The young cook Ling Xiao Xiao was determined to become the first royal chef in the world and began to succeed in this dream when she won the appreciation of the prince Zhu Shou Kui and was e... Read allThe young cook Ling Xiao Xiao was determined to become the first royal chef in the world and began to succeed in this dream when she won the appreciation of the prince Zhu Shou Kui and was employed in the delicacy room.The young cook Ling Xiao Xiao was determined to become the first royal chef in the world and began to succeed in this dream when she won the appreciation of the prince Zhu Shou Kui and was employed in the delicacy room.
- Awards
- 1 nomination total
Featured reviews
10c-05571
This is such a beautiful, charming, and light heart Chinese drama set in the glorious Ming Dynasty China (1368-1644), highly recommended especially for anyone who is interested in historical dramas! This show and "Royal Feast (Shang Shi)" are both set in Ming Dynasty, focusing on delicious food, with gorgeous Hanfu, and fascinating history as backdrops.
Looks like there are some malicious negative 1 star reviews here which are all written by Kpop fanatics who have zero knowledge of Chinese culture, or Asian culture for that matter. China's Ming Dynasty Hanfu carried many of the shapes and styles of Hanfu from China's Song Dynasty and Tang Dynasty, with slight modification taking from Yuan Dynasty clothing. Chinese Hanfu heavily influenced Hanbok, and Ming Dynasty Emperor gifted Chinese Hanfu clothing to Korean loyal family and the court as Korea was a tributary state of China during the Ming Dynasty. This is well documented in both Chinese and Korean history books.
Further more, the claim that this show plagiarizing "Dae Jang Geum" is completely false, unfounded, and baseless. This is a completely different story, with different plot lines, different characters, and different costumes - again, the costume here is Hanfu, traditional Chinese clothing, NOT Hanbok. The negative reviewers here should actually watch this drama and actually learn more about Hanfu and the differences between Hanfu and Hanbok before reviewing/commenting.
Looks like there are some malicious negative 1 star reviews here which are all written by Kpop fanatics who have zero knowledge of Chinese culture, or Asian culture for that matter. China's Ming Dynasty Hanfu carried many of the shapes and styles of Hanfu from China's Song Dynasty and Tang Dynasty, with slight modification taking from Yuan Dynasty clothing. Chinese Hanfu heavily influenced Hanbok, and Ming Dynasty Emperor gifted Chinese Hanfu clothing to Korean loyal family and the court as Korea was a tributary state of China during the Ming Dynasty. This is well documented in both Chinese and Korean history books.
Further more, the claim that this show plagiarizing "Dae Jang Geum" is completely false, unfounded, and baseless. This is a completely different story, with different plot lines, different characters, and different costumes - again, the costume here is Hanfu, traditional Chinese clothing, NOT Hanbok. The negative reviewers here should actually watch this drama and actually learn more about Hanfu and the differences between Hanfu and Hanbok before reviewing/commenting.
I recently saw the news that this drama is streaming in other countries except South Korea. Do you know why China do that? Because they show the cultural things in this drama as if the foods and clothing were their own culture. For example, There is Korean BBQ among the foods that come out in the drama and the costumes worn by some characters are Hanbok,Korean traditional clothing, not traditional Chinese costumes. As i'm a South Korean, I'm very angry and speechless with rage. I don't know why China do this, although they have their own good cultural things. I hope people who watch this series don't think the foods and clothing in this drama are Chinese.
There are a lot of things that one can find fault with regarding this series. The focus is supposedly Chinese but even the dress is Korean. That's a bit interesting...??! But with that said - this show is charming. Keep in mind American audiences have eating habits are very different Stateside. No slurping, lip smacking, teeth chomping, gurgling. In Asia enjoying your food is more polite than so called table manners. I discovered this rudely when I watched a man hock a loogie into a napkin at dinner in my first dining experience in Guangzhou. I did find this a bit annoying, and I found the same to be true as I watched this series, but table manners are also one of my pet peeves. I'm a bit neurotic about table manners and having been to China it was a good lesson in getting over myself. Nevertheless, this could be a trigger for those as fastidious as I am. But oh, my goodness...watching the cooking, the gorgeous sets, the gorgeous food, the gorgeous (Nationally and Historically incorrect) clothing, the gorgeous hair and costumes and a playful storyline with wonderful, fun, engaging actors and this little series is magic. We Americans do not have millenniums of history of cooking and recipes. Our cooking technique is born of a three-hundred-year history that has been honored by various worldwide cooking traditions. But the cooking traditions of China and Asia in general are thousands of years old and it is fun to catch a peek into this ancient tradition. I once was privileged enough to visit China and one of the high points of the visit was the truly exquisite food. This series though extremely historically inaccurate does bring some of those wonderful memories back. I remember getting Stateside and spending years trying to figure out the ingredients to a single cucumber salad I had been served. Our actors are charming and convincing. The storyline is something we all love - Food and Competition and Love of course!! A cute little series I plan on re-watching!
I started watching this series because of visuals. Set design, costumes, actors... everything looks great! The story might not be shakespearean standard - but it doesn't matter! It's cute and light-hearted, lovely, pretty, entertaining! Exactly what I was looking for.
You can even learn about Chinese food culture. Although I'm a vegetarian I took some ideas and influences from this series. Camera work was very good! The dishes looked delicious.
The forbidden love story was so cute! I really enjoyed to see the Prince fall more and more in love with the pretty cook. Truly entertaining. All in all it was worth watching!
You can even learn about Chinese food culture. Although I'm a vegetarian I took some ideas and influences from this series. Camera work was very good! The dishes looked delicious.
The forbidden love story was so cute! I really enjoyed to see the Prince fall more and more in love with the pretty cook. Truly entertaining. All in all it was worth watching!
Disney should be ashamed of putting this rip off show on Disney Plus. They copied Kdrama Dae Jang Geum- word for word. Even down to Korean cultural clothes. China took advantage of how popular Kdramas are getting and made another fake imitation.
Why else would this air in EVERY Country EXCEPT South Korea? They knew exactly what they were doing when they produced this show. They did not even credit the original Korean show. Mainland Chinese people will argue that hanfu looks exactly like hanbok but that is not true if you do your own research.
On another note, Chinese actors are not as convincing as Korean actors.
Why else would this air in EVERY Country EXCEPT South Korea? They knew exactly what they were doing when they produced this show. They did not even credit the original Korean show. Mainland Chinese people will argue that hanfu looks exactly like hanbok but that is not true if you do your own research.
On another note, Chinese actors are not as convincing as Korean actors.
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Delicacies Destiny
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 40m
- Color
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content