Chinese Culture >> Chinese Food Articles >> Chinese Food Style
Food is an important part of daily life for Chinese people.
Chinese not only enjoy eating but believe eating good food can bring harmony and
closeness to the family and relationships. Shopping daily for fresh food is
essential for all Chinese Cooking. Unlike the fast food society of the U.S., the
Chinese select live seafood, fresh meats and seasonal fruits and vegetables from
the local market to ensure freshness. This means swimming fish, snappy crabs,
and squawking chickens. Even prepared foods such as dim sum or BBQ duck for to
go orders must gleam, glisten, and steam as if just taken out of the oven.
Chinese people in general are not as concerned about nutrition as Western
culture. They are more concerned with the food's texture, flavor, color, and
aroma. These are the crucial points for good Chinese
cooking. Chinese daily
meals consist of four food groups: grains, vegetables, fruit, and meat. Because
of lactose intolerance, Chinese do not consume large amounts of dairy products.
Instead, Chinese substitute these with soymilk and tofu, which also contain
large amounts of protein and calcium. Vegetables, fruits, and meats are usually
fresh. Some exceptions include preserved vegetables such as snow cabbage or
mustard greens, preserved eggs, aka "thousand year old eggs" or salted and dried
fish. Other exceptions include snack items such as beef jerky, cuttlefish jerky,
sweet and sour preserved plums, or dehydrated mango slices.
Canned or frozen foods are seldom eaten. Western desserts such as cookies,
cakes, pies, and ice cream are eaten only on special occasions such as birthdays
and weddings. After dinner, families usually eat seasonal fruit as dessert.
Chinese desserts such as red bean soup, sweet white lotus's seed soup, or steam
papaya soup are served every so often as a special treat on a hot summer's
night.
Ethnic Chinese cooking does not involve a lot of deep fried cooking. The reason
most of the Chinese restaurants in America have deep-fried dishes such as sweet
and sour pork, almond fried Chicken, and deep-fried shrimp is to promote
business and to please western tastes. This clearly reflects why there are more
overweight and high blood pressure concerns in Western culture than there are in
Chinese culture.
Such an ethnic
Chinese food mingled with Traditional Indian food can be enjoyed
in Indo Munch Restaurant which is and Indian Chinese Fusion Cuisine.
About the Author
Representing http://www.indomunch.com