Chinese
Food Cooking
China is a country
where the appreciation of good food is developed into a fine art.
Chinese are epicures. Their cooking is distinctive: No other cooking
resembles it in any way. There are many
ways to cook Chinese food, but
those who cook at home usually roast or steam their food.
Chinese food is
rich, but not greasy: it is delicately flavoured, but not pungently
spicy. Cook what is freshly slaughtered, and eat what is freshly
cooked, a doctrine universally recognized throughout China. It is
better that one should wait for the meal than that the meal should wait
for one. Variety is another important feature.
A Chinese dish
almost always consists of a mixture of foodstuffs - the meat or fish is
generally cooked with, and improved by, the addition of some
appropriate vegetable. All the material to be used is cut into
convenient size in the kitchen before serving, so that no carving
instruments are required at table.
All the condiments
are added during the process
of cooking, thus doing away with
the necessity of the usual cruet. The only exception is some Soya bean
sauce provided at the table in case it is required.
With the passage of time the methods of cooking have necessarily
undergone many improvements as compared with the original crude
processes.
The
Many Influences Of Chinese Dishes
Expert cooks in
different parts of China have introduced numerous improvements, and,
with China being such a vast country, its component parts differing
widely not only in climate and customs, but even in the spoken
language, it is only to be expected that different terms are found in
different localities for the same way of cooking.
For instance,
roasting in the North is known as K'ao while in the South it is called
Shao M. Similarly Shao Fan M M in North China means cooking rice, but
in Canton they say Chu Fan. In these circumstances I have to employ
those terms, which are more commonly used and are more generally
understood. All the terms used in this little book are in the National
language, that is, Mandarin (Kuo Yu).
Roasting is one
common cooking method. There are two different ways of doing roasting:
one is roasting over an open fire known as Chinese cooking utensil
while the other is roasting in an oven.
By the first
mentioned method we prepare roast suckling pig and barbecued Peking
duck. In exactly the same way the Russians make "shaslick" and the
Javanese "sateh" dishes, which are well known to foreigners in the
Orient.
Making
Your Own Chinese Food
The Cantonese dish
known as "gold coin chicken" consisting of a combination of alternate
pieces of ham, chicken and pork is made the same way. Material for
barbecuing should be hung for six to seven hours, and then covered with
the proper condiments.
Then it is fixed to
a metal fork or skewer and held over a strong charcoal fire. Constant
turning of the fork is necessary to ensure even roasting. In barbecuing
a whole pig the skin should be punctured before roasting to secure an
even surface at the end of the operation.
The material to be
roasted is hung inside the oven, and both openings are closed. The
result is identical with that of a modern gas or electric oven. When
the meat is finished roasting it is soft, moist and ready to serve.