

In these carefully judged combinations lies a shared culinary understanding among Cantonese people, a flavor memory common across the Greater Bay Area.

Beyond morning tea, Cantonese cuisine reveals its pursuit of refinement in everyday dishes. White-cut chicken highlights the natural flavor of the meat with crisp skin and tender flesh, paired simply with ginger-scallion sauce. Roast goose offers crackling skin and juicy meat, balanced by plum sauce. Slow-simmered soups, cooked for hours, are clear, mellow and attuned to the seasons.

Street food tells an equally important story. Bamboo-pole noodles are firm and elastic; shrimp wontons have thin skins and generous fillings; radish and beef offal are slow-braised until deeply infused, served with garlic-chili sauce for warmth and comfort.

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