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March 8, 2014
Table of Contents
1 Introduction
Chinese cuisine

Wikipedia

 
Cuisine_of_China
cookbook
The cuisine of China is widely regarded as representing one of the richest and most diverse culinary heritages on Earth.

In Chinese culture, a meal is typically seen as consisting of two general components: (1) a carbohydrate source or starch (ll|Chinese: ??????, pinyin: zh??sh??, lit. "main food")???typically rice, noodles, or mantou (steamed buns) and (2) and accompanying smaller quanities of vegetable, fish, meat, or other items, or dishes (???, c??i). (This cultural conceptualization is some ways in contrast to Western meals where meat or animal protein is often considered the main dish.)

As is well known throughout the world, rice is a critical part of much of Chinese cuisine. However, in many parts of China, particularly North China, wheat-based products including noodles and steamed buns predominate, in contrast to South China where rice is dominant. Despite the importance of rice in Chinese cuisine, at extremely formal occasions, it is sometimes the case that no rice at all will be served; in such a case, rice would only be provided when no other dishes remained.

Chopsticks are the primary eating utensil in Chinese culture for solid foods, while soups and other liquids are eaten ref|1 with a wide, flat-bottomed spoon (traditionally ceramic). It is reported that wooden chopsticks are losing their dominance due to recent logging shortfalls in China and East Asia; many Chinese eating establishments are considering a switch to a more environmentally sustainable eating utensil, such as plastic chopsticks. In most dishes in Chinese cuisine, foods are prepared in smaller pieces (e.g. vegetable, meat, tofu), ready for direct picking and eating. It traditionally, Chinese culture considered using knife|knives at the table???as in Western culture???"barbarian|barbaric." Fish are usually cooked and serve whole, with diners directly pulling pieces from the fish to eat, unlike in some other cuisines where they are first filetted.

Spoon and fork are most often used by Malaysian Chinese|Malaysian and Singaporean Chinese eating at home, and are provided in many restaurants???especially "coffee houses" or kopi tiam. Some Chinese prefer to eat white rice with a spoon, even while eating other dishes with chopsticks. Many school cafeterias (canteens) in China provide only spoons for students eating, not chopsticks, for reusability and ease of washing. At meals in China, each diner is typically given a bowl of white rice, while the dishes are spread out on the table in front of all the diners. Individuals choose the dishes they wish to eat directly, with all people eating out of the same dishes with their chopsticks. This custom provides a certain degree of contrast with some other cultures, where individuals are given a serving on their plate; many non-Chinese are surprised by this eating style, in that individual chopsticks which each diner uses to eat food, are also used for selecting food from common dishes. However, spoons are also frequently used to select food, which is then placed directly in the individual's rice; this technique is also used when selecting with chopsticks. The food selected is often eaten together with a mouthful of rice.

Vegetarianism is not uncommon or unusual in China, though, as is the case in the West, is still only practiced by a relatively small proportion of the population. Most Chinese vegetarians are Buddhists. Western vegetarians eating Chinese cuisine will note that a large number of vegetable dishes may actually contain meat, as meat chunks or bits have been traditionally used to flavor dishes in Chinese cuisine, to some degree in contrast to the prevalence of meat dishes in Western cuisine or Chinese cuisine in the West, whose main ingredient is meat.

Desserts as such are less typical in Chinese culture as in the West. Chinese meals do not typically end with a dessert or dessert course as is common in Western cuisine. Instead, sweet foods are often introduced during the course of the meal with no firm distinction made. For instead, the basi fruit dishes (sizziling sugar syrup coated fruits such as banana or apple) are eaten alongside other "savoury" dishes that would be considered "main course" items in the West. However, many sweet foods and dessert snacks do exist in Chinese cuisine. Many are fried, and several incorporate sweet bean paste (dousha). (Bean paste is also used in Japanese cuisine). The matuan is filled with dousha and fried; it is often eaten for breakfast. Some steamed bun items are filled with dousha; some of these are in the shape of peaches, an important Chinese cultural symbol. Another dessert is Babao Fan (?????????) or "Eight Treasure Rice Pudding."



Due to the large and varied characteristics of China itself, a multitude of different regional and other (e.g. religious) styles can be identified in the larger complex of Chinese cuisine:

Regions of mainland China
Cuisine name derives from province or region except where indicated

  • Northwestern Chinese cuisine

  • Mandarin cuisine

  • Jiang-Huai cuisine

  • Northeastern Chinese cuisine

  • Cantonese cuisine (Guangdong province)

  • Chiuchow cuisine (Chaozhou region, Guangdong)

  • Hakka cuisine (Hakka people|Hakka ethnic group)

  • Hunan cuisine

  • Shanghai cuisine

  • Sichuan cuisine

  • Fujian cuisine

  • Yunnan cuisine

  • Hainan cuisine


Other regions
  • Cuisine of Hong Kong

  • Macanese cuisine|Cuisine of Macao

  • Taiwanese cuisine

  • Nanyang Chinese cuisine (cuisine of the Nanyang (geographical region)|Nanyang region or Southeast Asia Chinese diaspora)

Other categories
  • Historical Chinese cuisine

  • Chinese Islamic cuisine

  • Chinese Buddhist cuisine




  • Fried rice

  • Potsticker (a kind of dumpling)

  • Jiaozi (steamed dumpling)

  • Chinese noodles|Noodles

  • *Fried noodles

  • *Noodle soup

  • Kung pao chicken

  • Hotpot

  • Fried pancakes (including green onion pancakes)

  • Zongzi (rice balls, wrappedi in leaves)

  • Peking Duck - the trademark dish of Beijing

  • Baozi (filled steamed buns)

  • Dim sum - originated in Guangzhou (Canton) and Hong Kong

  • Steamed fish

  • Tofu dishes

<br>
Breakfast foods
  • Century egg|Hundred-year old egg or preserved egg

  • Tea egg (hard boiled egg soaked in tea)

  • Congee (rice porridge)

  • Pickling|Pickled vegetables

<br>
Starches
  • Mantou (steamed bread)

  • White rice

  • Chinese noodles|Noodles




China shares much with the culinary heritage of other regions of East Asia, in addition to some contrasts; compare Japanese cuisine, Singaporean cuisine, and Vietnamese cuisine, among others.



See American Chinese cuisine and Canadian Chinese cuisine for the development of Chinese cuisine in North America. Chinese cuisine is also highly developed in Western Europe. Within the United States, the cuisine of Hawaii contains many Chinese foods and Chinese influences, due to the high number of Chinese and Asian immigrants. However, Chinese-originated or -inspired foods are often combined with those of other cuisines in novel ways.



The popularity of Western fast food and other culinary products and habits have dramatically increased the influence of nutritional disease, including obesity (especially among children) over the last 10-15 years http://english.people.com.cn/200510/24/eng20051024_216452.html

note|1 Note: In most variety (linguistics)|varieties or dialects of ll|Chinese, the verb for consuming soup is actually translatable literally as "drink."




How to Cook and Eat in Chinese, Buwei Yang Chao, first ed. 1945.

Category:Chinese cuisine|*
de:Chinesische K??che
et:Hiina k????k
fr:Cuisine chinoise
ja:中華料理
ko:중식
nl:Lijst van Chinese gerechten
pl:Kuchnia chi??ska
ro:Bucatarie Chinezeasca
ru:?????????????????? ??????????
zh:中国菜

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Chinese cuisine".


Last Modified:   2005-11-07


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