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Dining |
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Shandong cuisine, tracing its roots back to the
Spring and Autumn Period 2500 years ago, presents its
food (usually deep-fried, braised, roasted or stewed)
with a strong emphasis on soy sauce, shallots, and
garlic. Qingdao, often regarded as "the cradle of
Shandong Cuisine", puts a spin upon the usual
Shandong dishes with it concentration on seafood (sea
cucumber, scallop, conch, prawn, and red porgy).
Well-known dishes include "sea cucumbers stewed
with shallots", "stewed salted fish"
and "celery with creamy soup". Made in
simple style, these dishes are available in most
restaurants.
The best way to enjoy Qingdao cuisine is probably
to head down to any of the many little seafood
restaurants on the shore or around Laiyang Lu.
For a better (and more pricey), atmosphere the hotels
are a good way to taste seafood with less of the
language barrier problems. The Qingdao Seafood
Restaurant, on Qingyu Road, is also a more expensive,
but better quality, seafood provider.
Qingdao also has a fairly large Muslim population
and a couple of Muslim places are scattered about,
most noticeably the Donglaishun Restaurant (Donglaishun
fandian) and the Qinghai Muslim Restaurant (Qinghai
musilin fanzhuang, on Dexuan lu), as
well as numerous meatstick (Chuanrou)
sellers.
McDonalds and KFC are both now resident in Qingdao,
almost next door to each other near the train station.
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