Cooking Chinese Food

0

Posted by admin | Posted in Cooking Adventures | Posted on 11-04-2011

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

 
 

Cooking Chinese Food
Cooking Chinese Food

A Little Bit About Chinese Food

In China, food and its preparation has been developed so highly that it has reached the status of an art form. Rich and poor, the Chinese people consider that delicious and nutritious food is a basic necessity. There is an old Chinese saying “Food is the first necessity of the people”.

This art has been cultivated and refined over hundreds of years. Legend has it that the culture of Chinese cuisine originated in the 15th century BC during the Shang dynasty and was originally introduced by Yi Yin, it’s first Prime Minister.

The two dominant philosophies of Chinese culture both had extreme influences on the political and economic history of the country but it is less well known that they also influenced the development of the culinary arts.

Confucius emphasized the artistic and social aspects of cookery and eating. The Chinese don’t gather together without involving food – it is considered to be poor etiquette to invite friends to your home without providing appropriate food.

Confucius established standards of cooking and table etiquette, most of which remain to this day. The most obvious example of this is the cutting of bite-sized pieces of meat and vegetables during the course of the food preparation in the kitchen, rather than using a knife at the table which is not considered to be good manners.

Confucius also encouraged the blending of ingredients and flavourings to become a cohesive dish, rather than tasting the individual components. Harmony was his priority. He believed and taught that without harmony of ingredients there could be no taste. He also emphasized the importance of presentation and the use of colour, texture and decoration of a dish. Most importantly, cooking became an art rather than a task to be endured and certainly he was instrumental in promulgating the philosophy of “live to eat” rather than “eat to live”.

On the other hand, Tao encouraged research into the nourishment aspects of food and cookery. Rather than concentrating on taste and appearance, Taoists were more interested in the life-giving properties of food.

Centuries on, the Chinese have discovered the health-giving properties of all sorts of roots, herbs, fungus and plants. They have taught the world that the nutritional value of vegetables is destroyed by over-cooking (particularly boiling) and in addition have found that things with a great flavour also have medicinal value.

Home cooked Chinese food is extremely healthy, even though much of it is fried. This is due to the use of polyunsaturated oils (used only once and discarded) and the exclusion of dairy products. In addition the inclusion of animal fat is minimal because portions of meat are small.

About the Author

Find tips about potato facts and how to bake a potato at the Fruits And Vegetables website.

What Cookbook Is Best For Authentic Chinese Food?

I’m looking for a cookbook that will allow me to cook Chinese food that resembles the food found in restaurants.

ie. crispy General Tao’s Chicken, Spring Rolls, etc…

I especially enjoy “The Thousand Recipe Chinese Cook Book”. It has many recipes plus terminology. Is quite large with over 800 pages.

Learn how to cook Chinese food – Shrimp with Vegetables dish

Fried Rice with Bacon, Potatoes, and Onion / Cooking Chinese Food

 

Cooking Chinese Food
Cooking Bok Choy

Top Ten Chinese Food Recipes

Chinese food is a great way to expand your personal recipe book, especially if you love to use simple, fresh ingredients with quick cooking time. These top ten dishes are famous all over the world, and are must-haves in your collection of Chinese food recipes.

Fried Rice – A must have dish in Chinese restaurants, fried rice is the ultimate Chinese food, and can be one of the most flexible in your cookbook because you can use leftover rice and ingredients to make it.  Of course, you can use fresh ingredients but it’s best to use rice that has been kept in the fridge overnight for best results. Ingredients usually involved in making fried rice are eggs, scallions, diced meat of either beef, chicken or pork, ham, shrimps and vegetables such as celery, peas, carrots, bean sprouts and corn. There are many varieties of fried rice but the more popular ones are the Yangchow and Fujian fried rice.

Kung Pao Chicken – Kung Pao chicken or Kung Po chicken is a Chinese dish from Szechuan cuisine and is considered to be a delicacy. The recipe for this mouth watering dish commonly calls for diced chicken that is pre-seasoned and quickly stir-fried with unsalted roasted peanuts, red bell peppers, rice wine or sherry, hoisin sauce, sesame oil, oyster sauce, and chili peppers. Alternatively, you can use prawn, scallops, beef or pork in place of the chicken.

