Sunday, September 21, 2008

Uyghur Restaurant

Our stomachs and taste buds have been extremely pleased for our first three weeks in Changsha. However, much to our dismay, both of our cameras remained broken due to previous unfortunate incidents, and we have not been able to blog. But September rolled along and I finally bought a camera I'd been meaning to buy for a long, long time. So here is an inaugural post of a Uyghur restaurant about five minutes away from Yali Middle School. This place is one of Heyman's favorites, and is quickly becoming one of ours too.


kao bao zi - roasted dumplings, also known as "the best things in the world" by Heyman. Toasted/baked, and filled with lamb meat, vermicelli. They are even tastier because they are limited, and are not always available since the restaurant only makes a certain number per day.


a famous chinese dish called liang pianr. wide, clear cold noodles with spongey tofu. sauce is spicy, with a seemingly Xinjiang/Hunan edge to it.

Fat, juicy lamb meat on a stick known as yang rou chuanr. A classic Uyghur snack, often eaten with big pieces of bread.

Broccoli in garlic and spicy sauce.


Fried potato pieces that crispy on the outside, soft on the inside. Sprinkled with spices.

7 comments:

Dan said...

OH MAN i would love some of that chuanr. looks delicious!

Allen said...

omg.....i'm so hungry now....

i just came out of volleyball practice and now i'm craving ivy noodle....

CAROL I MISS YOU

James said...

YUM

Helen Gao said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Helen Gao said...

Jesus. Carol...Imagine seeing these pictures while sitting in front of a desk across the Pacific ocean while dreading over homework and midterms with an empty stomach.
---Helen

Rus said...

thanks for posting this. let me correct the names of some of the dishes. the names you've posted are Chinese, not Uyghur. the Uyghur names are: dish #1) samsa, dish #2) ashlangpung, dish #3) kavap.

haven't seen the other two dishes, therefore don't know the Uyghur names for those two.

Carol Yu said...

thank you rus! we were at a uyghur restaurant in changsha, hunan, not in xinjiang, which is why the names are in chinese, but it is fantastic to get the real names!!