In Northeast China, the Manchu Eight Bowls mark the start of Spring Festival with slow-cooked winter dishes shared around one abundant table.
In Northeast China, winters arrive early and stay long.
On special days before the Spring Festival, one table fills completely — eight large bowls, placed side by side.
This is the Manchu Eight Bowls (Manchu Bada Wan).
A Table Built for Cold Weather
The dishes are hearty and slow-cooked.
Pork belly braised until soft.
Pig trotters simmered in thick sauce.
Chicken stewed with wild hazel mushrooms.
Carp cooked whole, rich and steaming.
To balance the weight, lighter plates appear — tofu with preserved greens, river fish, seasonal vegetables.
Nothing is delicate. Everything is substantial.

Why Eight Bowls?
When the bowls are set down together, the table leaves no empty space.
Meat and fish. Stewed and braised. Land and river.
The number matters less than the feeling: abundance, warmth, readiness.
Hosts place them all at once. Guests share from every bowl.
From Little New Year Onward
In cities like Jilin, kitchens grow busy days before Little New Year.
Families return home. Restaurants prepare large orders.
Steam rises from deep pots. Meat cooks slowly for hours.
By the time Spring Festival arrives, the Eight Bowls have already marked the season’s beginning.

A Feast That Stays
The Eight Bowls do not try to impress with refinement.
They gather people around one table, in the coldest part of the year.
Eight bowls. One winter. One shared table.
Written by Yi Shen, posters designed by Wang Di.
If you like this article, why not read: 【One Bowl, One Story】Laba Garlic: A Winter Tradition Before Chinese New Year
