There are at least two thousand types of dim sum in total across China, Dim sum are usually eaten as breakfast or
brunch. Cantonese dim sum has a very broad range of flavors, textures, cooking styles, and ingredients, so that people prefer eating scaled-down meals throughout the day rather than the customary three large meals. A traditional dim sum brunch includes various types of steamed buns, such as
cha siu bao (a steamed bun filled with barbecue pork),
rice or
wheat dumplings, and
rice noodle rolls that contain a range of
ingredients, including
beef, chicken, pork,
prawns, and
vegetarian options. Many dim sum restaurants also offer plates of steamed green vegetables, stuffed eggplant, stuffed green peppers, roasted meats,
congee and other soups. Dessert dim sum is also available and can be ordered at any time since there is not a set sequence for the meal. Small portion sizes allow people to try a wide variety of food.
Dumplings Rolls Buns Cakes Meats Seafood Vegetables Rice Desserts Tea " Tea is considered to be very important, so much so that it is considered just as important as the food itself. Teas served during dim sum include: •
Chrysanthemum tea: instead of tea leaves, it is a flower-based
tisane (herbal tea) made from flowers of the species
Chrysanthemum morifolium or
Chrysanthemum indicum, which are the most popular in East Asia. To prepare the tea, chrysanthemum flowers (usually dried) are steeped in hot water (usually after cooling from a boil) in a teapot, cup, or glass. A common mix with
pu-erh is called
guk pou () from its component teas. •
Green tea: freshly picked leaves that go through heating and drying processes but not oxidation, so keep their original green color and chemical compounds, like
polyphenols and
chlorophyll. Produced all over China, and the most popular category of tea, green teas include the representative
Dragon Well () and
Biluochun from Zhejiang and Jiangsu provinces, respectively. •
Oolong tea: partially
oxidizing, the tea leaves impart them with characteristics of both green and black teas. Oolong teas are closer in taste to green than black tea, yet have less of a "grassy" taste. Major oolong-tea producing areas such as Fujian, Guangdong, and Taiwan line the southeastern coast of China.
Tieguanyin or Ti Kuan Yin (): one of the most popular, originated in Fujian province, and is a premium variety with a delightful fragrance. •
Pounei (Cantonese) or pu-erh tea (Mandarin): usually a
compressed tea, pu-erh has unique, earthy notes derived from years of fermentation. •
Scented teas: various mixes of flowers with green, black, or oolong teas exist. Flowers used include jasmine, gardenia, magnolia, grapefruit flower,
sweet-scented osmanthus, and rose. Strict rules govern the proportion of flowers to tea. Jasmine tea, the most popular scented tea, is the one most often served at "
yum cha" establishments. The tea service includes several customs. Typically, the server starts by asking diners which tea to serve. According to etiquette, the person closest to the teapot pours tea for the others. Sometimes, a younger person will serve an older person. Those receiving tea express thanks by tapping their index and middle fingers twice on the table. According to one legend, the finger-tapping tradition evolved from an incident when an emperor poured tea for his servant in a public teahouse during a trip where the emperor concealed his identity to mingle with the commoners. Having been instructed by the emperor not to expose his identity to the public, the servant showed gratitude by improvising the finger-tapping gesture instead of what should have been a kowtow, which would have betrayed the emperor's noble status. The practice gradually evolved to represent gratitude for having tea poured by others. Diners also flip open the lid (of hinged metal tea pots) or offset the tea pot cover (on ceramic tea pots) to signal an empty pot; servers will then refill the pot. == History ==