Chinese foods pose as mourning to try funeral home noodles

Foods in China are allegedly roaming for an unexpected destination – a funeral house – went viral on social media after a noodle dish served in its canteen.
The dish is found in the Erlong Funeral Home in South -West Province Guizou.
The canteen funeral fulfills the customers of the house, but as the words began to spread about its noodles, the crowd of dinner -dinner -some posed as a shake -to try to try food.
Erlong has since announced that it will allow something Public members to eat in its premises, until they do Do not disturb the real mourning.
The funeral house offers a variety of noodle dishes during breakfast and dinner, priced at 10 yuan per bowl (£ 1.38; £ 1.09).
The most popular types are reportedly at the top with noodles minced pork and peanuts.
An Erlong worker told JuPai News that “he only serves the customers who come to the funeral house to handle cases”.
But other people are secret to get a bowl of noodles, the worker said, sometimes queues in Erlong are so long that dinner has to wait a few hours to get his food.
He said, “They are pretending to be relatives of the deceased, when the crowd gets, it is difficult to separate them, and it is difficult to manage,” he said.
To meet the demand, the funeral house has since decided to offer 50 bowl noodles to the members of the public since then – until they “they affect people’s grief”, with the local media According to Erlong’s chef in an interview.
The craze for noodles began earlier this month when a social media user posted about the dish while going to a friend in Guizhou, known for its spicy and sour dishes.
“My friend says that the food in this funeral house is very good,” he wrote on Xiaohongshu earlier this month, also known as Rednote. “The queue for food is more than the queue to keep flowers for the deceased.”
“I could not find noodles to eat, because my friend’s mother did not know anyone who was serving the funeral.”
Since then, many Chinese social media users have also shared their experiences of eating noodles.
On the Chinese version of Tikok, Douin, a user shared a picture of dining hall tickets, which appeared as a crowd for food.
“I heard that noodles were very good here,” he wrote. “I thought how little life was, and found another bowl.”