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🥟 Qingdao's signature dish · 2026

Qingdao Mackerel Dumplings (鲅鱼水饺)
Big plump jiaozi, juicy fish inside

Big, plump boiled jiaozi stuffed with minced Spanish mackerel and Chinese chives — juicy and lightly sweet with the taste of the sea, but barely fishy at all. Qingdao's signature dumpling, tied to a lovely custom: every spring, sons-in-law gift fresh mackerel to their wives' parents, and the whole family folds it into dumplings to share.

Before You Dig In

Mackerel dumplings — the dumpling Qingdao ties to family

Ask a Qingdao local what you have to eat and one answer comes back for sure: mackerel dumplings (鲅鱼水饺 bàyú shuǐjiǎo) — big, plump boiled jiaozi, bigger than ordinary dumplings, filled with the meat of Spanish mackerel (鲅鱼) caught fresh from Jiaozhou Bay around the city. Qingdao is a sea town where seafood is daily life, and people here fold the riches of that sea into a dumpling until it became one of the city's signature dishes — eaten alongside Tsingtao beer and a plate of stir-fried clams.

The heart of the dish is the filling. The shop takes fresh mackerel, skins it and removes every bone, leaving only the white flesh, then minces it fine and mixes it with Chinese chives (韭菜), a little fatty pork to keep it juicy, ginger, scallion, cooking wine, salt and pepper. Boiled, the fish turns soft and springy and juicy, the gentle sweetness of fresh sea fish cut by the fragrance of the chives. And because it's been skinned and boned, it's barely fishy at all — the easiest way there is to enjoy seafood, with no bones or shells to pick through.

What makes mackerel dumplings more than just food is this: they're tied to a family custom of gratitude. Qingdao has a saying, 'bàyú tiào, zhàngrén xiào' (鲅鱼跳、丈人笑) — 'when the mackerel leaps, the father-in-law smiles.' Every spring, when the mackerel is fat and best, a son-in-law buys fish to give to his wife's parents, and the whole family makes it into dumplings to eat together. This bowl carries far more than flavour.

Anatomy of the Dumpling

The fish, the filling and the custom — what's in this dumpling

Get your head around these four and you'll see why a plate of big boiled dumplings is a point of pride for Qingdao locals.

Big, plump Qingdao mackerel dumplings with thin translucent wrappers, arranged on a white plate, freshly boiled and juicy 1
Fresh Mackerel from the Bay
鲅鱼 · Spanish mackerel, heart of the filling

Spanish mackerel (鲅鱼) is a long, firm-fleshed sea fish caught in quantity around Qingdao — pinkish-white flesh, nicely fatty. The shop picks fresh fish and skins and bones it completely before mincing it into filling. The freshness of the fish decides how good the dumpling is: the fresher the fish, the sweeter and the less fishy. The best mackerel comes in spring, after the Grain Rain solar term (谷雨, around late April), when the fish is at its fattest.

The flesh: pinkish-white, firm, nicely fatty, gently sweet when fresh
The trick: the shop skins and bones it before mincing — so the filling has no bones and no fishiness
Best season: spring, after Grain Rain, when the fish is fattest
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Fish-and-Chive Filling
鲅鱼韭菜馅 · minced fish, chives and a little fatty pork

The minced mackerel is mixed with Chinese chives (韭菜), which bring a fresh fragrance that cuts the richness of the fish, plus a little fatty pork to keep the filling juicy rather than dry, seasoned with ginger, scallion, cooking wine to clear any fishy note, salt and pepper. Every shop has its own ratio — some go all fish for a stronger sea taste, some add more pork for a softer, juicier bite. Bite into one of those big dumplings and the filling is dense, springy and full of its own juice — that's the part that hooks people.

Core ingredients: minced mackerel + Chinese chives + fatty pork + ginger, scallion, cooking wine
The flavour: juicy and lightly sweet with the sea, fragrant with chives, springy, not fishy
Good to know: each shop's fish-to-pork ratio differs — try a few, find your favourite
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Boiled, Big and Plump
水饺 · boiled jiaozi, not potstickers

True mackerel dumplings are 'shuǐjiǎo' (水饺), boiled in water — not potstickers (锅贴) pan-fried with a crisp base. Qingdao prefers them boiled because boiling keeps the fish filling at its juiciest: the fish stays soft and springy rather than drying out. Mackerel dumplings are folded bigger than ordinary jiaozi, the wrapper thin enough that you can see the white fish through it. They're eaten with a dip of black vinegar and minced garlic, and a little chilli oil if you like a bit more depth — dunk and take a big bite, and the fresh fish and chives come right through.

How they're cooked: boiled in water to keep them juicy — folded bigger than ordinary jiaozi
Eat them with: black vinegar + minced garlic (add chilli oil if you like)
First-timers: go boiled and traditional for the fullest flavour and juiciness
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The Son-in-Law's Fish
鲅鱼礼 · a Qingdao intangible heritage custom

Why are these dumplings so special to Qingdao people? The answer is in the saying 'bàyú tiào, zhàngrén xiào' (鲅鱼跳、丈人笑) — when the mackerel leaps from the sea, the father-in-law smiles. Every spring after the Grain Rain (谷雨) solar term, when mackerel is fat and best, Qingdao sons-in-law buy several fresh mackerel to give their wives' parents as a sign of respect, and the family makes the fish into dumplings to eat together. Most of the fish comes in through Shazikou fishing port (沙子口) at the foot of Mount Lao, and the custom is listed as one of the city's intangible cultural heritages.

