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烤乳鸽
kǎo rǔ gē

Roast Pigeon — Shenzhen's Crispy Bird

Quick Info

Flavor
Rich, gamey, and deeply savory with warm five-spice notes. More flavorful than chicken, similar to dark-meat duck but with a wilder, more intense taste.
Texture
Paper-thin, shatteringly crispy skin over dark, tender meat with a rich, concentrated flavor — the bird is small and every bite counts
Spice Level
Not spicy
Temperature
Served Hot
Cooking
Roasted
Main Ingredients
Duck

Ingredients

Whole young pigeonFive-spice powderMaltose syrupSoy sauceShaoxing wineStar aniseCinnamonGingerSalt

Allergens

Confirmed

SoyGluten

Possible

Sesame

These ingredients may vary by restaurant. Ask your server to confirm.

The Story

Roast pigeon is a signature dish of Shenzhen and the surrounding Pearl River Delta region. While pigeon may seem exotic to Western diners, it has been raised and consumed in southern China for centuries. The birds used are young squab — tender, small, and incredibly flavorful. Shenzhen’s proximity to the famous pigeon farms of Guangdong makes this city one of the best places in the world to try it. The pigeons are marinated in a complex spice blend, air-dried, and then roasted until the skin is glass-like in its crispness.

What to Expect

A whole bird arrives on your plate, chopped into pieces or sometimes served whole. It is small — about the size of a Cornish game hen — with mahogany-colored skin that cracks audibly when you bite through it. The meat is dark, lean, and intensely flavorful, somewhere between duck and wild game. There is not a lot of meat on each bird, but what is there is incredibly concentrated in flavor. The best pieces are the breast and the legs, where you get the ideal ratio of crispy skin to tender, juicy dark meat.

Tips

Use your hands for this one — chopsticks will frustrate you with the small bones. One pigeon is usually a single serving. The head is traditionally served and is considered a delicacy (the brain especially), but feel free to skip it if that is beyond your comfort zone. Order the pigeon alongside milder dishes, as its intense flavor is best appreciated in contrast. Some restaurants offer a two-course pigeon — the crispy skin and meat first, then a soup made from the carcass.

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