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Yummy Yummy Yummy chinese drama review
Completed
Yummy Yummy Yummy
23 people found this review helpful
by Jojo Flower Award1 Big Brain Award1
Oct 28, 2025
32 of 32 episodes seen
Completed 2
Overall 7.5
Story 7.0
Acting/Cast 9.0
Music 8.0
Rewatch Value 6.5
This review may contain spoilers

A delicious start with bland finish. Love, food, and trauma are not in equal measure here!

This food rom-com starts off promising, with light, quirky, and surprisingly heartfelt moments. The first half had this cosy slice of life vibe, balancing humor with family chaos and a generous amount of slow-burning romance. But somewhere in the latter half, it takes a hard left into trauma territory. What began as a fun comfort watch turns heavy-handed and unnecessarily tragic. The tonal shift ruins the earlier charm, making it feel like two completely different dramas mashed together.

The premise is interesting and has a clever spin on the usual transmigration trope in the dramaland. Instead of just the ML or FL, the drama flips the trope and sends the entire Shen family to a different timeline where they fumble and survive through royal etiquette while clinging to their modern quirks and sanity.

The first half of this recipe had almost everything you want from a comfort watch. Adorable family bonds, humour that most of the time lands and a delicious slow burn romance that doesn't try too hard to impress, and that's the part of the charm. The Shen family's journey was chaotic and lovely. Watching them bicker in those too-frequent family meetings, adapt and grow together, felt oddly warm. While I found father and brother irritating and a bit senseless at times with over-the-top comedy, they somehow grew on me as the journey went on.

The slow-burn romance between Lin Yan and Shen Shaoguang was very gentle. I have a soft spot for pinning, and they served me left and right. The quiet yearning and restraint, the stolen glances, the way they linger just a second too long when no one is looking, Lin Yan nailed it. I liked how their bond wasn't built on grand declarations and respect for each other. I would describe their relationship as soft, patient and bittersweet. However, when the drama delves into heavier themes, the romance suffers. The tenderness begins to stretch thin under all that angst. When the writing wobbles, somehow their chemistry saved the day.

And then came the second half, pouring the tragic water on this delicious simmering soup to dilute its taste. The humor evaporated, the pacing curdled, and the romance became an emotional mush. I felt the drama took itself too seriously. We were spoon-fed angst until even the sweetest moments started to feel bittersweet. The big plot twist of "Who is my ancestor?" arrived like a reheated dish. It was edible enough to satisfy your hunger, but bland, flavourless and lacked any kind of excitement. It felt like writers were confused till the end on how to present it, and in a rush, went with the lamest explanation.

Lin Yan, my poor man, bears the brunt of this creative confusion. His story turns from moving to downright tragic, and while that could have been poignant, it ends up feeling manipulative, emotional suffering used as seasoning instead of storytelling. And don’t even get me started on the ending, the family’s entire journey rendering their growth meaningless. It’s the narrative equivalent of baking a perfect cake and then throwing it out before anyone takes a bite.

Another point that I felt was weak was the antagonists. Rival cooks, bureaucratic hurdles and local elites made for an entertaining obstacle but never truly felt dangerous. All the conflicts often lacked intensity, and somehow I felt resolved a little too easily.

I am surprisingly okay with the ending, considering how messy things got quickly. And also keeping in mind the restrictions with time travel theme dramas in China. But if you ask me, I can think of simpler and better ways it would have gone.

Acting-wise, Li Yunrui as Lin Yan was definitely a good choice. He portrayed the role with a certain charm, bringing the quieter, humorous and vulnerable sides perfectly. This is the year of Wang Yinglu for me. This is the third drama of hers I am watching, and she is good. The supporting cast also looked solid. A bit overboard at times when it came to humour or melodrama, but I think that was more of the writing choice of how the characters were.

Production and cinematography were excellent and never felt lacking. The manor in which they lived was definitely one of the most aesthetically pleasing and pretty-looking settings I have come across in my drama watching history.
Now coming to the food aspect, even though the title is yummy yummy yummy, the food never takes the centre stage. It is there, noticeable, deliciously presented, but if you are watching it for food shots, you will find them surprisingly scarce. I don't think it affected my watching experience as I had no expectations going in. But whatever food shots we got, it was rich, detailed, and definitely can make you hungry.

Overall, this is one of those classic strong first-half with a derailed second-half cases. It definitely lures you in with warmth and wit and it is good while it lasts but it's a pity when the drama forgets along the way what made it delicious in the first place. It could also have been a few episodes shorter.
Will I recommend it? For slow-burn romance, yes but with reservations.
7.25/10
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