quick-fried dragon and roasted phoenix
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is p ē NGL ó NGP á of è ng, which means that dishes are very rich and rare. It's from going to drink.
Idiom explanation
Cook: cook; cook: cook.
The origin of Idioms
Li He, Tang Dynasty, wrote in his book Jiang Jin Jiu: "glass bell, thick amber, small trough wine dripping pearl red, cooking dragon and Phoenix, jade and fat weeping, curtain green curtain surrounding spring breeze."
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym]: paofeng cooking dragon, Shaolong Shefeng, Zhifeng cooking dragon
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attribute; used of dishes or works of art. example if there is no oil comb on the seat, the assembly is empty. Yuan Dashan's the scenery
quick-fried dragon and roasted phoenix
a makeshift to tide over a present difficulty - wān ròu shēng chuāng
the dragon soars , the phoenix flies aloft -- dance in swirling - lóng xiáng fèng wǔ
There is no quantity of water in the sea - hǎi shuǐ nán liáng