Southern Minority Food — 南方少数民族美食

Preserved pork smoked pork dish

China's south (mainly Yunnan, Guizhou, and Hunan provinces, and Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region) has the greatest concentration of ethnic minorities anywhere in China. These ethnic people have their special cuisine, which is famous for its sour and spicy flavors. 

Local Preserved Ingredients

The minorities of the South are generally poor to subsistence-level farmers, living on or among the mountains, so their daily food is mostly grown locally, often on their own garden plots. Meat is usually reared at home, bought locally, or caught. Southern ethnic food is typically simple and full of natural ingredients, with little wastage. Heads, feet, and innards are all eaten.

The most significant ingredients of Southern minority cuisine are rural preserved foods. They preserve almost everything to prevent wastage, and have been doing so since ancient times.
 
Pickling in brine or vinegar, sun-drying, and curing were traditionally the only ways to preserve foods in the damp southern weather. The "mountain peoples" pickle vegetables, tofu, and chilies; smoke meat, poultry, fish, and tofu; and sun-dry fruits, fish, vegetables, and chilies.
 
Why It's So Sour and Spicy

 
Chilli are dried for chilli sauce

Typical Foods

Oil tea, home-brewed rice wine, sticky rice cakes (粑粑 baba /baa-baa/) and glutinous rice wraps (粽子 zongzi /dzong-dz/), are popular amongst several minorities. They often produce their own home-smoked meats.
 
Guangxi Minorities

The Zhuang are the largest "minority" in China. Their foods include oil tea, sticky rice cakes, and pork-stuffed snail shells. Multicolored sticky rice is eaten on Tomb Sweeping Day and the Zhuang Song Festival.
 
The Yao are a mixed and widespread minority in Guangxi. They are most famous for their oil tea, a broth of fried tea leaves, and their foods include sweet potato noodles, mugwort rice cakes (艾叶耙 aiyeba /eye-yeah-baa/), stuffed bitter cucumber, and stuffed green peppers.
 
Guizhou Minorities

 
Sour Soup Fish
 
Yi meals are based on buckwheat, corn and potatoes, and meats are often cooked in large joints.
 
Yunnan Minorities

The Bai make a lot of pickles and pork dishes.
 
Dai cuisine has a lot of Thai influence.
 
Sour and spicy food, wild vegetables, and blood cakes are eaten by the Hani of Southwest Yunnan.
 
Mushrooms stuffed with pork are a Naxi specialty, and butter tea is popular in the mornings.
 
The Shui have a more limited cuisine, including glutinous rice, pork and beef bone hotpots, and steamed fish, with chilies, tomatoes, and pickles.

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