Moo Shu Pork – This is a dish of northern Chinese origin and a favorite of many. Ingredients in a Mu Xu pork recipe often include green cabbage, wood ear mushrooms, scrambled eggs, carrots, bean sprouts, day lily buds and scallions. Celery, onions, bell peppers, snow pea pods, bok choy and Shiitake mushrooms are occasionally used. The vegetables are cut into long and thin strips before cooking, with the exception for bean sprouts and day lily buds. Fried Mu Xu pork is then wrapped in moo shu pancakes that is brushed with hoisin sauce and eaten by hand. Moo shu pancakes are thin wrappers made of flour that is easily available in supermarkets and steamed just before eating.

General Tso’s Chicken – General Tso’s chicken is a Hunan dish that tastes spicy and sweet and very popular in Chinese restaurants in America and Canada where it’s often marked as a “chef’s specialty”. General Tso’s Chicken recipe commonly involves battered chicken deep-fried and marinated with hot chili peppers, scallions, sugar, Shaoxing wine, sesame oil, soy sauce, rice vinegar, garlic and ginger.

Egg Rolls – Egg rolls are one of the most popular Chinese foods, and for good reason. This savory roll is made by wrapping a combination of chopped cabbage and meats and sometimes noodles in a sheet of dough. It is then dipped in egg and deep fried to perfection. Egg rolls are generally bigger in size  than its cousin spring roll, its skin is thicker and crunchier; and have more filling.

Fortune Cookies – Chinese cooking would simply not be complete without the addition of a recipe for fortune cookies. The ingrediesnts you need to make these treats are some sugar, flour, eggs and vanilla extract, making them a simple way to add some fun to your home cooked Chinese food.

Orange Chicken – This appetizing  Chinese dish is made of chicken chopped into bite size pieces and battered, and then fried with thick sweet and spicy chili sauce flavored with orange. The traditionally Chinese recipe for orange peel chicken as it’s sometimes called, is to deep fry the chicken first and then stir fry it in a lightly sweet soy-based sauce flavored with dried orange peels. Vegetables like baby carrots and bok choy are used as the garnishing. However, cooks in Western restaurants do not use dried orange peel but rather orange juice or fresh orange peel and a substantial amount of sugar to make the sauce. Chili peppers and steamed broccoli are used as garnishing instead.

Sweet and Sour Pork – This savory-sweet famous Chinese dish is of Cantonese origin. It is a good dish to prepare when you are planning on having guests, who will be wildly impressed with your cooking skill. As with other Chinese food recipes, the key to making a great Sweet and Sour Pork dish is in the sauce made of sugar, ketchup, white vinegar, and soy sauce. Its ingredients include pork, onion, bell pepper and pineapple chopped into bite size pieces.

Mapo Dofu – Mapo doufu or Mapo tofu is a popular Chinese dish from the Szechuan province. Ingredients used for this recipe include tofu or beancurd, and minced beef or pork cooked in a bright red spicy sauce based on chili.

Chop Suey – Chop suey or “za sui” or “shap sui” literally means ‘mixed pieces’ is an American-Chinese dish usually employs leftover vegetables and meats stir fried quickly in a sauce thickened with starch. It is a great dish when you need to use up the last of yesterday’s chicken or pork roast and can incorporate meats of any kind such as pork, shrimp, beef, fish or chicken and various vegetables from bean sprouts to cabbage and celery. Chop Suey is often eaten with rice.

About the Author

Chinese Food Recipes is an online recipe and cooking website offering plenty of free Chinese recipes and Asian recipes.

 

Cooking Dungeness Crab….


Secura 3-Tier 6-Quart Stainless Steel Electric Food Cooker Rice Steamer, w/ Steam360 technology S-324 Secura 3-Tier 6-Quart Stainless Steel Electric Food Cooker Rice Steamer, w/ Steam360 technology S-324
List Price: $100.99
Sale Price: $69.98
You save: $31.01 (31%)
See Reviews For This Product
 

Description

Package includes: Steamer base, 3 steam basket sets, see through lid, heater cap.

Melissa & Doug Stir Fry Slicing Set Melissa & Doug Stir Fry Slicing Set
List Price: $19.99
Sale Price: $9.99
You save: $10.00 (50%)
See Reviews For This Product
 

Description

3 years & up. Mix up some quick and easy healthy stir fry with this wooden set that includes shrimp, mushrooms, snow peas, bok choi, knife, spoon, and chopsticks in a wok. 23 pieces

Joyce Chen 10-Inch Bamboo Steamer Set Joyce Chen 10-Inch Bamboo Steamer Set
List Price: $25.99
Sale Price: $14.88
You save: $11.11 (43%)
See Reviews For This Product
 

Description

Joyce Chen opened her first restaurant in Cambridge, Massachusetts in 1958. She found that the selection and quality of Chinese cookware in America didn't live up to her high standards… so she developed her own...

