Shanxi delicacy fish is a kind of pasta.
Pulled fish is a kind of pasta. You put the mixed noodles on a plate, and use a chopstick or iron rod to slowly draw it from the edge of the plate to the pot, because it is shaped like small strips.
The fish is pulled into the pot, so it is called "fish pulling".
The biggest humanistic factor of Shanxi pasta is the widespread participation of the people.
"Hedong Beilu" says: People in Bing (referring to Bingzhou) and Dai (referring to the state) suffered from gluttony. At the same time, Shanxi merchants went from being a businessman to a businessman during the development of capitalism in our country.
Taking noodles as an example, they were called "boiled cakes" in the Eastern Han Dynasty, "soup cakes" in the Wei and Jin Dynasties, "Shui Yin" in the Southern and Northern Dynasties, and "Leng Tao" in the Tang Dynasty.
Compared with the South's enthusiasm for rice, Shanxi people are equally enthusiastic about pasta.
The names of pasta are constantly changing, and they vary from time to time and place. As the saying goes, "Jiao'er" calls it "Jiao'er" because of its many names. The numerous names and names of pasta just show that Shanxi people attach great importance to and love it.
Topography of Shanxi Province Shanxi Province has mountains, undulating hills, and ravines. The general terrain is two mountains sandwiching a river, with mountains and hilly uplifts on the east and west sides, and a series of beaded basin subsidences in the middle, with plains distributed in between.
The eastern part is a massive mountainous area formed by the Taihang Mountains as the main chain. From north to south, there are Hengshan Mountain, Wutai Mountain, Shizhoushan Mountain, Taihang Mountain, Taiyue Mountain and Zhongtiao Mountain. The mountains are tall and majestic, with an altitude of more than 1,500 meters.
To the west is the Loess Plateau with Luliang Mountain as its backbone.
From north to south, there are Qifeng Mountain, Hongtao Mountain, and major peaks such as Guanchuan Mountain, Luya Mountain, Yunzhong Mountain, Black Tea Mountain, Guandi Mountain, Bauhinia Mountain, and Longmen Mountain belonging to the Luliang Mountains. Most of them are above 1,500 meters above sea level.
The highest altitude of Mount Di is 2831 meters.
From north to south, the central part is connected with multi-shaped rift basins such as Datong, Xinzhou, Taiyuan, Linfen, and Yuncheng. There is also the relatively unique Changzhi Plateau rift basin in the southeast.
The main outline of the province looks like a concave shape.