Honourable mention went to the moist and tender chicken with crunchy skin, described literally as "hand poured" - a process that is quite complicated. The chicken is first steamed so that it is cooked. It is then dried and then put on a rack over a pan of hot oil. Oil from the pan is then scooped up and poured over the chicken to crisp its skin without dipping the whole chicken in oil. This way, the skin is crispy but the meat is not greasy or dry. In some restaurants, it's called "oil poured" but here it is called "hand poured", likely just a marketing thing to avoid mention of oil and to emphasize the "hand-made" aspect - as if anything cooked could be otherwise.