Joyce Chen Stainless Steel Strainer,  7 Inch Joyce Chen Stainless Steel Strainer, 7 Inch
List Price: $12.99
Sale Price: $7.86
You save: $5.13 (39%)
See Reviews For This Product
 

Description

Joyce Chen opened her first restaurant in Cambridge, Massachusetts in 1958. She found that the selection and quality of Chinese cookware in America didn't live up to her high standards… so she developed her own...

Joyce Chen J26-0054 6-Quart 3-Tier Chinese Steamer Joyce Chen J26-0054 6-Quart 3-Tier Chinese Steamer
List Price: $119.95
Sale Price: $64.95
You save: $55.00 (46%)
See Reviews For This Product
 

Description

This dutiful 3-tier stainless-steel cookware is a family-size steamer, a stock pot, a colander and it's built to last a lifetime. The 6 quart pot has an encapsulated aluminum clad bottom for quick and even heating...

Farberware Classic Stack 'N Steam 3-Quart Saucepot and Steamer Farberware Classic Stack 'N Steam 3-Quart Saucepot and Steamer
List Price: $29.99
Sale Price: $25.50
You save: $4.49 (15%)
See Reviews For This Product
 

Description

Functional as well as beautiful, this 3-quart saucepot and 2-quart steamer insert are made of heavy 18/10 stainless steel polished to a mirror finish. The pot has an aluminum core in its base to spread heat quickly and evenly...

Benriner Japanese Mandoline Slicer Benriner Japanese Mandoline Slicer
List Price: $39.95
Sale Price: $21.80
You save: $18.15 (45%)
See Reviews For This Product
 

Description

The Benriner Slicer is a professional piece of equipment that no chef should be without. Its sharp super high quality stainless steel blades provide a clean and sharp cut to any vegetable. It comes equipped with 4 different blades giving you the ability to slice in many various ways...

Norpro Deluxe 3-Piece Bamboo Steamer Set Norpro Deluxe 3-Piece Bamboo Steamer Set
List Price: $17.99
Sale Price: $14.14
You save: $3.85 (21%)
See Reviews For This Product
 

Description

Norpro's three-piece bamboo steamer set could steam a whole meal. At 10 inches in diameter and 6-1/4 inches high, it is large enough for eight pork buns (there's a recipe on the box) on one level and a mound of broccoli, carrots, and snap peas on the other...

To-Go Ware 3 Tier Stainless Steel Food Carrier To-Go Ware 3 Tier Stainless Steel Food Carrier
Sale Price: $24.95
See Reviews For This Product
 

Description

How often do you find yourself tossing away food containers? Even if you pack your own lunch, are you reusing containers and packaging, or finding yourself creating more waste than you might like to . ...

Cuisinart 726-38H Chef's Classic Stainless 14-Inch Stir-Fry Pan with Helper Handle and Glass Cover Cuisinart 726-38H Chef's Classic Stainless 14-Inch Stir-Fry Pan with Helper Handle and Glass Cover
List Price: $100.00
Sale Price: $28.24
You save: $71.76 (72%)
See Reviews For This Product
 

Description

Cuisinart is pleased to offer an exciting new variety of specialty pieces of Chef's Classic Stainless Cookware that make everyday cooking tasks a pleasure.






Chinese Cooking Made Easy


Chinese Cooking Made Easy


$9.06


Chinese Cooking Made Easy

Chinese Cooking Cantonese


Chinese Cooking Cantonese


$5.98


Chinese Cooking Cantonese

Chinese Immigrant Cooking


Chinese Immigrant Cooking


$23.96


Chinese Immigrant Cooking

Knack Chinese Cooking:


Knack Chinese Cooking:


$13.96


Knack Chinese Cooking

Homestyle Chinese Cooking


Homestyle Chinese Cooking


$5.98


Homestyle Chinese Cooking

The Best of Chinese Cooking


The Best of Chinese Cooking


$7.98


The Best of Chinese Cooking

Simple Chinese Cooking


Simple Chinese Cooking


$20.97


Simple Chinese Cooking

Mastering the Art of Chinese Cooking


Mastering the Art of Chinese Cooking


$31.49


Mastering the Art of Chinese Cooking

Quick and Easy Chinese Cooking:


Quick and Easy Chinese Cooking:


$13.56


Quick and Easy Chinese Cooking

Classic Chinese Cooking:


Classic Chinese Cooking:


$19.78


Classic Chinese Cooking






Write a comment

SEO Powered By SEOPressor