Content to do with food and drink recipes
![Luck of the Irish Shamrock Shakes!](https://www.beijing-kids.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/st-paddy-351x185.jpg)
Luck of the Irish Shamrock Shakes!
Help your kids make this quick easy shake loaded with enough endorphin producing sugar to help everyone feel like they found the gold at the end of the rainbow.
Content to do with food and drink recipes
Help your kids make this quick easy shake loaded with enough endorphin producing sugar to help everyone feel like they found the gold at the end of the rainbow.
There are a few websites that do a great job of covering Chinese cooking in English, offering recipes for everything from basic stir-fries to complex noodles and dim sum. These are a few of our favorites.
In a year when many of us are separated from family for the holidays, it’s more than tempting to lean on familiar ingredients to make old favorites from home. But trying to replicate recipes in Beijing can quickly get expensive, not to mention the amount of food miles products rack up on their way from the US or Europe to China.
You get invited to a party, put it on the family calendar, and forget about it. It’s not until the host starts pulling together the potluck list that you freeze.
Rather than chucking leftover Halloween pumpkins in the compost, why not put them to use in the kitchen?
These tips and tricks will help you cut the sugar but keep the fun this Halloween
Ever thought of all the germs sprayed across a birthday party when we blow out candles on a cake? I bet you are now.
Persimmons are delicious, but if you’ve never tried one on your own, it’s hard to know where to start. Here are some excellent starters for the persimmon newbie!
We’re not here to talk about Mid-Autumn Festival. We’re here to talk about mooncakes.
Better known as Chinese steamed buns, mantou is a staple food in the Chinese diet and very easy to make.