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Forums > Food & Drink > Local basil

Thanks, Sbarella and Tiger.

Looks like the bottom line is that, like you said, it's not popular in local cooking, and therefore seldom supplied except in venues frequented by foreigners.

It's popular in Thailand, and I had assumed ... (We all know that old saying about assumptions.)

I came across lightly roasted local pine nuts in the wet market near where I live a few days ago, and had visions of pesto.

But we sure do have a great supply of mint. Only 1 Yuan for a couple of generous hand-fulls.

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Forums > Food & Drink > Local basil

Am looking for local basil, but have not seen it in several wet markets. (I mean the fresh herb, not dried and packaged leaves or seeds.)

Am I just overlooking it? Isn't basil in common use here? So many other herbs are abundant and fresh at this time of year. Would expect basil to be among them.

Have found several dictionary words for it, but don't know what the most common varieties here are actually called in daily speech.

罗勒, 兰香, 苏菜/苏草, 九层塔, 千曽塔, etc.

Anyone been buying and using fresh local basil? Thanks in advance.

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Forums > Food & Drink > Where to buy green tea?

Would add that the title of the thread is quite misleading. You aren't really looking for green tea.

Might get some additional useful suggestions if you re-posted with a more appropriate title, such as "Where to buy herbal tea."

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Forums > Food & Drink > Where to buy green tea?

>>"One seller said perhaps 芙蓉茶 is a (different) kind of green tea and that perhaps what I meant was 芙蓉花 and that these kinds of flowers are grown in the villages, but not sold as tea."

Yes, the seller gave you part of the answer. What you are after is not tea at all.

Tea is made from a specific shrub or tree (camellia sinensis.) It can be green tea, red tea, Pu'er tea, Oolong tea, and so on, mainly according to how it is processed (oversimplification.)

What you are seeking is flowers from which to make a tisane or herbal infusion.

Therefore you need to be asking for 芙蓉花 and to be explaining that you want to use them to make 芙蓉茶。 The word is used in a loose sense here, not in a strict sense.

I had thought hibiscus was readily available in supermarkets here, but since telling you that some days ago I've had a closer look. Seems I was mistaken. Have not seen it when shopping.

玫瑰花 and 菊花 (rose and chrysanthemum) are abundant and cheap. But I didn't see hibiscus.

A next logical step would be to try some TCM pharmacies. They are all over town, in every neighborhood, often clustered near a hospital.

They stock all sorts of unusual herbs, roots and bark from which people brew infusions for medicinal purposes.

They might have it, or they might not. It could just not be available in this part of China. (I really don't know.)

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>>"does anybody know how these trash pickers are called in chinese?"

It's 收废品 for the people who ride around on the 3-wheel bikes 三轮车 and collect broken appliances. I'm not sure of the term for the smaller-scale "dumpster divers."

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The CNAC exhibit, which is on display now, February 2009, is extremely intersting and well done. Worth a trip. The museum charges no admission and the Number 1 Kunming bus goes there.