We Came Looking for Non-Spicy Food in Chengdu. Elaine Ended Up Learning to Make Chinese Dumplings.

We Weren’t Looking for Dumplings on Our Chengdu Trip

The funny part is…

We weren’t on a food adventure.

We were on a mission.

Elaine was fourteen.

She enjoyed travelling in China…

…but she wasn’t ready for Sichuan chilli.

So every morning I found myself quietly surveying the streets around our homestay in Jinniu District.

No spicy noodles.

No bowls swimming in red chilli oil.

No hotpot.

Just somewhere she could enjoy breakfast.

Sometimes travelling with children isn’t about finding the “best restaurant.”

It’s about finding somewhere they’ll actually eat.



Then We Found Auntie’s Shop

It wasn’t famous.

No Michelin star.

No English menu.

No tourists.

Just a tiny dumpling shop run by several women who seemed to know every customer walking past.

The sign simply read…

People ordered…

sat down…

finished breakfast…

and hurried off to work.

Exactly the kind of place we love.



The Best Kind of Classroom Has No Classroom

While waiting for our dumplings, Elaine couldn’t stop watching.

One auntie rolled the wrappers.

Another filled them.

Another folded them with incredible speed.

Hundreds.

Every single morning.

Like a dance they had performed thousands of times.

I could almost see the gears turning inside Elaine’s head.




Then I Looked Up…

Our breakfast had arrived.

A plate of steaming 饺子 (jiǎozi) sat in front of me, and after several days of searching for mild food around Jinniu District, I was simply enjoying the fact that Elaine had finally found something she genuinely liked.

So I settled down to eat.

Like I often do in China, I found myself watching the street instead of scrolling through my phone.

People cycled past carrying vegetables.

Neighbours stopped for a quick chat.

Customers came in, ordered dumplings, chatted with the aunties and left.

It was just another ordinary Chengdu morning.

Or so I thought.

A few minutes later, I looked up.

Elaine wasn’t sitting opposite me anymore.

She had disappeared.

For a split second, I wondered where she’d gone.

Then I looked towards the dumpling table.

There she was.

Standing behind the counter.

Surrounded by three dumpling aunties.

🤭



I Don’t Know What She Said…

To this day, I still don’t know exactly how the conversation started.

Yet somehow, curiosity proved to be an excellent translator.

One auntie handed her a piece of dough.

Another demonstrated how to add the filling.

A third showed her how to fold the edges.

Before I knew it, my fourteen-year-old daughter had become the newest member of the morning dumpling production team.

And nobody seemed to find it unusual.


This remains one of my favourite travel photographs.

Not because it captures someone learning to make 饺子 (jiǎozi).

But because it captures something far more important.

Nobody was performing for tourists.

Nobody was running a paid experience.

Three local women simply welcomed a curious teenager from Southeast Asia into their tiny kitchen for a few minutes.

No booking.

No entrance fee.

No certificate.

Just kindness.


A Few Dumplings…

A Lifetime Memory

Elaine’s dumplings weren’t perfect.

Some looked more like little pillows.

Some leaked filling.

The aunties laughed.

Elaine laughed too.

Then everyone simply made another one.

That morning…

we didn’t just eat breakfast.

We shared a language that needed almost no words.


Conclusion

People often ask us,

“What’s your favourite attraction in Chengdu?”

Honestly…

this little dumpling shop ranks surprisingly high.

Not because of the dumplings.

Because of the people.

When we travel through China, we’re not collecting attractions.

We’re collecting conversations.

Sometimes they’re spoken in perfect English.

Sometimes they’re spoken entirely through smiles, hand gestures, flour-covered hands…

…and a freshly folded 饺子 (jiǎozi).

Years later, I can no longer remember exactly how much that breakfast cost.

But Elaine still remembers how to fold a dumpling.

And she still remembers the aunties who treated a curious girl from Southeast Asia like one of their own.

To me, that’s the real flavour of Chengdu.


KC

Writer & Blogger

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About Us

Hello, I'm KC

.. with my special need and self-learning (homeschooling) daughter, Elaine. We are China-focused travelers and have visited more than 20 interesting historical places/cities in China. And we enjoy bringing you useful & practical travel stories to help you enhance your experience traveling in  China.. do follow us for more interesting travel stories..

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