As the Chinese New Year draws near, 71-year-old Peng Zuhua boards a long-distance bus bound for home. His destination is Baojing county, nestled deep in the Xiangxi Tujia and Miao autonomous prefecture of Hunan province — a mountainous region where the scent of wood smoke and cured meat announces the coming of Spring Festival long before the calendar does.
Once home, his days quickly fill. After the Winter Solstice, Tujia villages begin one of the most important rituals of the year: shanianzhu, the slaughter of the New Year pig. The event is both practical and ceremonial, a cornerstone of Spring Festival preparations that blends necessity with celebration.
Families invite relatives and neighbors, set long wooden tables, and move from house to house in a continuous round of feasting. The sound of laughter and clinking bowls carries through narrow mountain paths. Peng, like many elders, becomes a familiar figure at these gatherings, welcomed for both his presence and his stories, sharing meals and memories in equal measure.
For the Tujia people, the ritual is inseparable from the Chinese New Year itself. Fresh pork is cut and cooked immediately, forming the centerpiece of celebratory banquets that stretch late into the night. Other prized cuts — pig trotters and ribs — are carefully salted and preserved to make larou, the smoked cured pork that defines the region’s Spring Festival flavor.
Across China, Chinese New Year’s Eve dinner remains the most ceremonial meal of the year — a moment when families reunite, no matter how far they have traveled. Customs vary widely between the north and the south, but each dish on the table carries symbolic meaning, expressing wishes for prosperity, longevity, and peace.
In recent years, as smaller households have become the norm, Chinese New Year’s Eve tables have grown more varied than ever. Yet, beneath changing menus lies a constant: everyone carries one unforgettable “taste of Spring Festival”, a flavor bound to memory, belonging and family warmth.
For Peng, that taste is cured pig trotters — an unchanging anchor of his family’s reunion meal. “The rich, salty aroma of larou,” he says, “that’s the taste of home”.
The process behind that taste is precise and time-consuming. After slaughtering, the meat is cured for about a week with salt and locally grown red Sichuan peppercorns. “It has to be our local peppercorns,” Peng explains. “Otherwise, the flavor isn’t right.”
The cured meat is then hung roughly 1.5 meters above the household fire pit and smoked slowly with low heat. Too high, the smoke won’t penetrate; too low, the meat cooks through, losing its texture and character. The smoking lasts anywhere from 20 days to a month, requiring constant attention. The fire must not go out, and the wood must be dry. “Oily branches make the meat bitter,” Peng says.
Well-preserved pork, he adds, reveals itself when sliced: fat translucent like amber, lean meat a deep reddish brown. “That’s when you know it’s done right.”