laitimes

No meat makes people thin, and no bamboo makes people vulgar. Not vulgar and not thin, braised pork with bamboo shoots. The first half of this poem is from Su Shi's "Yu Qiansheng Lu Yunxuan". The implication is that there is no meat to eat, but it will

author:Yujian History

No meat makes people thin, and no bamboo makes people vulgar.

Not vulgar and not thin, braised pork with bamboo shoots.

The first half of this poem is from Su Shi's "Yu Qiansheng Lu Yunxuan".

The meaning is that if there is no meat to eat, it will only make people lose weight, but if there is no bamboo, it will make people vulgar.

The source of the second half of the sentence cannot be verified, and it may be a joke of later generations.

But it's very interesting, with a recipe, it cleverly solves the problem of becoming thin or vulgar.

#TiannandibeibeiNew Year's greetings# Get red envelopes together >

No meat makes people thin, and no bamboo makes people vulgar. Not vulgar and not thin, braised pork with bamboo shoots. The first half of this poem is from Su Shi's "Yu Qiansheng Lu Yunxuan". The implication is that there is no meat to eat, but it will
No meat makes people thin, and no bamboo makes people vulgar. Not vulgar and not thin, braised pork with bamboo shoots. The first half of this poem is from Su Shi's "Yu Qiansheng Lu Yunxuan". The implication is that there is no meat to eat, but it will
No meat makes people thin, and no bamboo makes people vulgar. Not vulgar and not thin, braised pork with bamboo shoots. The first half of this poem is from Su Shi's "Yu Qiansheng Lu Yunxuan". The implication is that there is no meat to eat, but it will