There is plenty of standard Chinese food in
Hohhot. The hotel restaurant of the
Xincheng
is good and cheap; for a livelier atmosphere,
however, there are two very popular Chinese
restaurants right opposite the hotel entrance. In
the vicinity of the train station, try the simple
Taiwan
Beef Noodle Restaurant, whose limited menu is
written in English - it's a little to the east of
the
Tongda Hotel. At the Nationalities
Market, there's a fast-food café in the left wing
(as you face the bridge) where you can get
passable hamburgers and fries.
The highlight of eating in Hohhot, however, is
the chance to eat Mongolian food , which is
by no means as dreadful as reports would have it.
Mongolian hotpot , or shuan yangrou,
is a perfectly respectable dinner that even the
Chinese enjoy. It's similar to Korean food, in
that you cook it yourself: piles of thinly sliced
mutton, ordered by the jin (half kilo), are
cooked by being dropped into a cauldron of boiling
water at the table, then quickly removed and
dipped into a spicy sauce. Tofu, glass-noodles,
cabbage and mushrooms are common accompaniments
which all go into the pot, too. Many restaurants
in Hohhot serve shuan yangrou - try the Malaqin
Restaurant on Xincheng Xi Jie, a few blocks
east of Hulunbei'er Lu. Dinner here with plenty of
beer shouldn't cost more than ¥35 per head.
For an even more exotic meal, however, with the
focus on Mongolian dairy products, head for the
Mongolian quarter in the southeast of town. Bus #4
comes down here - get off at Daxue Lu just south
of the university. During term time, this area is
packed with students, and restaurants stay open
late. Any restaurant with Mongolian letters above
the door is worth trying; one in particular is
just 200m down the small street leading south from
beside the Daxue Lu Shangchang (University Street
Market). For an excellent breakfast or lunch,
order a large bowl of milk tea, with sugar, and chaomi
(buckwheat), huangyou (butter), nailao
(hard white cheese), and naipi (a sweetish,
biscuit-like substance formed from the skin of
boiled milk). Toss everything into the tea, and
eat it with chopsticks - it's surprisingly
delicious. To make this into a substantial meal,
eat it with mengu baozi and xianbing
- dough stuffed with ground mutton, steamed or
fried respectively.