The Food Ranger banner
The Food Ranger avatar
The Food Ranger
@thefoodranger
Subscribers5.9M
Views929.9M
Videos403
The Food RangerPublished at August 23, 2025 at 10:30 PM31:11
I tried Chinese Street Food in Xi'an, China! thumbnail

I tried Chinese Street Food in Xi'an, China!

9 months agoLong-tail
the food rangertrevor jamesfood rangerfoodstreet foodtried chinese street
Published time
August 23, 2025 at 10:30 PM
Duration
31:11
Video type
Travel & Events
Channel region
United Arab Emirates
Publish Timing Insight
Not enough timing data
This channel still lacks enough historical upload timing data. Let the channel accumulate more snapshots before evaluating the best timing.
Monetization Insight
No clear monetization tags yet
Focus on view growth, engagement quality, and topic competition to judge monetization potential.
Action Suggestion
Watch for sustained growth
The basic conditions are already in place. Keep watching 7-day views and revenue before deciding whether this topic should become a series.
Views
451.1K
Likes
7.8K
Comments
430
Estimated Daily Revenue
-
Estimated Total Revenue
$297.75 - $1.7K
RPM Range
$0.66 - $3.85
1D Views Gain
0
7D Views Gain
0
1D Likes Gain
0
7D Likes Gain
0
1D Comments Gain
0
7D Comments Gain
0
Velocity Score
0%
Topic Cluster
the food ranger
Video Description
Muslim Chinese Street Food Tour of Xi’an, China! 👉 Subscribe for more: https://youtube.com/thefoodranger 👉Check out my friend Alex's channel https://www.youtube.com/@Just_Food I’m so excited to be back to Foodrangin and to take you around Xi'an china on this incredible on this Chinese food tour.This is perhaps the most famous street food city in China and the starting point of the Silk Road. It's packed with both muslim Chinese street food and Xi'an style Chinese street food too. My friend Alex  @Just_Food  is visiting China for the first time, and I brought him around to try the real deal Muslim Chinese cuisine. It was awesome to see his reacti to trying authentic Chinese food for the first time in China! Xi’an has a very vibrant Hui Muslim Chinese community, and the Muslim quarter street food here is next level. This district is packed with delights! This is where Chinese and Middle Eastern flavors combine. Lots of garlic, hand pulled noodles, fatty and juicy lamb, cumin, and flatbread. This creates one of the most delicious cuisines in the world. This is the birthplace of the silk road, and this food traveled across Central Asia into the Middle East and also influenced cooking in Europe. In this video (part 2 of 4), we try some of the most iconic Muslim Chinese street foods and also non-halal street foods you must eat in Xi’an: 东仓门早市 (Dongcangmen Morning Market) We started the day at Dongcangmen Morning Market, one of Xi’an’s busiest street food spots. First up was Jinggao — a sticky rice street cake filled with sweet red bean paste. Soft, chewy, and slightly smoky from the griddle, it’s a Xi’an breakfast classic (Price: 5 RMB / ~$0.70 USD). Next we tried a Chinese Jianbing Crepe, this version spread with bean paste and stuffed with two eggs. Crispy, savory, and sweet all in one bite — the ultimate breakfast street snack (Price: 8 RMB / ~$1.10 USD). We also had Shuijianbao, juicy pan-fried buns served with vinegar and chili oil — only 1 RMB for three! Finally, we warmed up with a spicy, peppery bowl of Hulatang, Xi’an’s famous hot pepper soup packed with vegetables and tofu. 张凌峰肉夹馍 (Zhang Lingfeng Roujiamo) Next we stopped for Roujiamo, often called the “Chinese hamburger.” This one was one of the most loaded Roujiamo I’ve ever eaten — stuffed to the brim with slow-braised pork and a huge slice of fatty pork skin that melted in your mouth. Juicy, rich, and perfectly tucked inside the crispy baked flatbread. Price: 13 RMB (~$1.80 USD). We also had a bowl of Liangpi, Xi’an’s famous cold skin noodles. Served with chili oil, garlic, and vinegar, it’s the perfect refreshing side dish to balance out the richness of the Roujiamo. 老何家卤汁凉粉 (Lao Hejia Luzhi Liangfen) After that, we visited Lao Hejia for their famous Luzhi Liangfen — jelly noodles mixed with crumbled Chinese mo flatbread. It came topped with century egg and drenched in chili oil, garlic, mustard, and the shop’s signature spiced vinegar. Tangy, spicy, and deeply savory, this is one of Xi’an’s most iconic and flavorful street snacks. Price: 11 RMB (~$1.50 USD). Back Alley Uyghur Stall – Kaobaozi Deep in a hidden back alley, we found a Uyghur vendor selling freshly baked Kaobaozi — giant meat buns stuffed with a juicy mix of beef and rich lamb fat. Each bun was loaded with flavor from his secret cumin spice blend, making them smoky, aromatic, and incredibly satisfying. 老刘家泡馍 (Lao Liu Jia Paomo) We finished with one of Xi’an’s most legendary dishes — Yangrou Paomo (pita bread soaked in lamb soup). At Lao Liu Jia, you first break the dense flatbread into small pieces by hand, then it’s simmered in a rich, aromatic mutton broth. The result is a hearty, flavorful stew that represents the soul of Xi’an’s Muslim food culture. Price: 45 RMB (~$6.20 USD). 瑞宝斋马峰酸汤水饺 (Ruibaozhai Mafeng Suantang Shuijiao) We also tried Suantang Shuijiao — spicy and sour boiled dumplings swimming in a hot, tangy broth. The sourness comes from fermented vinegar and chili, giving each dumpling a bold kick of flavor. We got 24 dumplings for just 19 RMB (~$2.60 USD), making this one of the best-value meals in Xi’an. I hope you enjoy this street food video with my friend Alex! It was so much fun showing him around Xi’an and introducing him to Hui Muslim Chinese street food! Make sure to check out his channel here: 👉 https://www.youtube.com/@Just_Food Timestamps: 00:00 Introduction 00:23 Silk road overview 00:55 Morning market 01:08 Xi'an breakfast sweet 02:49 Chinese crepe 05:07 pan fried dumplings 08:10 Chinese hamburger 13:50 Very unique street food 19:08 Uighur tandoor baozi 22:20 Lamb pita soup yangroupaomo 26:34 Late night dumplings 30:49 Thank for watching Follow me for more food adventures: https://youtube.com/thefoodranger https://instagram.com/thefoodranger https://facebook.com/thefoodranger
Related Topics
Continue with closely related videos to judge topic depth and content format.
Topic: the food ranger
Not enough related-topic video data yet.
Video FAQs

These FAQs clarify what this video page measures, why revenue is estimated, and how to use the page for content research.

What can you learn from this video analytics page?

This page shows views, likes, comments, RPM and revenue estimates, publish timing, topic tags, related videos, and the broader channel context behind the video.

Why are RPM and revenue numbers estimates?

Actual earnings depend on monetized playbacks, audience geography, seasonality, advertiser demand, and monetization status. CloutOrbit provides directional estimates for benchmarking, not exact payouts.

How should you use this page for content research?

Compare timing, topic tags, monetization signals, and adjacent videos from the same channel to spot formats, themes, and publishing patterns worth testing.