Besides, Cantonese people always like to take you to places for eating and drinking tea. Here, the places for eating and drinking tea are always crowded. They let you drink tea, soup, raw seafood, all kinds of shells, birds, snakes, snakes, voles, bugs, all kinds of things that you find strange. They are always discussing where to eat and drink tea at the next stop. Although the meal is not finished yet, you only have two eyeballs to support it, and occasionally you struggle to turn around.
Guangdong people have always taken rice as their staple food. There is always steamed fish in the last course. Their signal at the end of the meal was to ask the waiter for a toothpick. Sometimes they will finish the bill and walk down the street unconsciously with a toothpick in their mouth.
If you stay in Guangzhou for a long time, you will also find that Cantonese people are very concerned about your health. They adjust your body by enthusiastically suggesting that you eat all kinds of soups, vegetables and stews. They think you have endless moisture and heat in your body. They tell you whether the stew you are eating now is warm or tonic, this dish is cold, that dish is hot, and so on. I really don't know how to express Cantonese people's enthusiasm and love for your without the dining table among you, the rich sounds and overwhelming scenes in teahouses and restaurants. Cantonese people haven't changed much in diet. According to historical records, "Chu is vast and sparsely populated", and Cantonese people are "rice soup fish", eating rice and drinking fish soup. The subtropical climate, coupled with the dense harbor of Shanghai Lake, makes all kinds of fruits and insects, clams and shellfish in the water easy to get, and there is no hunger at all. So, don't worry about eating. If you have a rare visitor, you can cook and pick fruits, catch fish and shrimp and touch shells at most.