The Muslim Quarter is Xi'an's most famous food street — and also its most misunderstood. Here is how to navigate it like someone who knows what they are doing.
Every evening, the Muslim Quarter (回民街, Huímín Jiē) in Xi'an fills with the smell of cumin, lamb, and baking flatbread. This is not a tourist creation — it is a 1,000-year-old neighborhood where the descendants of Silk Road traders still live, work, and cook. The quarter has been continuously inhabited by the Hui Muslim community since the Tang Dynasty, and the food you eat here is the living culinary legacy of 2,000 years of trade between China and the Islamic world. But most visitors see only the main commercial street near the Drum Tower, which is crowded, overpriced, and increasingly generic. The real Muslim Quarter is deeper inside — and this guide tells you how to find it.
The Muslim Quarter has two distinct zones. The outer zone — the wide street from the Drum Tower to Beiyuanmen — is the tourist area. The food here is acceptable but overpriced, and many stalls sell the same generic items replicated for mass tourism. The inner zone — the narrow alleys branching off the main street, particularly Damaishi Street (大皮院街) and Xiyangshi Street (西羊市街) — is where locals eat. These alleys are narrower, darker, and far more interesting. The stalls here serve food that has not been adjusted for tourist palates. The lamb is gamier. The chili is hotter. The queues are longer — and that is how you know it is good.
Every dish in the Muslim Quarter carries the history of the Silk Road. Yangrou Paomo (羊肉泡馍) — lamb soup with hand-torn flatbread — is the quarter's most famous dish and one of China's most participatory eating experiences. You are given two small flatbreads and a bowl. Your job is to tear the bread into pieces the size of a soybean. This takes 15–20 minutes. You then hand the bowl to the cook, who adds rich lamb broth, glass noodles, and wood ear mushrooms. The bread absorbs the broth and becomes something extraordinary. Roujiamo (肉夹馍) — slow-braised lamb in a crispy flatbread — is China's original burger and has been sold here for over 1,000 years.
For Yangrou Paomo, go to a sit-down restaurant on Damaishi Street, not a stall. The preparation requires proper kitchen facilities, and stall versions are usually inferior. For Roujiamo, look for the stall with the longest queue — the queue is the quality indicator. The best Roujiamo is made with Laozhi Roujiamo (老朱肉夹馍) on Xiyangshi Street, where the lamb is braised for 8 hours in a secret spice mix. For Biangbiang noodles, find a small shop with a handwritten menu — the handmade version is incomparably better than machine-made. For Liangpi, any stall in the inner alleys will do — it is a simple dish, and the quality is consistently high.
Several red flags indicate a stall or restaurant to avoid. If the menu is in six languages, it is aimed at tourists. If the Roujiamo is pre-made and sitting under a heat lamp, the bread is already soggy. If the lamb skewers are not being grilled fresh to order, they have been sitting and drying out. If the prices are printed on a laminated menu with photos, you are in the tourist zone. And if the staff are aggressively calling you over, they are desperate for customers — a sure sign that locals do not eat there.
Before you eat, visit the Great Mosque (清真大寺, Qīngzhēn Dàsì) at the center of the quarter. Founded in 742 AD during the Tang Dynasty, it is one of the oldest and largest mosques in China — and one of the most architecturally unique, built entirely in Chinese style with pagoda-like minarets and traditional courtyard gardens. The mosque is open to non-Muslim visitors and provides essential context for the food you are about to eat. Understanding that the Hui community has been here for 1,300 years — maintaining their Islamic faith while integrating into Chinese culture — transforms a food street into a living record of cultural exchange.
"The Muslim Quarter is not a food street — it is a 1,000-year-old community where the descendants of Silk Road traders still live. The food is not a performance for tourists; it is what these families have eaten for generations." — Local Hui resident, Xi'an