The saying: 'when the mackerel leaps, the father-in-law smiles'
The timing: spring, after the Grain Rain solar term (谷雨, late April)
Good to know: the fish lands at Shazikou port (沙子口) at the foot of Mount Lao
Not your everyday pork dumpling: ordinary Chinese jiaozi are usually pork, or pork and cabbage — mackerel dumplings are a different thing entirely. The filling is pure sea-fish flesh, skinned and boned, so it's soft, springy and juicy, gently sweet like fresh sea fish rather than land meat. If you're put off by fishy smells, don't worry — a good shop makes them with barely any at all. They're one of the easiest dumplings to eat in all of Qingdao.
A plate of hot, freshly boiled Qingdao mackerel dumplings, still steaming, piled high with a fork
A plate of hot, freshly boiled mackerel dumplings, still steaming — thin wrappers around a dense fish filling, eaten with black vinegar and minced garlic, the Qingdao way.
Eat Like a Local

How to order and eat — without the awkwardness

How to order — by the portion, say how many

Dumpling shops in Qingdao usually sell by the portion (份) or by weight in liang (两); a portion is usually around 10–15 dumplings. Mackerel dumplings are bigger than ordinary jiaozi, so two portions fill up an average eater. The easy way to order is to ask for 'bàyú shuǐjiǎo' (鲅鱼水饺) and say how many portions. No Chinese? Just point at the picture menu. Branded places like Chuange have picture menus and other seafood fillings to try, such as prawn dumplings (虾水饺) and squid-ink dumplings (墨鱼水饺), where the wrapper turns black from the ink. Ordering a few different fillings on one plate is half the fun.

First time and not sure what to get? Make mackerel dumplings the star, add a portion of prawn or squid-ink dumplings, and order a bowl of clam soup (蛤蜊汤) on the side — that's a full, well-rounded seafood-dumpling meal, the Qingdao way.

How to eat them — dunk in black vinegar, take a big bite

Step 1: mix your dip first — black vinegar with minced garlic, a little chilli oil if you like it. Step 2: pick up a big dumpling, dunk it, and take a big bite, but mind the heat — they're hot and juicy inside, and you get the sweet fresh fish against the sharp vinegar all at once. Step 3: sip the clam soup between dumplings; the gentle saltiness cleans your palate so you can keep going without it feeling heavy. A good mackerel dumpling is easy to finish a whole plate of, because the fish filling is lighter than pork.

Paying: most shops take WeChat Pay and Alipay; a few small ones still take cash in yuan but rarely foreign cards, so set up Alipay or WeChat before your trip to China. Getting there: many shops in the old town and the shopping districts sit a short walk from a Qingdao Metro station, and the branded restaurants in the malls usually have a metro stop connected right to them — handy for visitors.

Where to Eat

Which place — where Qingdao families go

Spots locals and food lovers have talked about for years — the big brands are comfortable and family-friendly, while the small market shops are often homelier and cheaper. Check the branch nearest your hotel on the Dianping app before you go.

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Chuange Fish Dumplings (船歌鱼水饺)
Qingdao's first seafood-dumpling brand · several branches (The MixC mall / Minjiang Road) · comfortable, family-friendly

Name a mackerel dumpling shop people talk about and Chuange comes first — it's Qingdao's first seafood-dumpling brand, now with several branches, clean and comfortable to sit in, good for families or a bigger group. It's known for big, well-stuffed dumplings with several seafood fillings to choose from — mackerel, prawn, abalone, and the squid-ink dumplings whose wrappers turn black from the ink. Reviewers mostly rate it highly. Reckon on around ¥75–100 per person once you order several fillings plus a few seafood dishes, and ordering is easy with a picture menu to point at.

Where: several branches around the city, including The MixC mall (万象城) and Minjiang Road (闽江路)
Hours: lunch to dinner (mall branches follow mall hours) · Price: ~¥75–100/person (~฿375–500)
2
Minguo Seafood Dumpling House (民国海鲜饺子楼)
A local favourite · a wide range of seafood fillings · old-style setting

Another spot Qingdao locals and food lovers rate for seafood dumplings — known for a wide range of seafood fillings and fresh ingredients. The mackerel dumplings are folded big and well-stuffed, the fresh-fish flavour clear and sweet, and the room is dressed in an old-style look with a touch of early-1900s Qingdao character. It's a good choice if you want seafood dumplings somewhere comfortable that isn't a big chain. Order the mackerel dumplings with prawn dumplings and a bowl of clam soup for a full spread. Check branches and opening hours on the Dianping app before you go.

