Nanjing Food Tour: What Locals Actually Eat (Not What TripAdvisor Tells You)
The Essential Nanjing Foods
Duck Blood Vermicelli Soup (鸭血粉丝汤)
This is Nanjing's soul food. A light, peppery broth with glass noodles, cubes of duck blood (sounds weird, tastes like firm silken tofu), duck liver, duck intestine, and tofu puffs. It costs ¥12-18 at most places and it's what locals eat for breakfast or a quick lunch.
Where to try it: Huilan Yaxue Fensitang (回味鸭血粉丝汤) has branches everywhere — it's the reliable chain. For something more old-school, find a small shop near Confucius Temple that has a line out the door.
Salted Duck (盐水鸭)
Yes, the famous one. Nanjing-style salted duck is poached, not roasted. The skin should be pale, the meat tender with a clean salt flavor. The best versions are made from ducks raised in the osmanthus season (桂花鸭) around October.
Where to try it: Zhangji (章记盐水鸭) near Hunan Road, or Guijinlou (桂今楼).
Pan-Fried Beef Dumplings (牛肉锅贴)
Crescent-shaped dumplings with a juicy beef filling, pan-fried until the bottom is crispy golden. Not to be confused with Shanghai-style potstickers — these are bigger, juicier, and better. Fight me.
Where to try it: Qijia Wan Guotie (七家湾锅贴), the legendary spot.
Tangbao Soup Dumplings (汤包)
Similar to Shanghai xiaolongbao but typically larger and served fewer per basket. The skin is thinner and the soup inside is more refined. You pick it up, poke a hole, sip the broth, then eat.
Duck Oil Shaobing (鸭油烧饼)
A flaky, layered pastry made with duck fat instead of butter or lard. Crispy, savory, slightly sweet. Sold at bakeries and street carts for ¥2-3. A perfect snack.
Most of these dishes are breakfast or lunch foods. Nanjing locals eat early — the best stalls open at 6 AM and sell out by 10 AM. If you show up at noon to a famous place, it might be closed.
A Real Day of Eating in Nanjing
Here's what an actual food day might look like if you were eating with a local friend:
7:30 AM — Duck blood soup + a shaobing at a neighborhood shop near your hotel. Total: ¥20.
11:30 AM — Beef guotie at Qijia Wan, followed by a walk through Laomendong to browse small food shops. Total: ¥15.
3:00 PM — Osmanthus jelly (桂花糕) and a cup of yuhua tea (雨花茶, Nanjing's famous local green tea) at a traditional teahouse.
6:30 PM — A sit-down dinner: start with cold salted duck, followed by lionhead meatballs (狮子头), dry-fried green beans (干煸四季豆), and maybe braised tofu. A meal like this at a decent local restaurant costs ¥80-150 for two people.
9:00 PM — Stroll along Confucius Temple. Yes, it's touristy, but the night food stalls have decent stinky tofu and grilled skewers.
Total spent on food for the day: ¥150-250 ($21-35 USD).
Where NOT to Eat
Avoid the restaurants directly lining the main walkway at Confucius Temple (夫子庙). They're overpriced and mediocre — designed for tourists, not food. Instead, duck one or two streets back and look for places with Chinese-only menus and zero English. That's usually the sign.
Similarly, hotel restaurant "Nanjing cuisine" is almost always sanitized and boring. The real stuff is out in the streets and neighborhoods.
How to Order Without Speaking Chinese
Download Alipay and use its built-in translation camera feature — point it at any Chinese menu and it translates in real time. It's not perfect, but it works well enough.
Better yet: save these photos to your phone and just show them to the server:
- 鸭血粉丝汤 — duck blood vermicelli soup
- 盐水鸭 — salted duck
- 牛肉锅贴 — beef pan-fried dumplings
- 汤包 — soup dumplings
- 鸭油烧饼 — duck oil pastry
- 狮子头 — lionhead meatball
- 雨花茶 — yuhua green tea
Or — just book a local food guide who'll take you to the right places and order for you.
Seasonal Eating
Nanjing locals eat with the seasons. Some things to know:
Spring (March-May): Fresh bamboo shoots, river shrimp, spring greens. Restaurants feature seasonal specials.
Summer (June-August): Cold noodles, chilled dishes, and loads of watermelon. Locals eat lighter.
Autumn (September-November): Peak season. Osmanthus-everything: osmanthus duck, osmanthus cakes, osmanthus tea. Hairy crab season starts in October.
Winter (December-February): Hot pots, lamb stews, and rich braised dishes. Nanjing-style pickled vegetable and pork bone soup (腌笃鲜) is a winter staple.