Five days in Kunming gives you enough time to truly explore one of China's most underrated food cities. At the crossroads of 25 ethnic groups, the cuisine here is staggeringly diverse — from cross-bridge rice noodles and wild mushroom hotpot to Dai grilled fish, Bai goat cheese, and Yi lamb barbecue. This foodie itinerary takes you through morning wet markets, hidden noodle shops, ethnic minority restaurants, famous flower cake bakeries, pu'er tea ceremonies, the Jiuxiang countryside for rural cooking, and the vibrant night food scene. You will eat things in Kunming that exist nowhere else on earth.
Start at Zhuanxin Market with grilled erkuai (Yunnan rice cake) stuffed with pickled veg, chili, and fritters, plus fresh soy milk. Then explore stalls selling wild mushrooms, tropical fruits, insect snacks, and fermented tofu. A foodie paradise.
The definitive cross-bridge noodle experience at this century-old institution. Order the premium set with quail eggs, Xuanwei ham, chicken slices, chrysanthemum petals, and a dozen ingredients. The ritual of adding each ingredient in order is part of the magic.
While your stomach has room, try the other iconic noodle: small pot rice noodles (小锅米线). Each bowl is cooked in a tiny copper pot with minced pork, chili oil, and pickled greens. Compare the flavors and textures with the cross-bridge style you just had. Find a hole-in-the-wall with a long local queue.
Walk from Green Lake south through old city streets, snacking as you go. Stop for fresh-baked rose flower cakes at Jiahua bakery. Try Yunnan small-grain coffee. Browse pu'er tea shops and dried flower stalls. A slow foodie stroll through Kunming's culinary heart.
Visit a serious tea shop for an extended pu'er tasting. The shopkeeper will brew raw (sheng), ripe (shou), and aged pu'er side by side. Learn about terroir, processing, and how pu'er improves with age. This is educational and delicious — plan to buy some quality tea to take home.
The crown jewel: wild mushroom hotpot in the Guanshang district. Rich chicken broth with plates of porcini, matsutake, chanterelles, bamboo fungus, black truffle, and more. The mint-chili dipping sauce is essential. Peak mushroom season is June-October, but restaurants serve preserved mushrooms year-round. Order at least 8 varieties for the full experience.