Enshi Daughter City Ba Ren Tang: Located on Daughter Street of Tujia Daughter City, Qiliping, Enshi City, it is a restaurant with strong Tujia cultural characteristics. The decoration is mainly dark red. It has a rich variety of dishes, highlighting Tujia food culture such as Tujia bowl-breaking wine, corn wine, and bacon. The dishes taste and feel good.
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Enshi Daughter City Ba Ren Tang: Located on Daughter Street of Tujia Daughter City, Qiliping, Enshi City, it is a restaurant with strong Tujia cultural characteristics. The decoration is mainly dark red. It has a rich variety of dishes, highlighting Tujia food culture such as Tujia bowl-breaking wine, corn wine, and bacon. The dishes taste and feel good.
The Ba People Snack City is located in the Daughter City Snack Street. The stalls along the street are all selling special snacks, such as Tofu King, Huang Jiashe Rice, Bamboo Tube Rice, Farmer's Grilled Skewers, Toast Oil Tea Soup, Hand-Pulled Shrimp, and Braised Pig's Trotters. I tried two kinds and they tasted pretty good.
"Baren Hall" is located in the central area of Enshi Daughter City. The lobby is tall and wide, with countless tables and chairs, and can accommodate thousands of people for dining at the same time. It is also an important place to display Tujia culture. There is a large poster introducing Tujia culture at the door, and there are tables and chairs outside the door, which is convenient for passers-by to rest and read the large introduction to understand Enshi and Tujia culture. At 6 o'clock in the evening, two young men in ethnic costumes will beat two big drums at the door of Baren Hall, and the young girls on the second-floor gatehouse will dance happily to welcome guests from all directions. Then there are young girls singing and offering wine to guests from afar. Very good!
Enshi Ba Ren Tang is a restaurant with Tujia characteristics. After drinking, you must smash the bowl. The wine is chosen by yourself, and a stack of bowls will be served when the wine is served. The process of drinking is: pour, clink, drink, and smash. It must be done in one go, which is absolutely heroic.
Ba Ren Tang is located in the main performance area of Daughter City. The canteen is very spacious and has a performance stage. There are several circular performances, such as bowl-breaking wine and Tujia drum dance. It is also a designated dining spot for tourist groups. You can eat, drink and have fun in Ba Ren Tang.
We came to Nürzhai with a group tour, and there was also a group meal arrangement at Ba Rentang. The tour guide said that this special meal includes a special bowl-shaking wine, and you can watch a song and dance performance at the same time. After arriving, I found that the store is indeed not small. It only accepts group business, and the environment of the store is also decorated with the flavor of an ancient town. But why is it arranged to sit on Xiaozhudeng? The position is very low and uncomfortable, and it is not easy to stand up after sitting down. This is simply a bad habit of smashing bowls of wine. (There are so many bad habits among Chinese people, I really don’t know when to stop it.) The bowls are sold for 5 yuan each, which is really evil. Breaking it after drinking is not to mention wasteful. The scattered pieces of the bowl can easily injure people. Although the store and tour guide will tell you to keep the mouth of the bowl down, how many people still remember it when everyone is excited to throw it. The ground was still a mess, and the sound was noisy. The performance staff are worthy of praise. Even though the audience is noisy, they are still performing hard. But in such an environment, I really am not in the mood to watch, and would rather hang out outside!
Enshi's special Hezha. It's exciting to drink wine in the bowl. In Ba Ren Tang, drinking and throwing bowls is a major feature of the hotel. The sound of bowls being broken one after another. It's a pity that the potato rice was sold out at noon and in the evening. The broken bowls on the ground were a mess, and I felt the heroic "waving hand dance" of the Tujia people.