Source: InKunming | 2026-01-08 | Editor:Doe

While vast stretches of northern China lie locked in ice, winter in Kunming offers a gentler embrace, bathed in warm sunshine with temperatures ranging from 8 to 20 degrees Celsius. As the twelfth lunar month ushers in the year’s final chapter, the traditional “Pig Slaughter Feast” (a celebratory meal marking the start of the New Year season) steeped in tradition awakens—more than just Kunming’s annual cultural spectacle, it is a heartfelt journey of nostalgia that spans mountains and seas.
The Beginning of the New Year Spirit, a Signal of Reunion
As dawn breaks, villages on the outskirts of Kunming come alive. Neighbors and relatives lend each other a hand—catching pigs, singeing off bristles, carving up the meat—laughter ringing through the busy morning. This is no ordinary meal; it marks the beginning of Kunming’s New Year spirit and the most down-to-earth declaration of reunion. The press of a pig's trotter, a silent signal for the feast to begin; the clink of wine bowls, an unspoken pact of reunion. This steaming, vibrant sense of ceremony is the seasonal clock etched into the very soul of Kunming's people.
One Traditional Pig Slaughter Feast, Half the Taste of Kunming
The true centerpiece is a table of authentic, abundant traditional Shazhucai (pig slaughter dish). Across Kunming, flavors differ from one community to another, together forming a vivid map of local tastes:
Songming’s “Eight Pork Dishes”: red braised pork belly, tofu stewed with pig’s blood curd, air-dried sausage served with blood tofu,red kidney bean and pork skin soup… eight substantial bowls that offer the most direct expression of a bountiful harvest.
Luquan’s “Fire-Roasted Pig”: its golden-brown, crispy skin and tender, juicy meat embody the hearty hospitality of mountain households.
Anning’s crispy pork, Yiliang’s seasoned raw liver... each dish is a hometown code etched into the taste memory of locals. Especially the freshly fried crispy pork—crunchy on the outside, tender within—it is the unmistakable “flavor of the New Year” that countless Kunming natives carry with them, even in their dreams.
A Feast of Home Ties, a Gathering of Hearts
The liveliness reaches far beyond the dining table, flowing through the courtyard with warmth and affection. Men lend a hand with the work, women tend the stove, and children dart about in peals of laughter. There is no formality or distance here—but rather steaming dishes passed from hand to hand, and sincere smiles all around.
The Pig Slaughter Feast tradition emphasizes the spirit of "hosting and helping in return": today's guests lend a hand at my home, tomorrow they become hosts at yours. It is in such a bond of shared labor and warm steam rising from the pots that the affection between neighbors mellows and grows deeper over time. Before leaving, a fresh piece of meat insistently pressed into your hands by the host, and a bowl of Shazhucai packed by a neighbor—these are the most humble yet touching parting gifts one can receive on a Kunming winter day.
The Deepest Longing for Home, the Warmest Place to Return
For the people of Kunming, the Pig Slaughter Feast has never been merely about food. It is an emotional homecoming in the heart of winter. For those who labor far from home, it is the reason to cross mountains and seas just to return—the bowl of sour and spicy blood curd, the slices of chilled pork dipped in seasoned sauce, a remedy for homesickness.
It invites the weary to slow their pace, to rediscover life’s roots and soul amid the scent of firewood and the din of shared laughter. At a single table, the feast celebrates bonds of home that cannot be severed, gathers hearts that will not drift apart, and carries with it the promise of reunion and the joy of a bountiful harvest.
This winter, you are welcome to visit Kunming. Amidst the warm sunshine and joyful laughter, join us for a Pig Slaughter Feast. Let the steaming nostalgia and the authentic, hearty aroma of home-cooked food warm your belly and, even more so, your heart.