China

China

Chinese food is all about hot, fiery, and fast cooking. It is some of the most exciting around the globe and one with many layers and unique tastes.

China

Influences

With such a vast footprint spanning the predominant portion of Central-East Asia, China has many diverse regions, each with its own dishes and flavours. From Cantonese cuisine of the South to the Huaiyang of the East, Shandong of the North, Sichuan in the West, each region has a unique taste, but one thing remains the same – their passion for food and flavour!

Flavours

Home of the stir-fry, Chinese food is all about eating with the eyes and the stomach. There is no set ingredient list for any stir-fry. It’s all about colourful, fresh ingredients cooked quickly on a high heat and constantly moving in their most prized cooking implements – the wok. Every Chinese home has at least one, and it has now become known worldwide like this. Clever in design, it heats up quickly whilst maintaining an even heat throughout and pushing all ingredients back to the centre after being tossed in its piping-hot sphere.

History and Influences

With China being such a sprawling country with so many iconic and traditional dishes throughout, there are many stand-outs that we in Australia just love including things like the classic Sweet and Sour Pork and Chop Sui from the South or Sichuan-spiced crispy chicken and seafood of the North. One of the most popular and classically Chinese meals is definitely the practice of Yum Cha.

Beginning as a form of snacking whilst in the tea houses of Guangzhou, Yum Cha has a language of its own and always begins and ends with a fragrant tea and serves bamboo baskets of dumplings, wontons, fried prawn toasts, steamed greens, the list goes on!
Another Chinese meal that’s been picked up and loved worldwide is Peking Duck. Whole ducks are braised in hot soy sauce then roasted in a hot oven with five-spice until super-crisp then served with soft pancakes, plum or hoisin sauce and fresh batons of cucumber and spring onion.

China

Iconic Dish

Combinations are also used throughout to cook things like whole fish or slow-cooked beef or chicken in the traditional ‘Hot Pot’. Created during the Three Kingdoms Period from 200-280AD as a warming meal of meat cooked in a spiced stock over hot coals for the cold winter months, the hot pot has been loved for many generations to follow, including the Emperors of the Qing Dynasty and is a special Chinese dish all over the world today using popular slow-cooking ingredients like pork belly.

China

Spiceology

The fundamentals of Chinese cooking are all about aromatics, especially in traditional dishes such as Char Siu Pork where a delicate combination of hoisin, sherry, honey, vinegar, five-spice powder and shallots are combined and used to marinate strips of pork loin before barbequing.

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