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Took a German couple to hotpot yesterday. It was 38°C outside. The husband looked at the bubbling red oil and said: "You want us to eat boiling food in this weather?" I just smiled and ordered extra beef. Two hours later he was rolling up his sleeves, sweat dripping, declaring it was the best meal he has had in China. His wife was quieter — too busy fighting for the last piece of tripe. Here is the thing about Chinese food culture that surprises most tourists: we eat hotpot year-round. In fact, summer is when it hits different. The TCM logic is that the sweat cools you down from the inside out. I do not know if that is scientifically accurate, but I know that after a hotpot dinner in July, walking out into the hot night air feels... refreshing? It makes no sense until you try it. The German guy asked for the restaurant name before leaving. Said he wanted to come back tomorrow. I told him the place does not have an English name. He said: "Good. Means the food is real."
Chongqing in summer hits 40°C — and I mean that literally, not as a figure of speech. The kind of heat where walking from your front door to the car feels like a bad life decision. So where do locals go? Underground. Not basements or malls. Real air-raid shelters dug into the mountains during World War II. Today they're converted into hotpot restaurants, tea houses, and even a museum. The temperature inside stays around 22°C year-round, no AC needed. I took a British family to one last week. We sat in a cave tunnel eating hotpot while outside the city baked at 41 degrees. The dad kept touching the stone walls, amazed that 80-year-old military tunnels now serve the best goose intestine I've ever had. That's what I love about this city. Nothing gets thrown away. Every space finds a new purpose.
After a lifetime of eating Chongqing hotpot, here's everything I wish every visitor knew — from what makes the broth different to how to eat it without embarrassing yourself.
A family from London asked me to take them to a 'real' restaurant in Chongqing. Not the tourist ones on Hongyadong. So I took them to my uncle's hotpot place in a side alley near Jiefangbei. No English menu, no pictures — just the smell of numbing Sichuan pepper hitting you from the street. The dad looked nervous. Two hours later he was dipping beef tripe like a local, sweating through his shirt, asking me what else Chongqing has that tourists miss. That's the thing about this city — the best stuff is never on TripAdvisor.