Current location - Recipe Complete Network - Complete recipe book - Words that describe delicious food
Words that describe delicious food

The mouth is fragrant

The mouth is drooling

The eyes are eager to pierce the eyes

The index finger is moving

The jade plate is beautiful and delicious. A feast of phoenix marrow and dragon liver with endless aftertaste. The fragrance is left on the lips and teeth. The color and taste are delicious. The eight delicacies and jade are mouth-watering. The taste is endless

Wonderful

Words: Smooth, tender and juicy. The taste is full of aftertaste. Long, tender, smooth, melt-in-your-mouth crispy and fragrant

As the saying goes: You won’t let go after being slapped

Overflowing with fragrance

The fragrance floats ten miles away

Oil but not greasy

Crispy and delicious

Medium salty and sweet

Crisp and refreshing

All five flavors

Sour, sweet and delicious

Juicy and delicious

Refreshing and delicious

Tender and refreshing

Spicy and delicious

Sweet and soft, glutinous food

The delicious food is delicious, delicious, delicious, sweet, refreshing, fragrant in the mouth, endless aftertaste, delicacies on the jade plate, beautiful in appearance, delicious in color and taste, mouth-watering, eight delicacies of jade food , its flavor is endless.

Three animals and five tripods

Word meaning:

In the old days, the sacrifices were rich. Later he also described the food as wonderful.

Word pronunciation:

sān shēng wǔ dǐng

I never tire of fine food, and I never tire of fine food

shí bù yàn jīng, kuài bù yàn xì

Idiom allusions: disgust: satisfaction; 荍: finely chopped meat. The more finely the grain is pounded, the better, and the finer the meat is chopped, the better. Describes that food should be carefully prepared.

The source of the idiom: "The Analects of Confucius Xiangdang": "When you eat, you must change your food, and when you live, you must move your seat. You will never tire of fine food, and you will never tire of fine meat."

Example sentence: "If the cut is not straight, it will not be done properly." This is the old-fashioned rule of his old man, but the rule of "never getting tired of fine food, never getting tired of fine meat" is a bit strange. (Lu Xun's "Collection of Nanqiangbei Diao·From the Feet of Chinese Women...")

Steaming Aili Pear

āi lí zhēng shí

Idiom Allusion: Steaming Aili Pear eat. A metaphor for not knowing the goods. Ruining a good thing in a stupid way.

The source of the idiom: Liu Yiqing's "Shishuo Xinyu·Qingshang" in the Southern Song Dynasty: "Whenever Hunan County sees someone unhappy, he often says angrily: 'If you get Aijia pears, why don't you eat them without steaming them?' ”

Eight Treasures and Jade Food

bā zhēn yù shí

Idiom allusion: Generally refers to exquisite dishes.

companion food to the prime minister

bàn shí zǎi xiàng

Idiom allusion: companion food: to accompany others to eat together. Used to satirize officials who do nothing and are incompetent.

The source of the idiom: "The Biography of Lu Huaishen in the Old Book of Tang Dynasty": "In the third year of Kaiyuan, he moved to Huangmen Prison. Huaishen and Ziwei ordered Yao Chong to be in charge of the Privy Council. Huaishen thought that he was not as good as Chong. Everything is given to him, and people at that time called him "the prime minister who is full of food"

bǎo shí nuǎn yī

Idiom allusion: full of food: Eat well; warm clothes: dress warmly. Describes a prosperous life with abundant food and clothing.

The source of the idiom: "Mencius Tengwengong 1": "The way of human beings is: well-fed and warmly clothed, living comfortably without education, one is close to an animal."

Drinking enough Eat enough

jiǔ zú fàn bǎo

Idiom allusion: I have eaten as much wine as I can, but I am still full. Describes eating and drinking enough.

Origin of the idiom: The first chapter of "Xiangyang Hui" by Gao Wenxiu of the Yuan Dynasty: "I will arrange a banquet of good wine here... and I will make him drunk and full, unable to walk."

Feed all day long

bǎo shí zhōng rì

Idiom allusion: All day long: all day long. Eat enough all day, don't use your brain, and don't do anything serious.

The source of the idiom: "The Analects of Confucius·Yang Huo": "It is difficult to have a full day without any intention!"

Example sentence: If a person has a full day with no intention, he is the most hopeless person.

Relish with relish

Eat salt in the morning and evening, swallow dates wholeheartedly, feast with great joy, the fragrance is overflowing, never tire of fine food, never tire of delicious food, luxurious clothes and delicious food