Do chinese people who live in China eat only chinese food?
Or  do they also cook pasta, potatoes, etc. I mean regular cooked food at  home. Is chinese food in China, like the one we know in other countries? 
Other - Society & Culture - 13 Answers
Random Answers, Critics, Comments, Opinions :
1 :
Of  course they have different meals...Like Americans don't just feast on  burgers do they? They have Indian food, British food, Chinese, Italian  etc..If China just had Chinese cuisine, then it would be a very secluded  culture don't you think?
2 :
Just because ppl live in  China doesn;t mean all they eat is Chinese food.  They also eat other  western food, such as McDonald's, pastas, etc.  The Chinese food in  China are a little different from the ones in the USA.
3 :
Real Chinese food doesn't compare to what we eat at "Chinese" restaurants.
4 :
Not true. Many people in China eat Mc Donald, KFC, and other fast food restuarant. In America, we do not eat just American food.
5 :
if a chinese bought a potato it would become a chinese's food. just like if an american bought sake it would become american's drink
6 :
I was in Shanghai. The Chinese are very modern. Of cos they do eat other cuisine besides Chinese food.
7 :
I  think that they do because that's thier culture -- but I'm sure they're  are some who also eat resturaunt food that isn't chinese - I bet there  is an American food resturaunt.
8 :
I think only the rich chinese eat other food than chinese.
9 :
Yes.  They tried other food, but they looked so foolish and felt so damn  silly when they tried to eat hamburgers, hot dogs, fried chicken, and  pizza with chop-sticks.
10 :
Good question!  Chinese eat only Chinese food in China, but it is way different than  what they make and sell in restaurants around the world.  In China, meat is rationed, and you must have a 'pork ticket' to get  pork, for example. So most people only get rice and vegetables most of  the time, and eat meat once a month or so.  The food is delicious, healthy, and well-balanced, regardless of whether  it is any of the 4 major cuisines or 10 or so other cuisines served  there.  I just LOVE Chinese food; all kinds!
11 :
When I was in  Guanzhou China 6 years ago... they had a ton of Chinese restaurants  serving foods from all parts of China. Each area has there own unique  dishes. Also I saw a McDonalds and a KFC. If you like Dim Sum I  recommend you visit the White Swan Hotel/Restaurant/Mall.  My wife was born in China and when she was a kid she had witnessed food  rationing and using government issued food tickets, but I didn't see any  food rationing while I was there in 2000.
12 :
If they  have been exposed to western culture for example studying at uni abroad,  or vacations, or even going to Hong Kong then they take back with them  tastes for overtly overseas food, you have expat foreign chefs opening  five star restaurants in Shanghai as example selling fusion food which  is western and far east asian mixed tastefully together, chinese food is  not like chinese food sold in fast food outlets overseas, crisps for  example are sold in chinese supermarkets as well as tomato ketchup and  salad cream so its an effect of globalisation, the westerners who lived  in Guangzhou 1930's ate food adapted to what they were used to in the UK  or France etc
13 :
============================ Chinese cook Chinese meals at home ============================ Yes, Chinese in China cook Chinese meals at home. So do most Chinese in  other parts of the world. May be there are some exemption cases where  Chinese, especially younger generations, cook non-Chinese meals at home.  ====================== Daily meal in Chinese culture ====================== A meal in Chinese culture is typically seen as consisting of two or more  general components:  (1) A carbohydrate source or starch - typically rice, noodles, or  steamed buns. (2) Accompanying dishes of vegetables, meat, fish, or other items.  This cultural conceptualization is in some ways in contrast to cuisines  of Northern Europe and the United States, where meat or animal protein  is often considered the main dish, and analogous to the one of most  Mediterranean cuisines, based typically on wheat-derived components like  pasta.  Rice is a critical part of much of Chinese cuisine. However, in many  parts of China, particularly northern China, wheat-based products  including noodles and steamed buns predominate, in contrast to southern  China where rice is dominant.  Image: Chinese home cook meal -  http://album.sina.com.cn/pic/4a7cd4a502000cap  
  
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