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Chinese New Year is almost here. It's time for family and great food.

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1:55

Hubei stew is perfect for winters- and homesickness.

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1:54

For Zhu Luwei, glutinous rice balls in fermented rice wine are one of his fondest memories of his days in his hometown, Ningbo.

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1:46

Each New Year, Zhu Luwei visits his family, giving them the taste of an authentic Ningbonese Chinese New Year.

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1:48

Hu Jianming from Ninghai, Ningbo introduces a hometown dish: pork belly stew with dried pufferfish.

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1:57

The lesson on to make pork belly stew with dried pufferfish continues.

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Hu Jianming from Ningbo believes food from one's hometown is like a memory of his or her childhood.

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Shiyin introduces a pair of contact lenses she finds work well for Hanfu styling.

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Shiyin sets out to find out why there aren't as many young men that are embracing the Hanfu style.

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This story is about Han Prime Minister Cao Cao's six-year-old son, Cao Chong (196 to 208 B.C.). The theory this little boy used to weigh an elephant is similar to Archimedes' Principle (287 to 212 B.C.), which is that the weight of an object submerged in fluid is equal to the weight of the displaced fluid.

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This idiom indicates that something seemingly bad may turn out to have been a good thing in the end, a blessing in disguise. The story in the video explains it quite well. And, while the idiom can also have the opposite meaning (a good thing becoming something bad), the former is more frequently used.

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This tells the story of how the ancestor of the Han Chinese, the Yellow Emperor, established the custom of marriage and honeymoons in China thousands of years ago, uniting tribes and bringing communal marriage to an end. Part 1 of 5.

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This tells the story of how the ancestor of the Han Chinese, the Yellow Emperor, established the custom of marriage and honeymoons in China thousands of years ago, thus bringing communal marriage to an end. Part 2 of 5.

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This tells the story of how the ancestor of the Han Chinese, the Yellow Emperor, established the custom of marriage and honeymoons in China thousands of years ago, thus bringing communal marriage to an end. However, it was initially met with resistance. Part 3 of 5.

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