Forget Canning, and Get Yourself a Chinese Pickle Crock | Eater
"Found in the 1970s, the 2,000-year-old tomb of a Han-dynasty noblewoman contained lavish clothes, jewelry and remnants of a final banquet — and crucially a set of pickling crocks alongside a thick manuscript of pickle recipes. The presence of both jars and written recipes highlights that pickling was an established, valued culinary practice with ritual significance, treated as a necessary provision for the afterlife and evidence of sophisticated food knowledge at the time." - Clarissa Wei
If you love Chinese history, you must come. Small place but means a lot
D Powell
Google
It's not a huge site. Admission is 2RMB. It's good value and worth visiting if you are in the area with a spare 30 minutes. The wooded area around the site is pleasant. I was puzzled by the number of used entry tickets, plus a few notes, that had been dropped into the pit.
Dieser Ort hat vielversprechende Kessel in dem leider keine Suppe drin ist. Trotzdem ist dies ein wundervoller Ort um sich Kessel anzugucken aber um essen zu gehen ist das schlecht