China Time-honored Brand (Chinese: Zhonghua lao zihao 中华老字号 or simply lao zihao 老字号) is a title granted by the Ministry of Commerce of the People's Republic of China to Chinese enterprises that existed before 1956, sell products, techniques or services passed down through generations, have distinct Chinese cultural characteristics and are widely recognized by society.[1][2]
This title was first granted soon after the foundation of the PRC in 1949.[3] The current eligibility criteria were set in 2006, when the Ministry of Commerce revised them for the last time.[3]
Quanjude 全聚德 — Peking duck restaurant
Donglaishun 东来顺 — hotpot restaurant
Douyichu 都一处 — restaurant famous for its shaomai Bianyifang 便宜坊 — another Peking duck restaurant Goubuli 狗不理 — baozi restaurant (founded in Tianjin, a city near Beijing)
Hundun hou 馄饨侯 — wonton (hundun) restaurant Liubiju 六必居 — sells preserved vegetables and sauces Rongbaozhai 荣宝斋 — sells works of art (notably wall scrolls) Tongrentang 同仁堂 — supplier of medicinal herbs used in Traditional Chinese Medicine
Zhang Yiyuan 张一元 — teahouse
Ruifuxiang 瑞蚨祥 — silk clothing and qipaos
Neiliansheng 内联升 — old Chinese cloth shoes
Shengxifu 盛锡福 — hats
van der Meulen, Bernd; Sun, Juanjuan; Carvajal, Ricardo; Kite, Jonathon; Costa Diaz, Thiago (2016), "Food Safety Regulations Applied to Traditional and Ethnic Foods", in Prakash, Vishweshwaraiah; Martìn-Belloso, Olga; Keener, Larry; Astley, Siân; Braun, Susanne; McMahon, Helena; Lelieveld, Huub (eds.), Regulating Safety of Traditional and Ethnic Foods, Amsterdam: Elsevier, pp. 441–466, ISBN978-0-12-800605-4