Soup From Yunnan

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10 responses to “Soup From Yunnan”

  1. Wow, I LOVE this!!!! and your photos are beautiful! thanks for sharing! This recipe looks very similar to one I tried from Aida Mollenkamp’s Keys to the Kitchen Cookbook. will definitely be trying your version too! love this!

  2. One more thing, “Nobody’s interested in exotic affairs with the far east. .” Are you kidding me? This is a work of art. . LOVE this. I think this will speak to many Asian food lovers. . just beautiful.

  3. Hey Lady and Pups,

    I’m headed to Yunnan to work for a few months and I’d really like to know–if you know–the Chinese name of this dish. It just looks so damn good, I’d be remiss if I didn’t try and find it.

    • Vincent,it’s Chinese name is called Niu-ba-hu (牛吧呼). It’s a weird sounding name and it literally doesn’t mean anything in Chinese (just sounds). I have seen it a couple time in yunnan restaurants but not all of them carry it. I wonder how easy it is to find it in Yunnan. let me know!

  4. i cannot stay away. i keep reading, laughing, agreeing, learning, taking notes, pinning posts… you are amazing! i <3 it here. thank you!!!

  5. Hi Mandy,

    I can’t seem to find any Chinese aromatic herbs packets. Do they go by any other name, or can you mention/link a brand?

    Thanks!

      • JACLYN, they are usually sold in Chinese supermarket along the spice isle, and it’s not something that’s associated with a well-known brand. Different manufacture has different formula so it can be quite inconsistent. If you can’t find it, just do the spice-blend as provided in the niu-rou mian recipe.

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