Royal Cuisine
Royal Cuisine originated from the imperial kitchens, where dishes were cooked for the royal families. It is made from selected materials and cooked with great care. In addition, the cutting skills are delicate. The dishes of royal cuisine often have beautiful names with auspicious meanings. They are excellent in color, fragrance, taste, shape, and dishware as well as dish arranging.
Official Cuisine
In China, there's another way to classify cuisines besides region that is based on the origin of the dishes. This system includes dishes of the palace, official, common people, mountain and forest temples, and ethnic minorities, as well as dishes of foreign countries. This way of classification has a very long history. It was based on the rigid stratification of China's feudal society, which lasted for thousands of years and forced different ways of living upon the people. The differences in the stratification of the foods were recorded in the Unofficial Annals of the States in the Spring and Autumn Period as follows, 'The emperor ate beef and sheep; officials ate pig; scholars ate fish; and the common people ate vegetables.' Feudal ethics and different living standards among the differing strata resulted in Chinese food being classified into the palace, official, and common people cuisines. Official cuisine, also called the cuisine of the officialdom and literati, included the famous dishes of the wealthy people. The standards for the officials are it should be lower than for palace food while remain far superior to the common people's. Official dishes were created by working people, but were eaten only by feudal bureaucrats, aristocrats, and the rich.
Vegetarian Cuisine
The Vegetarian Cuisine became popular early in the Song Dynasty (960A .D. -1279A .D.) and developed further into three major schools in Ming and Qing Dynasties, they are temple vegetarian dishes, court vegetarian dishes and folk vegetarian dishes. Made of green vegetables, fruits, edible fungi, soybean products, and cooked in vegetable oil. The dishes are tasty, nourishing, and highly digestible. What's more, the vegetarian cuisine can help the body resist cancer. Cooking by the various methods, some of the materials can be appeared and tasted like meat.
Islamic Dishes
Islamic Dishes have became more and more popular as Islam was introduced into China and absorbed the traditional cookery of nomadic peoples in Northwest and Northeast China . Visitors can find the Islamic Cuisine restaurants all over the country especially in the North and Northwest of China.
Medical Cuisine
The cuisine is an important and characteristic part of Chinese Cuisine. The chefs have developed many food therapies by combining cookery and traditional Chinese Medicine. The dishes cooked in this way are not only tasty but also good for health.
Minority Ethnic Cuisine
Apart from the Han, China also has 55 minority ethnic groups whose living habits vary greatly. Living on the grassland and engaging in herding and hunting, the Mongolians are call the 'ethnic group on the horseback'. Their typical food, like Roast Whole Lamb, Roast Lamb Leg, Mutton Eaten with Fingers and Milky Tea, is well known both inside and outside China. The Tibetan dwells on the roof of the world. Due to high altitude, water's boiling point is too low to cook highland barley. So they bake the barley and grind it into flour to make a special staple named Zanba. The minorities living in muggy zones in southwest China flavor sour, bitter and spicy food, such as Roast fish Wrapped in Lemongrass created by the Dai people in Yunnan Province. Apart from adding ingredients like ginger and pepper, they wrap the fish with lemongrass and then grill it on a fire.