Where: central Qingdao · check the open branch on the Dianping app before you go
Hours: lunch to dinner · Price: ~¥60–90/person (~฿300–450)
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Local dumpling shops in the old town + near the seafood markets
The local tip · the small shops are homelier and cheaper

The truth about mackerel dumplings is that the small dumpling shops where locals actually eat are often homelier, tastier and cheaper than the brands. Walk the old town or the lanes near the seafood markets and look for a shop packed with locals, the dumplings turning over fast, fresh fish coming in daily — that's the one. At places like these a portion of mackerel dumplings is around ¥38–68, a good bit cheaper than the sit-down restaurants. Come in spring after Grain Rain and you'll be eating them right when the mackerel is at its fattest. Ask a market stallholder where the good mackerel dumplings are nearby; you'll often get a better answer than any online review.

Where: the old town · lanes near the seafood markets · where locals actually eat
Hours: lunch to dinner · Price: ¥38–68/portion (~฿190–340), cheaper and homelier
Frequently Asked

FAQ · what to know before your mackerel dumplings

What are mackerel dumplings (鲅鱼水饺), and are they fishy?
Mackerel dumplings are Qingdao's signature boiled jiaozi, filled with the meat of Spanish mackerel (鲅鱼) minced fine and mixed with Chinese chives and a little fatty pork for juiciness, seasoned with ginger, scallion, cooking wine, salt and pepper. The trick to keeping them clean-tasting is that the shop skins and bones the fish before mincing, leaving only the white flesh. Once boiled, the fish is springy and juicy, lightly sweet from the fresh sea fish and balanced by the fragrance of the chives. They are very easy to eat and barely fishy at all — a way to enjoy seafood without picking through bones or shells.
What is the 鲅鱼礼 custom, where sons-in-law gift mackerel?
It's an old Qingdao custom captured in the saying 'bàyú tiào, zhàngrén xiào' (鲅鱼跳、丈人笑) — 'when the mackerel leaps, the father-in-law smiles.' Every spring after the Grain Rain solar term (谷雨, around late April), when Spanish mackerel is at its fattest and best, Qingdao sons-in-law buy several fresh mackerel to give to their wives' parents as a sign of respect, and the family then makes the fish into dumplings to eat together. Most of the city's mackerel comes in through Shazikou fishing port (沙子口) at the foot of Mount Lao, and the custom has been listed as a district-level intangible cultural heritage of Qingdao — so the dish carries real family meaning, not just flavour.
How do you order mackerel dumplings, and how many is enough?
Most shops sell them by the portion (份) or by weight in liang (两); a portion is usually around 10–15 dumplings. Mackerel dumplings are larger than ordinary jiaozi, so two portions fill up an average eater. The easy way to order is to ask for 'bàyú shuǐjiǎo' (鲅鱼水饺) and say how many portions. Branded sit-down places like Chuange have picture menus you can point at, and other seafood fillings to try, such as prawn dumplings (虾水饺) and squid-ink dumplings (墨鱼水饺). Boiled dumplings are usually eaten with a dip of black vinegar and minced garlic, sometimes a little chilli oil, with a bowl of clam soup (蛤蜊汤) on the side for the full Qingdao set.
Are mackerel dumplings boiled or fried, and how do they differ from potstickers?
True mackerel dumplings are 'shuǐjiǎo' (水饺) — boiled in water, not potstickers (锅贴, guotie, pan-fried with a crisp base). Qingdao prefers them boiled because boiling keeps the fish filling at its juiciest; the fish stays soft and springy rather than drying out, and the thin wrapper turns translucent so you can see the white fish inside. Some shops offer pan-fried or steamed versions too, but for a first taste of mackerel dumplings, go boiled and traditional — that's where you get the full flavour and juiciness of the mackerel.
How much do mackerel dumplings cost, and how do you pay?
At an ordinary shop, mackerel dumplings run about ¥38–68 (about ฿190–340) per portion, depending on size and the shop. At a comfortable branded restaurant like Chuange Fish Dumplings (船歌鱼水饺), ordering several fillings plus a couple of seafood dishes, reckon on around ¥75–100 (about ฿375–500) per person. Small market shops and local dumpling houses are cheaper still. Most shops take WeChat Pay and Alipay; a few small ones still take cash in yuan but rarely foreign cards, so set up Alipay or WeChat before your trip to China.
Where should I eat mackerel dumplings in Qingdao?
The most talked-about is Chuange Fish Dumplings (船歌鱼水饺), Qingdao's first seafood-dumpling brand, with several branches including ones inside The MixC mall (万象城) and on Minjiang Road — comfortable and family-friendly, known for big well-stuffed dumplings and squid-ink dumplings. Minguo Seafood Dumpling House (民国海鲜饺子楼) is another local favourite. And the local dumpling shops around the old town and the seafood-market lanes, where locals actually eat, are cheaper and full of homely flavour. For something homestyle, look for a shop packed with locals first.
Klook · Food Tour

Qingdao Food Tour — find the best mackerel dumplings and seafood, with someone who knows

A Qingdao food tour with a local guide who walks you through the old town and the seafood markets, takes you where locals eat their mackerel dumplings, gets you a plate of spicy clams with a fresh beer, and orders for you so there's no language stress — the whole sea-town spread in one meal.

See Qingdao food tours on Klook →
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