The full version of the line about high-end ingredients in "A Bite of China" is: High-end ingredients often only require the simplest cooking methods.
Source: Food documentary "A Bite of China".
Usage: Mostly seen in video clips of food bloggers and UP owners, it can also be used to ridicule other people’s cooking.
Example: High-end ingredients often require only the simplest cooking methods. After two hours of busy work, Master Chen brewed a bucket of Master Kong.
Classic narration of "A Bite of China"
1. These flavors have been mixed with emotions and confidences such as hometown, fellow villagers, nostalgia, diligence, thrift, perseverance and so on over a long period of time. At the same time, it is on the tip of the tongue and in the heart, making it almost impossible to tell which one is the taste and which one is the feeling.
2. Most Chinese people’s emotions towards food are homesickness, nostalgia, and attachment to the taste of childhood.
3. Whether they are focusing on farming or eating with their heads down, they will never forget to look up at the sky.