One country, a hundred parcels

Every part of China has its own kind of Zòngzì — a different shape, a different leaf, a different filling. A little journey from north to south.

Not all Zòngzì are the same. In the north they like them sweet and small; in the south, big and savoury. Here are the best-known regional kinds — and where they come from.

Jiaxing Zòngzì

savoury

From Jiaxing, Zhejiang

The most famous savoury kind: long and plump, packed with juicy marinated pork belly. The benchmark all the others are measured against.

Cantonese Zòngzì

savoury

From Guangdong

Big and generous: pork, salted egg yolk, mung beans and sometimes chestnut or peanut in a single parcel. A small feast in itself.

Date Zòngzì

sweet

From Beijing & the north

Simple and sweet: sticky rice with red dates (jujube), often wrapped in a reed leaf. Traditionally eaten dipped in sugar.

Suzhou Zòngzì

sweet & savoury

From Suzhou, Jiangsu

From the refined Jiangnan kitchen: sometimes sweet with red bean paste, sometimes savoury with meat — always carefully and elegantly wrapped.

Spicy Zòngzì

savoury & spicy

From Sichuan

For bold palates: meat and rice with chilli and Sichuan pepper that pleasantly tingles. Punchy and unmistakable.

Double Zòngzì

sweet & savoury

From Chaoshan (Teochew)

Two worlds in one parcel: one half savoury with meat, the other sweet with bean paste or taro. A little masterpiece.

Hainan Zòngzì

savoury

From Hainan

Huge and wrapped in banana leaves, with ham, pork and salted egg yolk. An island version to eat your fill.

Alkaline Zòngzì

sweet

From Southern China

Cooked with a little lye water, the rice turns amber and slightly translucent. Eaten plain and cool as a dessert, dipped in sugar or syrup.

And ours?

We mostly wrap the savoury Jiaxing style with pork belly — plus sweet red bean or a vegetarian kind on request. Just tell us what you're in the mood for.

Which kind will it be?

Take a look at our varieties and prices and drop us a quick message — we wrap them fresh to order.