Guangdong cuisine is
unique among the Chinese cuisines. Its raw materials,
cooking methods, and flavorings all differ from the
other cuisines. Guangdong is located in southern China.
Bordered by the mountain ranges to the north and the
South China Sea to the south, it has long been separated
from the hinterland. In ancient times the Baiyue people
lived there, but many immigrants from the hinterland
moved in during the Qin and Han Dynasties. The dietetic
culture of Guangdong has retained many eating habits
and customs of the ancient people, such as eating snakes.
In short, to the people of Guangdong, everything that
walks, crawls, flies, or swims is edible. Many of these
strange foods no longer appeal to today’s refined tastes,
and some have been eliminated out of respect for the
eating habits of people in other areas, but some strange
foods still remain.
The most famous dish, Dragon and
Tiger Fight, is a dish of braised snake and leopard.
It has even been served as the main course at important
banquets. Other famous dishes are dragon, tiger, and
phoenix with chrysanthemum (snake, leopard, and chicken),
braised phoenix liver and snake slices (chicken liver
and snake), and stir-fried shredded snake meat in five
colors.
Since the Ming and Qing Dynasties, Guangdong
has become more prosperous, and it has developed closer
contacts with the hinterland. As Western culture has
been introduced, Guangdong cuisine has absorbed the
cooking skills of the West as well as the cooking skills
of other Chinese regions to develop its own unique
methods. The most characteristic cooking methods are
cooking in salt, cooking in wine, baking in a pan,
and soft – frying.
Cooking in salt means the preserved
ingredient (a whole chicken, for example) is buried
in heated salt until it is well done. The most famous
of these dishes is Salt – Cooked Chicken from Dongjiang.
Cooking in wine means the main ingredient is steamed
in alcoholic vapor. The most typical dish is twin pigeons
cooked in rose wine. Two cleaned pigeons on two chopsticks
are placed in an earthen bowl so as to keep them away
from the bottom. Place a cup of rose wine between the
pigeons, then put the bowl inside an iron pot and heat
the pot until the pigeons are well done. Half a cup
of wine will remain without the slightest smell of
wine, but the pigeons will have acquired an appealing
fragrance of rose wine.
Baking in a pan means the ingredients
are put in an iron pan with a cast iron lid. The pan
is covered with a red – hot cast – iron lid and heated
until the dish is done. A typical dish of this type
is baked egg.
Soft – frying is another unique cooking
method of the Guangdong cuisine. The main ingredients
are liquid or semi – liquid, such as fresh milk and
minced chicken. The technique is: heat the pan over
a hot fire, then pour some oil in the pan to coat the
bottom, Add a little more oil and stir in the ingredients
over a medium to low fire. Typical dishes are stir
– fried fresh milk and stir – fried eggs.
Guangdong
cuisine emphasizes seafood, and unique, mixed flavorings.
For example, one flavoring liquid is a mixture prepared
from onion, garlic, sugar, salt, and spices. The gravy
is prepared from a mixture of peanut oil, ginger, onion,
Shaoxing rice wine, crystallized sugar, anise, cassia
bark, licorice root, clove, ginger powder, dried tangerine
peel, and Momordica grosuvenori. Spiced salt is prepared
from refined salt, sugar, powdered spices, and anise.
These flavorings, along with other favorite condiments
such as oyster sauce, fish sauce, clam oil, and curry,
give Guangdong cuisine its unique taste.
Guangdong
cuisine is divided into three branches: Guangdong food
is traditional Guangdong cuisine; Chaozhou food is
similar to Fujian cuisine because Chaozhou neighbors
Fujian Province. It stresses seafood and many dishes
are served in soup. Its flavors are thick, delicious,
and sweet. Cooks like to use fish sauce, hot sauce
and red vinegar. Dongjiang food, which is represented
by Huizhou food, emphasizes domestic animals and poultry.
Its dishes are slightly salty with simple sauces. Guangdong
cuisine has been heavily influenced by foreign cooking
cultures.
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