The Ice and Fire Demon Chef’s Seven Peerless Divine Blades - The Sigh of the Ice and Snow Goddess - Morning Dew Knife.
Roar of the God of Fire - Zhengyang Sword.
The whisper of the wind of freedom - Aotian Sword.
The melody of the earth's awakening - the Eternal Life Sword.
The magical and ever-changing Six Rays - Xuanji Sword.
The dawn that penetrates heaven and earth - the Holy Blade.
The curse of eternal hell - the Demon-Eating Knife.
These are seven magic swords, and seven magic wands with ice, fire, wind, earth, space, light, and darkness.
Most importantly, they belong to the protagonist - kitchen knives.
2. Eat All Over the World is a novel that takes the food world as the background and reflects the Chinese food culture.
The way to eat lies in physical properties.
Only by understanding what you are doing and how you place it all have their own nature.
Only by understanding its nature can we understand its spirit without being superficial... 3. The Queen of Cooks Mu Yun, a 23-year-old modern private kitchen owner, traveled back to the Fitou Dynasty with his soul, and borrowed the extraordinary fatness of the second daughter of the Mu family, the richest man in the capital.
body, met the third prince who was about to become emperor and was designed and managed by him to run the dilapidated Zui Feng Tower.
On the way to search for signature calligraphy treasures, he happened to meet Shi Zhiyan, who had a peerless appearance, and his heart secretly fell in love.
After many efforts, Zui Fenglou became famous and diners came one after another.
Mu Yun was kidnapped and brought back to the capital by the corrupt Mu family. She unexpectedly knew Shi Zhiyan's intentions, but was called into the harem by imperial edict. Mu Yun was conspired against and was demoted to the imperial mausoleum, but a blessing in disguise turned her from a fat woman into a pretty beauty.
In the face of power and love, she turned against her emotions and decided to wash away her grievances.
Choices, hesitations, struggles and even palace battles at the cost of life constitute inexhaustible cruelty.