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Surprise honor

By Xu Junqian | China Daily | Updated: 2016-11-11 08:14

Surprise honor

Lao Zheng Xing restaurant in Shanghai is known for its signature dishes like 18-second shrimp and red-braised pig intestine. It's the only State-owned eatery in the city to be honored by the Michelin Guide. The restaurant has been packed to capacity since the award. GAO ERQIANG/CHINA DAILY

"No one makes them better than us," says Hu Bing, executive chef of Lao Zheng Xing. It's an unusual boast-Chinese chefs are a humble breed and famously discreet. "I am not saying this simply to express our pride in our status as a veteran among restaurants."

In fact, the restaurant is not a veteran at preparing the shrimps alone, it also makes a red-braised pig intestine with alfalfa sprouts, another signature dish. Lao Zheng Xing invented them.

Founded in 1862, about two decades after Shanghai became a treaty port and came to enjoy roaring prosperity, Lao Zheng Xing was launched as a humble eatery by Zhu Zhengxing and Cai Renxing, from whom it gained the name.

Knowing barely anything about cooking, the two entrepreneurs from Ningbo in neighboring Zhejiang province met a chef from Wuxi, Jiangsu province, after their first joint venture-a grocery store-failed. They decided to try their luck again.

The Xi cuisine of Wuxi is famously sweet, and the restaurant created a hybrid of those dishes with the coarser, oilier dishes of nearby Anhui's Hui cuisine, which had been dominant because it was accessible and went well with rice, the local staple.