Chinese culture food can be roughly divided into the Northern and Southern styles of
cooking. In general, Northern Chinese cooking dishes are oily without being cloying, and the
flavors of vinegar and garlic tend to be more pronounced. Pasta plays an
important role in Northern Chinese cooking; noodles, ravioli-like dumplings, steamed
stuffed buns, fried meat dumplings, and steamed bread are favored flour-based
treats. the cooking of Peking, Tientsin, and Shantung are perhaps the best known
area styles of Northern Chinese cuisine.
Representing Southern Chinese cooking styles are Szechwan and Hunan cuisine, famous
for their liberal use of chili peppers; the Kiangsu and Chekiang styles, which
emphasize freshness and tenderness; and Cantonese food, which tends to be
somewhat sweet, and full of variety. Rice and rice products such as rice
noodles, rice cakes, and rice congee, are the usual accompaniments to Southern
style cooking. In Chinese cooking, color aroma, and flavor share equal
importance in the preparation of each dish. Normally, any one entree will
combine three to five colors, selected from ingredients that are light green,
dark green, red, yellow, white, black, or caramel-colored. Usually, a meat and
vegetable dish is prepared from one main ingredient and two to three secondary
ingredients of contrasting colors. It is then cooked with the appropriate
method, seasonings and sauce to result in an aesthetically attractive dish.
A dish with a fragrant aroma will whet the appetite. Ingredients that
contribute to a mouthwatering aroma are scallions, fresh ginger root, garlic,
chili peppers, wine, star anise, stick cinnamon, pepper, sesame oil, dried
Chinese black mushrooms, and so forth. Of foremost importance in cooking any
dish is preserving the fresh, natural flavor of the ingredients, and removing
any undesirable fishy or gamey odors. In Western cooking, lemon is often used to
remove fishy flavors; in Chinese cooking, scallions and ginger serve a similar
function. Soy sauce, sugar, vinegar, and other seasonings add richness to a dish
without covering up the natural flavor of the ingredients. A well-prepared dish
will be rich to those who like strong flavors, not over spiced to those who like
a blander taste, sweet to those who like a sweet flavor, and hot to those who
like a piquant flavor. A dish that is all of these things to all of these people
is a truly successful dish.
Color, aroma, and flavor are not the only principles to be followed in
Chinese cooking; nutrition of course the first concern. A theory of the
harmonization of foods can be traced back to the Shang
dynasty (Chinese culture 16th to 11th century B.C.) scholar Yi Yin. He related the five flavors
of sweet, sour, bitter, piquant, and salty to the nutritional needs of the five
major organ Systems of the body (the heart, liver, spleen/pancreas, lungs, and
kidneys), and stresses their role in maintaining good physical health. In fact,
many of the plants used in Chinese cooking, such as scallions, fresh ginger
root, garlic, dried lily buds, tree fungus, and so forth have properties of
preventing and alleviating various illnesses. The
Chinese culture have a traditional
belief in the medicinal value of food, and that food and medicine share the same
origin. This view could be considered a forerunner of nutritional science of
China. Notable in this theory is the concept that a correct proportion of meat
to vegetable ingredients should be maintained; one third of meat-based food
should be vegetable ingredients, and one-third of vegetable-based dishes should
be meat. In preparing soups, the quantity of water used should total
seven-tenths the volume of the serving bowl. In short, the correct ingredient
proportions must be adhered to be in the preparation of each dish or soup in
order to ensure full nutritional value.
The Chinese culture have a number of rules and customs associated
with eating. For example, meals must be taken while seated; there is a set order
of who may be seated first among men, women, old and young; and the main courses
must be eaten arranged on a per table basis, with each table usually seating ten
to twelve persons. A typical banquet consists of four appetizer dishes, such as
cold cut platters or hot hors d'oeuvres; six to eight main courses; then one
savory snack-type fish and a dessert. The methods of preparation include
stir-frying, stewing, steaming, deep-frying, flash-frying, pan-frying, and so
forth. A dish may be savory, sweet, tart, or piquant. The main colors of a dish
may include red, yellow,
green, white and caramel color. Food garnishes, such as cut or sculptured
tomatoes, Chinese white radishes, cucumbers, and so forth, may be used to add to
the visual appeal of a dish. All of these elements contribute to making Chinese
food a true feast for the eyes and nostrils as well as the taste buds.
In the cosmopolitan world,
Chinese culture food is available in
practically most cities around the world. However, experts tend to agree that
Taipei is the on place in the world where you can find the "genuine" version of
just about any kind of Chinese food imaginable. In fact, in any large city or
little village in Taiwan, you do not have to walk very far to find a small
restaurant; a few more steps will take you to a large and elaborate one. Even in
home cooking, whether for everyday family meals or entertaining guests, food is
prepared with sophistication and variety. Northern style dishes may included
peking duck, smoked chicken, chafing dishes with sliced lamb, fish slices in
sauce, beef with green pepper, and dried scallops with Chinese white radish
balls. Representative of the Southern style of cooking are duck smoked with
camphor and tea, chicken baked in salt, honey glazed ham, flash-fried shrimp,
eggplant in soy sauce, Szechwan style bean curd... the variety is endless.