Kunming Scenes 2025-feb

The World of Noodles

If the variety of wheat or rice noodles found in China is already enough to fill an entire book, an appendix should be dedicated to noodles made from other ingredients. It seems that any vegetable that can be turned into flour only needs a bit of water, some kneading, cutting into thin strips, and drying to become noodles. I suppose each of these steps requires a certain level of technique.

In the photo, a small shop in a market in downtown Kunming is displayed, and on its counter, one can distinguish noodles made from sweet potato, yam, mung bean, potato, and a few other varieties.

Oyster Vendor at a Night Market – Kunming, China

In recent years, China has become one of the world’s largest consumers of seafood. As a result, even in inland regions, it is quite common to find marine fish and shellfish, especially oysters, squid, octopus, and shrimp, usually from aquaculture farms.

In this image, we see the operator of a barbecue stand in a restaurant street in Kunming, a city in southwest China. It is eleven at night. The vendor is wearing a Muslim cap, and his apron bears the words «halal food.» In the background, a couple appears to be waiting for their meal, which we can see in the vendor’s hand. The young woman looks at him—perhaps hungry, or merely curious. Further back, other diners and the glowing sign of another restaurant complete the scene.

Giving Instructions

In China, it is quite common to see restaurant, café, and shop owners—sometimes even managers of massage parlors—gathering their staff at the entrance before starting the workday to give instructions on the tasks ahead. Typically, we see only half a dozen employees in uniform, and even that can be quite striking.

Today, while walking around, I came across this curious scene: sanitation workers in a central district of Kunming, all wearing their standard orange vests and yellow helmets, receiving instructions from their supervisor. I have passed this corner many times before but had never noticed them—yet it must be a daily routine.

The China We Always Imagine

The one from old movies, from Tintin comics, from The Shanghai Gesture by Josef von Sternberg, and also from Once Upon a Time in China. In other words, streets full of people and an exotic atmosphere that can sometimes be evoked simply by the roof of a house or a red lantern. I come across this version of China almost every day in the center of Kunming.

In the image, one of the city’s central streets on a Saturday afternoon. Crowds of people are out for a stroll or shopping, and, of course, the street is adorned with a few red lanterns.

jinuo book

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