1, ancestral home of Bruce Lee.
Bruce Lee's ancestral home is located near the Li Ancestral Hall in Shangcun Village, Jun 'an Town, Shunde District, Foshan City, Guangdong Province, covering an area of 5 1.8 square meters. This house was built by Bruce Lee's grandfather Li Zhenbiao, and his father Li Haiquan once lived here. The house is divided into one room, one living room, one kitchen and one patio, with a height of 4.2m and a hall width of 1 1 pit.
2. Bruce Lee Paradise
Bruce Lee Paradise is located in Jun 'an Town, Shunde District, Foshan City, Guangdong Province, with an area of nearly 3,000 mu. It is a typical Lingnan hilly landform, surrounded by 22 green hills. Bruce Lee Paradise is one of the top ten new attractions in Shunde. There are artificial waterfalls, the world's largest17m phoenix sculpture recorded in Guinness Book of Records, the world's largest18.8m bronze statue of Bruce Lee, the peak viewing pavilion, Sangji fish pond and Xiang Lian.
Jun' an feature national defense specialty fish pancake
During Tongzhi period in Qing Dynasty, Ouyang Lizhi, the master of Jun 'an warehouse, developed the cooking skills of his father Ouyang Huachang and created fried fish cakes. Ouyang Lizhi first set up a stall in the Central Street (Jinhua Street) in Jun 'an Xu. Later, his son Shouzhao inherited his father's business and hung up the signboard of "Shouzhao Fish Cake". Because of its fragrance, smoothness and sweetness, this fish cake has gradually become a well-known food and spread to Zhongshan, Haizhou and Xinhui.
Jun 'an Fish Cake is a dish made from the fish flesh of shad and cooked by traditional cooking techniques in Shunde Jun 'an. The shad meat is made into minced fish, stirred manually or mechanically until gelatinized, pressed into cakes, and then fried until both sides are golden. The fish cake made by this technology keeps the original flavor and tenderness of shad meat, and the taste is crisp outside and tender inside, sweet and delicious.
Reference to the above content: Baidu Encyclopedia-Bruce Lee's former residence