1. Words to describe food (about 20, the more the better) Words to describe food include: Bazhenyu food, its endless flavor, popular among the people, smooth and tender, overflowing with juice, full taste, long aftertaste, soft and tender
Smooth, melts in the mouth, crispy and delicious, crispy on the outside and tender on the inside, smooth and delicious, full of color and flavor, compelling aroma, endless aftertaste, fragrant on the lips and teeth, melts in the mouth, smooth and refreshing, mellow taste, fat but not greasy,
Spicy but not dry, tender and juicy.
1. Bazhen Jade Food 1. The idiom Bazhen Jade Food generally refers to exquisite food. Source: Volume 3 of "The Romance of the West Chamber" by Dong Jieyuan of Jin Dynasty: "Eight Treasures Jade Food invites a man to dinner, and a thousand words can be said about business."
2. Its flavor is endless 1. Its flavor is endless.
The description has a profound meaning and is endlessly memorable. Source: Zhu Xi of the Song Dynasty, "Annotations to the Four Books: Doctrine of the Mean": "If you put it out, it will merge with the Liuhe, and if it is rolled up, it will be hidden in the secret. Its flavor is endless, and it is all practical learning."
3. Crispy on the outside and tender on the inside 1. Crispy on the outside and tender on the inside. Originally used to describe cooked food that is crispy on the outside and tender on the inside. In Internet buzzwords, it describes having a great feeling when encountering something, which means "being shocked"
.
4. Endless aftertaste 1. Refers to the taste left after eating. It is a metaphor that the more you think about it afterwards, the more meaningful it becomes. Source: Wang Yucheng's "Olive" poem of the Song Dynasty: "It has been a long time since I had the aftertaste, and I finally felt it was as sweet as sugar."
5. Eight Precious Jade Foods 1. Explanation: Generally refers to exquisite delicacies, source: Jin Dynasty Dong Jieyuan's "The Palace Dialogues of the West Chamber" Volume 3: "Eight Precious Jade Foods invite a man to dinner, and a thousand words can be said about business."
2. Idioms describing food 1. Its taste is endless. Its pronunciation is qí wèi wú qióng. It means that the taste is endless. The description has profound meaning and makes people have endless aftertaste.
2. salivation, pinyin is chuí xián yù dī, a Chinese idiom, which means that one is so greedy that one's saliva is dripping. It describes someone who is very greedy and wants to eat. It also means that when you see good things, you are very envious and want to get them (including
derogatory meaning).
From: "Zhao Hai Jia Wen" by Liu Zongyuan of the Tang Dynasty: "The tongue is salivating, and the afternoon is squandered." 3. The five flavors are all available. The idiom comes from the "Book of Rites·Liyun", describing the complete and appropriate seasonings (sweet, sour, bitter, spicy, salty).
, used as predicate and attributive; used for people's state of mind, etc.
There is also Ma Zhiming's cross talk "Five Flavors".
4. Zhenmei Meishi Zhenmei Meishi, pronounced zhēn xiū měi zhuàn, is a Chinese word, and its basic meaning is good-tasting food, delicious food.
5. The idiom "Bazhen Jade Food" refers to exquisite food in general.
From Volume 3 of Dong Jieyuan's "The Chronicles of the West Chamber: Zhugong Diao" of the Jin Dynasty: "Eight delicacies and jade food invite a man to have a meal, and a thousand words can help business." The synonym is delicacies from mountains and seas.
Delicacies from mountains and seas are precious and rare foods produced in the mountains and oceans. They are the finest parts of food. Bear paws, bird's nests, shark's fins, sea cucumbers, etc. often played a starring role in ancient recipes.
3. Idioms describing food 1. Its taste is endless. Its pronunciation is qí wèi wú qióng. It means that the taste is endless. The description has profound meaning and makes people have endless aftertaste.
2. salivation, pinyin is chuí xián yù dī, a Chinese idiom, which means that one is so greedy that one's saliva is dripping. It describes someone who is very greedy and wants to eat. It also means that when you see good things, you are very envious and want to get them (including
derogatory meaning).
From: "Zhao Hai Jia Wen" by Liu Zongyuan of the Tang Dynasty: "The tongue is salivating, and the afternoon is squandered." 3. The five flavors are all available. The idiom comes from the "Book of Rites·Liyun", describing the complete and appropriate seasonings (sweet, sour, bitter, spicy, salty).
, used as predicate and attributive; used for people's state of mind, etc.
There is also Ma Zhiming's cross talk "Five Flavors".
4. Zhendemeishi, pronounced zhēn xiū měi zhuàn, is a Chinese word, and its basic meaning is good-tasting food, delicious food.
5. Bazhen Jade Food The idiom Bazhen Jade Food generally refers to exquisite food.
From Volume 3 of Dong Jieyuan's "The Chronicles of the West Chamber: Zhugong Diao" of the Jin Dynasty: "Eight delicacies and jade food invite a man to have a meal, and a thousand words can help business." The synonym is delicacies from mountains and seas.
Delicacies from mountains and seas are precious and rare foods produced in the mountains and oceans. They are the finest parts of food. Bear paws, bird's nests, shark's fins, sea cucumbers, etc. often played a starring role in ancient recipes.
4. What are the idioms that describe a lot of delicious food? The idioms that describe a lot of delicious food include: index finger moves, delicacies on a jade plate, gluttonous feast, phoenix marrow and dragon liver, endless aftertaste, fragrant on the lips and teeth, good color and taste, salivating, eight.
Precious jade food, its taste is endless.
1. Big move of the index finger [shí zhǐ dà dòng]: Originally it was a sign of something delicious to eat, but later it was used to describe being greedy when seeing something delicious.