Sea and broth
Oysters, fish, shellfish and dried seafood add clean sweetness and umami to soups, noodles and rice.
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UNESCO Creative City of Gastronomy
Sea-fresh, broth-warm, gently sweet and often full of textural contrast — Quanzhou food rewards curiosity more than a checklist.
Overview
The city’s cooking is not defined by one famous dish. Its character comes from the meeting of coast and hinterland, everyday thrift and festival abundance, local memory and overseas contact.
Freshness and savoury depth matter, but so do texture and temperature: silky soups, crisp fried pork, slow-braised beef, chewy jellies and cooling sweet bowls. Most dishes are not aggressively spicy, which makes the cuisine approachable without making it bland.

How it tastes
These four flavour directions are a more useful first map than the label “Minnan food” on its own.
Oysters, fish, shellfish and dried seafood add clean sweetness and umami to soups, noodles and rice.
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Pepper, ginger and slow braising create rounded warmth without relying on heavy chilli.
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Vinegar pork, oyster omelette and savoury wraps balance crisp edges with soft fillings and gentle acidity.
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Stone-flower jelly, fruit, beans and sweet soups bring relief after a warm afternoon of walking.
ExploreWhere to eat
Begin with places that reveal a distinct part of the city’s food character, then follow the dish that interests you.
A warm breakfast bowl with fine vermicelli, savoury broth and toppings chosen at the counter.
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A long-running name for beef soup, braised beef ribs and mustard-green rice near the historic centre.
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A cooling stop near Tianhou Temple for four-fruit soup, sweet bowls and jelly textures.
ExploreIndependent recognition
The 2025 Fujian selection recommended 14 Quanzhou restaurants. The 2026 edition expanded that number to 18 and awarded Quanzhou its first MICHELIN Star.
The guide spans formal seafood dining, neighbourhood cooking and affordable specialist shops. Always read the current distinction carefully: a MICHELIN Star, Bib Gourmand and MICHELIN Selected restaurant are different forms of recognition.
See the current Quanzhou selection
Quanzhou’s first One-MICHELIN-Star restaurant, centred on seafood selected from the restaurant’s tanks and cooked to order.
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A specialist in salt-baked Muscovy duck and other clay-pot dishes, recognised for good-quality cooking at a moderate price.
ExploreDietary needs
A translated menu rarely gives enough information about broth, sauces, cooking fats or shared kitchens.
Halal
Do not assume that a beef restaurant or a pork-free dish is halal. Look for a visible 清真 sign and confirm meat sourcing, alcohol and shared-kitchen practices. A verified restaurant list will be added only after direct checks.
Plant-based
Buddhist vegetarian restaurants can be useful, but vegan, vegetarian and temple-style 素食 are not identical. Ask whether broth, oyster sauce, egg, dairy or animal fat is used.

Ordering with confidence
Keep Chinese names and food photos on your phone. At small shops, pointing may be more reliable than translated menus. Assume broth and sauces can contain meat, seafood or soy unless the kitchen confirms otherwise.
Practical travel tips