By Sindy Chan (
China Daily)
10:26, January 25, 2013
The charm of Baiwan town in northern Guangdong province lies in its primitiveness. (China Daily/ Nam Nai Choi)
Boiling hot summers attract the bugs, bitterly cold winters bring frost and rain, autumns are too dry and springs too humid. These are the challenges nature brings to Baiwan, a mountainous town in northern Guangdong province.
Despite the extreme weather conditions, cassava, corn, soybean, peanut, sweet potato, vegetable and rice grow out of the infertile soil.
These fruits of the earth produce some of the loveliest local delicacies: cakes made of cassava flour, porridge cooked using corn powder mixed with rice, nutritious milk and bean curd from soybeans, cooking oil extracted from peanuts and delicious and healthy steamed or baked sweet potatoes.
Children in the town are familiar with a fun way of baking sweet potatoes in the fields. First, dig a big hole on the ground, then stack up rounded mud balls to form a "beehive" and put in charcoal pieces to heat up the beehive.
When the mud is heated up, remove the coals, place the sweet potatoes between the mud balls and collapse the beehive. Within 30 minutes, you will get mouthwatering sweet potatoes baked using hot mud.
If you visit Baiwan and see people baking in the fields, it is worth buying a couple of sweet potatoes or whatever is cooking to taste the difference.
Baiwan farmers are also well-known for their meat products. Tasty tender chicken and meaty pork cooked in the local style are some of the must-try dishes.
Mountains in Baiwan may remind visitors of Guilin, as both places share the same karst topography stretching across Guangdong province and Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region.
Because of the high concentration of limestone, water in Baiwan is rich in calcium, which strengthens bones and teeth.
But the true attraction of Baiwan lies in its primitiveness. It is common to see village women carrying bamboo shoots freshly picked from the forest or drying yuba or bean-curd skin under the house eaves.
Elderly people prepare their coffins ahead of time and store the coffins at the attic.
And you are bound to meet curious and friendly children with local accent and vocabulary asking, "What are you doing here?"
【1】 【2】 We recommend:
Beijing is in silver and whiteGirlhood photos of Chinese stars revealedA trip to sunshine sanctuary in BeihaiHow sweet! Stunning pure ad girlsChina's largest 'capsule hotel' opens in QingdaoLa Perla Spring Summer 2013 LingerisesA young artist's life with wolf cubBanquets at Diaoyutai State GuesthouseOlympic medalist Michelle Kwan marriesEmail|
Print|
Comments(Editor:葉欣、張茜)
Increases the bookmark
twitterfacebookSina MicroblogdiggGoogleDeliciousbuzzfriendfeedLinkedindiigoredditstumbleuponQzoneQQ MicroblogRelated Reading
Hot NewsChina may test Y-7 variant as carrier-based AEW aircraftChina urges Philippines to avoid complicating disputesCan Chinese save face and save money?Alibaba launching logistics networkApple sales growth seesaws in ChinaLip-synching, a long way from real performancesLhasa welcomes 6.5 mln tourists in 2012Leave your comment0 comments