skip to main
|
skip to sidebar
Wokking On The Run
.::The Guide to Fast, Fresh & Healthy Asian Cuisine::. By Colin Ogg
Pages
Home
About Me (& the Blog)
Chicken Recipes
Beef Recipes
Seafood Recipes
Restaurant Reviews
From My Wok to Yours - Taking the Mystery Out of Everyday Dining and Meals!!
Thursday, February 4, 2016
The 8 Great Regional Cuisines of China: Sichuan Cuisine — the Most Popular Cuisine in China
Chuan Cuisine, originating from Sichuan Province in southwestern China, is the most widely served cuisine in China. The dishes of Chuan Cuisine are famous for their
hot-spicy taste and the flavor of Sichuan pepper
that are rare in other regional cuisines.
Flavors of Chuan Cuisine — hot and spicy
A variety of seasonings are used in Chuan Cuisine, and each dish can be cooked differently. Therefore Chuan Cuisine enjoys a reputation for variety. As the saying goes it's 'one dish with one flavor and one hundred dishes with one hundred flavors'.
The most common flavors
of Chuan Cuisine are hot and spicy, “the five fragrances” (Fennel, pepper, aniseed, cinnamon, and clove), other mixed spices, chili and Sichuan pepper (made with prickly ash), and sweet and sour.
Seasonings of Chuan Cuisine
Dry red chili peppers is one of the most common Chuan Cuisine seasoings.
Some of the
most common seasonings
that contribute to the hot and spicy flavor include Sichuan pepper, black pepper, chili, broad bean chili paste, shallots, ginger, and garlic.
The ingredients
used range widely, including poultry, pork, beef, fish, vegetables, and tofu.
Cooking Methods
The methods of cooking Chuan Cuisine vary according to the texture required, including stir frying, steaming and braising, baking, and the most widely used method — fast-frying. Chuan Cuisine has good combinations of flavors and often has thick gravy.
The Most Famous Sichuan Dishes
Mapo tofu
Chuan Cuisine mainly features pungent, hot, and fragrant home-grown dishes. The most typical Chuan dishes are mapo tofu, kungpao chicken, fuqi fei pian, and hotpot.
'Pockmarked Granny' Bean Curd (Mapo Tofu)
Mapo (/maa-por/) tofu is bean curd served in a chili-and-bean-based sauce, which is usually a thin, oily, and bright red suspension, and often topped with minced meat, usually pork or beef. Seasonings include water chestnuts, onions, other vegetables, or wood ear fungus. The taste of mapo tofu is fittingly described as numbing, spicy-hot, fresh, tender and soft, aromatic and flaky. Mapo tofu is easy to find outside of China.
Spicy Diced Chicken (Kung Pao Chicken)
Kung pao chicken
Kung Pao chicken is the Cantonese name, but the Chinese name is Gongbao Jiding (宫保鸡丁 /gong-baow jee-ding/ 'Palace-Protected Chicken Cubes')
It is cooked by frying diced chicken, dry red pepper and golden peanuts. Spicy diced chicken is more popular among Westerners than mapo tofu, and is usually less spicy, or not at all spicy, when served abroad, or far from Sichuan.
Fuqi Fei Pian ('Husband and Wife Lung Slices')
Fuqi Fei Pian is made of thinly sliced beef, or bovine lung or tongue seasoned with chili oil. There is a romantic story of the origin of this famous Sichuan dish. Guo Zhaohua (the inventor) and his wife sold their vinegar-ized beef slices by trundling a small cart along the street. Their beef slices were very delicious, and no one could resist the charming smell in that street. People liked the food made by this couple very much, so they gave it the name Husband and Wife Lung Slices in honor of the couple.
Sichuan
Hot Pot
Sichuan Hot Pot, like most of the cuisine in that humid and populous province, is very spicy. The broth is flavored with chili peppers and other pungent herbs and spices. The main ingredients include hot pepper, Chinese crystal sugar and wine. Slices of kidney, chicken breast, beef tripe, goose intestines, spring onion, soy bean sprouts, mushrooms, duck, and sea cucumber are the usual meats used in the dish.
Enter your email address:
Delivered by
FeedBurner
No comments:
Post a Comment
Newer Post
Older Post
Home
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Facebook Badge
Wokking on the Run Blog
Promote Your Page Too
Current Rank Among Food Blogs
Alltop
Subscribe
Subscribe to Wokking On The Run by Email
Total Pageviews
Readers
FEEDJIT Live Traffic Map
Feedjit Live Blog Stats
Blog Archive
▼
2016
(12)
▼
February
(12)
Top Foodie Cities in China
The 8 Great Regional Cuisines of China - Hui Cuisi...
The 8 Great Regional Cuisines of China - Hunan Cui...
The 8 Great Regional Cuisines of China - Zhe Cuisi...
The 8 Great Regional Cuisines of China - Refined H...
The 8 Great Regional Cuisines of China - Fujian Cu...
The 8 Great Regional Cuisines of China - Shandong ...
The 8 Great Regional Cuisines of China - Cantonese...
Your Guide to Sushi
Thai Food Introduction
The 8 Great Regional Cuisines of China: Sichuan Cu...
Chinese Food Revisited
►
2015
(11)
►
June
(1)
►
May
(1)
►
April
(3)
►
February
(2)
►
January
(4)
►
2013
(4)
►
January
(4)
►
2012
(9)
►
September
(1)
►
August
(2)
►
June
(1)
►
February
(2)
►
January
(3)
►
2011
(12)
►
July
(1)
►
April
(2)
►
March
(2)
►
February
(7)
►
2010
(75)
►
December
(1)
►
November
(1)
►
October
(3)
►
August
(1)
►
July
(5)
►
June
(5)
►
May
(4)
►
April
(5)
►
March
(13)
►
February
(18)
►
January
(19)
►
2009
(25)
►
December
(25)
No comments:
Post a Comment