People eat two meals a day, and during the busy farming season and when building houses, craftsmen are hired to eat three meals. The staple foods in daily life are rice and millet (also called sorghum rice), rice (porridge ground by sorghum in dialect), Qian Qian rice (millet porridge), fishing rice (millet or yellow rice thick rice), black flour (miscellaneous bean flour), miscellaneous flour (flour ground by peas and wheat) and steamed bread (black steamed buns, yellow steamed buns and white steamed buns).
In Suide County (15 pieces), the local flavor diets include "mixed noodles, mixed noodles, oil cakes, jujube cakes, buckwheat noodles, noodles, hemp soup rice, mung bean rice soup, black rice wine and so on. In case of traditional folk festivals, birthdays, full moons, weddings and funerals, and other weddings and funerals, "oil cakes, noodle soup, noodles (jiaozi), flat food, eight bowls, thirteen flowers and sixteen pieces (five, eight, 13, 65438) urban food stalls are mostly traditional snacks, such as oil cakes, oil swirls and black snacks. There are many varieties and unique flavors. At present, most folk foods and local snacks have entered hotels and restaurants, becoming the first-class delicacies on the table and being favored by foreign guests. More traditional and ancient costumes include robes, jackets, hats, felt hats, melon shell hats, "convex shoes" worn by women with small feet, goatskin jackets, "sheep belly" handkerchiefs (men's headscarves), cloth socks, "shoes" and "famous brands" and "fart curtains" worn by children. Most of these clothes are no longer worn at present, and some have disappeared. The bracelets, rings, earrings, necklaces and other jewelry worn by the old lady have continued to this day and are very popular. Folk accommodation is generally earthen caves and heatable stoves, which are warm in winter and cool in summer and have continued to this day. There is Suide Cave Hotel in the county town, which is very popular with foreign tourists. The county is located in the Loess Plateau, with criss-crossing beams and headlands, criss-crossing ravines, rugged roads, difficult walking and inconvenient transportation. Due to the limitation of natural environment, residents have been going out and generally walking since ancient times. Only a few rich officials can ride horses, sedan chairs or "nests". Ordinary people can only ride donkeys or sedan chairs when they get married. It is impossible to travel in a sedan chair on weekdays. Material transportation depends entirely on carrying, carrying, animal carrying and manpower carrying. After liberation, especially since the reform and opening up, Suide's transportation has developed rapidly, and sedan chairs and animals have become a thing of the past. Suide people like to socialize. Relatives and neighbors like to communicate with each other and visit each other. As the saying goes, "the closer relatives are, the closer neighbors are." In the old society, young and middle-aged men had the custom of "making friends" (sworn brothers), while women had the custom of "worshipping sisters" to show the deep brotherhood between brothers and sisters. For outsiders, Sui people can generally treat each other with courtesy and live in harmony. It is the traditional virtue of Suide people to attach importance to feelings and righteousness, be charitable, respect the old and love the young, be kind to others, trade fairly, help each other and live in harmony.