1. Feng Ming Chaoyang This dish is named after the earliest collection of poems in my country, "The Book of Songs". "The Book of Songs Daya·Juan A" says: "The phoenix is ??singing on the high hill; the phoenix trees are growing on the rising sun. "It means that the phoenix sings when the sun rises (morning sun), which is a metaphor for rare auspiciousness.
2. Heming Jiugao This dish is named after the "Book of Songs·Xiaoya·Heming": "Heming Jiugao, the sound is heard in the sky."
This means that the crane's cry is so loud that even if it lives in Jiugao (referring to Shenzhen), its cry can still be heard in the sky.
3. Deer Ming greets guests. The name of this dish comes from "The Book of Songs·Xiaoya·Lu Ming": "Yo yo deer croaking, eating apples in the wild. I have guests. Drums, harps and shengs." It means that the deer are hooting.
Harmony, eating Lai Gao from the field, the popular guests are all present, and our country's elegant music entertains them and adds to the fun of the banquet.
4. The name of this dish is derived from the Han Dynasty's "Ancient Poetry·Xing Xing Zhong Xing Xing": "Hu Ma is leaning against the north wind, and the Yue Bird's Nest is south of the branches."
This means that horses (horses born in the north) are attached to the north wind, and birds (birds born in the south) build their nests on branches facing south.
It is a metaphor for missing one’s homeland and not forgetting one’s hometown.
5. Picking chrysanthemums under the east fence. This dish is named after the poem "Picking chrysanthemums under the east fence, leisurely seeing the Nanshan Mountain" in "Twenty Drinking Poems No. 5" written by Jin Dynasty poet Tao Qian.
It means picking chrysanthemums under the east fence and looking at the Nanshan Mountain in a leisurely manner.
6. Jingwei fills the sea. The name of this dish comes from a mythical story in "The Classic of Mountains and Seas". Tao Yuanming, the great poet of the Eastern Jin Dynasty, left a poem after reading the "Classic of Mountains and Seas": "Jingwei holds a small tree and will fill the sea."
7. Huaxue Wusi This dish is named after the poem "Playing with the River Cao Zhiqianbian" written by the poet Xie Tiao of the Southern Qi Dynasty: "The fragrant moon rises in the mountains, and old friends appreciate it with clear bottles. The distant mountains are hundreds of miles green, and the backflow reflects thousands of feet. The flowers and branches are as numerous as
The snow and weeds are scattered like a net. How can we miss each other after we say goodbye? "Weeping grass refers to spring weeds, whose skin is like silk.
8. The name of this dish comes from "Walking Alone by the River Looking for Flowers" written by Du Fu, a famous poet of the Tang Dynasty, when he lived in a thatched cottage in Chengdu.
The poem reads: "Huang Si's maiden's house is full of flowers, with thousands of flowers hanging low on the branches. The butterflies dance all the time, and the orioles are at ease with their crows." It means that the flowers of Huang Si's maiden's house cover the path, and there are thousands of them.
Thousands of flowers bent the branches.
The playing butterflies lingered and danced gracefully, and the delicate oriole was free and singing.
9. Maple Leaves and Red Flowers This dish is named after the poem "Mountain Journey" written by Du Mu, a famous poet in the late Tang Dynasty. "Far up the cold mountain, the rocks are sloping, and there are people living where the white clouds grow. I parked my car and sat in the maple forest at night, and the frost leaves are red in February.
"Flowers." It means that in the distance, a winding stone path leads directly to the top of the mountain in autumn, and several families appear in the deep mountains covered with white clouds.
I stopped the car and walked in the mountains because I loved watching the evening view of the maple forest. The frost-stained maple leaves were more red than the flowers in February.
10. The name of this dish comes from Du Fu's seven-character quatrain "Two Orioles Crying the Green Willows".
The poem reads: "Two orioles sing in the green willows, and a line of egrets ascends to the blue sky. The window contains Qianqiu snow in the Xiling Mountains, and the door is docked with ships thousands of miles away from the East Wu." It means that outside the thatched cottage, there are two orioles on the green willow branches.
Singing happily, a row of egrets are flying into the blue sky thousands of miles away.
Looking out from the window of the thatched cottage, what comes into view is the thousand-year-old snow on the West Ridge; moored in the river in front of the thatched cottage is a ship sailing thousands of miles to Soochow.
11. Pine and Green Pearl This dish is named after the poem "Spring on the Lake" written by Bai Juyi, a poet of the Tang Dynasty, "There are thousands of green pine trees on the mountain surface, and a pearl in the center of the moon." It means that the pine trees in the mountain are like thousands of green emeralds.
Heavy emeralds are arranged around the West Lake, and the bright moon in the lake is like a big pearl dotted in the center of the lake.
12. Bailang Tuo Hongyan. This dish is named after the words "The wind turns thousands of white waves, and the wild geese dot the blue sky" in the Tang Dynasty poet Bai Juyi's "Looking out at the river tower at night, the scenery is strange, and reciting it in a poem, sending it to Zhang Jiyuan of the Ministry of Water Resources"
A line of poetry.
It means that when you stand on the river tower and look up, you can see the wind blowing on the water surface and the white waves splashing into flowers; when you look up at the sky, you can see the wild geese lined up in the blue sky, which is an open and fresh scenery.
13. Golden toad grinds jade. This dish is named after the famous line "Toad grinds jade and hangs a bright bow" in "Spring Huaixing" by Li He of the Tang Dynasty.
It means that the toad crushed the clouds away and hung a bright bow (referring to the appearance of a crescent moon in the sky).
Supplements from the respondent 14. The name of this dish of Hibiscus Pearl comes from "Ode to the Dusk River" written by Bai Juyi, a poet from the Tang Dynasty.
The poem reads: "A setting sun spreads over the water, half of the river is rustling and half of the river is red. Poor night on the third day of September, the dew is like pearls and the moon is like a bow." It means that the setting sun is shining slantingly, and the gorgeous sunset is spreading on the river. How wonderful it is
Ah, I saw half of the river was green and half was red.
In the late autumn of September, the night is also very lovely, the dewdrops are like pearls, and the crescent moon is like a bow.
15. Galaxy Purple Abalone The name of this dish is derived from Li Bai's poem "Wanglu Mountain Waterfall".
The poem reads: "The sun shines on the incense burner and produces purple smoke, and you can see the waterfall hanging in front of the river in the distance. The water flows down three thousand feet, and it is suspected that the Milky Way has set in the sky." It means that the bright sunshine shines on the incense burner peak, and the water vapor on the incense burner peak is transpiration, as if
Waves of purple smoke rise from the mountain; looking from a distance, a waterfall hangs high above the river in front.
The waterfall falls straight into the sky and is three thousand feet long. It really makes people doubt that it is the Milky Way from the sky flowing to the human world.
16. Golden Chrysanthemum The name of this dish is derived from the poem "Ode to Chrysanthemums after Not Di" written by Huang Chao, the leader of the peasant uprising in the Tang Dynasty.
The poem reads: "When autumn comes on September 8th, I will kill hundreds of flowers after they bloom. The incense soaring to the sky penetrates Chang'an, and the city is filled with golden armor." 17. A green snail on a silver plate. This dish is named after Liu Yuxi of the Tang Dynasty
In the poem "Looking at Dongting", "Looking at the green mountains and rivers of Dongting in the distance, there is a green snail in the silver plate".
Dongting refers to Dongting Lake; Shan refers to Junshan.