thread of pictures of real chinese food

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My dad has been known to make marinades and sauces with ketchup. You can make a pretty good 红烧 anything with it

乒乓, Friday, 22 November 2013 14:59 (twelve years ago)

i never see it in the north though, i don't think. maybe i do. i wanted to speculate about the conservativeness of northern foodways vs. cantonese cuisine's or the cantonese eater's approach to outside influences or maybe ketchup came via hk.

dylannn, Friday, 22 November 2013 15:25 (twelve years ago)

It'll catch pretty soon I think

It's very suited to the Chinese palate

It's also true that it's been in HK since forever, and not the American kind either

Most of the big HK saucehouses have their own version

http://i.imgur.com/yTpgVl0.jpg

乒乓, Friday, 22 November 2013 15:27 (twelve years ago)

northerners do cook with it, too. but yeah they love their ketchup in the south, mh.

dylannn, Friday, 22 November 2013 15:43 (twelve years ago)

makes sense, thanks!

mh, Friday, 22 November 2013 16:31 (twelve years ago)

http://travel.cnn.com/explorations/eat/40-taiwanese-food-296093

Taiwanese food is seriously incredible

Inspired to make an oyster omelette tonight

乒乓, Sunday, 24 November 2013 18:11 (twelve years ago)

what are the best chinese dishes with game birds

carla jenkinvingne (nakhchivan), Sunday, 24 November 2013 20:24 (twelve years ago)

I went to a place in Beijing that put something like 7+ different kinds of game birds into a big soup

Some of the birds were really tiny

There drumsticks were comically sized and hard to eat

The bones could function as toothpicks afterwards

乒乓, Sunday, 24 November 2013 20:42 (twelve years ago)

But in general I think duck and goose are staples, and you can get them every which way

乒乓, Sunday, 24 November 2013 20:42 (twelve years ago)

the idea of putting them in a soup is that it boils all the meat off the tiny bones i guess

carla jenkinvingne (nakhchivan), Sunday, 24 November 2013 20:49 (twelve years ago)

duck and goose work well in all sorts of cuisines, especially those with ample source of umami/sourness/sweetness to complement the fattiness, game birds have more flavour but are mostly very lean

carla jenkinvingne (nakhchivan), Sunday, 24 November 2013 20:50 (twelve years ago)

Yeah that's true although my favorite duck preparation doesn't use sourness/sweetness at all

http://i.imgur.com/fRLHFY8.jpg

The end result is quite lean and gamey, probably due to the smoking process. I'm not sure where the fat goes

Plum sauce is definitely a thing but there are many different ways of eating a duck

I'm not aware of any broadly popular recipes that call for a game bird

But I'm sure there are some regions of China that will use a game bird in a regional specialty

乒乓, Sunday, 24 November 2013 21:40 (twelve years ago)

Do pigeons count as game birds

You can see how some people have chosen to cook pigeon here

http://www.meishichina.com/YuanLiao/GeZi/1/

乒乓, Sunday, 24 November 2013 21:50 (twelve years ago)

yeah pigeons count

a poet and Educational Consultant based in Peterborough (nakhchivan), Sunday, 24 November 2013 22:25 (twelve years ago)

Mom uncorked a bottle of Great Wall red wine for some reason

http://i975.photobucket.com/albums/ae232/daggerlee/7A4233FC-0C7D-4844-B704-BC727DF479FA_zpsln9pbp3k.jpg

We've had it for god knows how long

Tastes awful. Really dry and bitter

乒乓, Thursday, 28 November 2013 18:48 (twelve years ago)

Looks awesome, about as appealing as licking red vermouth off my carpet.

fields of salmon, Thursday, 28 November 2013 19:28 (twelve years ago)

http://www.npr.org/blogs/codeswitch/2013/12/02/248195661/ketchup-the-all-american-condiment-that-comes-from-asia?ft=1&f=1015

Wow you could argue that ketchup came from China originally. Crazy world. Globalization. Trade.

乒乓, Tuesday, 3 December 2013 22:14 (twelve years ago)

Kind of funny "ketchup" just meant a sauce originally and that tomato ketchup took a while to catch on. Kind of reminds me of the Americanization of "salsa" they mentioned, where it mostly means some runny tomato-based sauce you eat on tortilla chips but is basically just any of a number of sauces.

mh, Wednesday, 4 December 2013 00:40 (twelve years ago)

We're all lactose intolerant.

That's not true, is it!? I drink milk every day!

Matt Groening's Cousin (Leee), Wednesday, 4 December 2013 00:54 (twelve years ago)

one month passes...

http://so.cntv.cn/language/english/?qtext=snacking&type=0

in case the link doesn't work: cctv's snacking across China doc

a lake full of ancient spices (los blue jeans), Sunday, 19 January 2014 04:16 (twelve years ago)

I'm eating real chinese food all the time now

It's fucking amazing

, Sunday, 19 January 2014 04:31 (twelve years ago)

龜 please tell me about a delicious Chinese breakfast

pretty krulls make glaives (flamboyant goon tie included), Sunday, 19 January 2014 04:37 (twelve years ago)

I'm eating real chinese food all the time now

It's fucking amazing

me too/yes, yes it is

quincie, Sunday, 19 January 2014 09:32 (twelve years ago)

I am also curious about actual delicious Chinese breakfast; all I know is that Taipei has tons of great bakeries, so breakfast for me is delicious, delicious bread/pastry. Oh and sometimes noodle soup.

I do not get congee, but I would like to understand the appeal.

quincie, Sunday, 19 January 2014 09:35 (twelve years ago)

quincie just get up in the morning and take a walk and figure out where all the Chinese people are eating and walk in and point at things

, Sunday, 19 January 2014 09:36 (twelve years ago)

http://travel.cnn.com/explorations/eat/40-taiwanese-food-296093

Think I've hit about ten of these in the first week, but have not yet visited a night market (that will happen in the next few days) and will no doubt knock off a bunch of these in one go.

xpost: there is definitely a Taiwan breakfast thing that involves an egg and a thin pancake/crepe type thing that I will try. Also various soup sorts of things. None of these places has an English menu (or any menu, actually), so I will definitely point and say thank you six hundred times and hopefully not come off as a complete asshole.

quincie, Sunday, 19 January 2014 09:42 (twelve years ago)

But still, congee. What is up with that? I like lots of the pickled things, so maybe the idea is to use congee as a vehicle for that stuff? IDGI though, would rather have a nice bowl of rice.

quincie, Sunday, 19 January 2014 09:44 (twelve years ago)

龜 please tell me about a delicious Chinese breakfast

― pretty krulls make glaives (flamboyant goon tie included), Sunday, January 19, 2014 12:37 PM (5 hours ago) Bookmark

I went out for a walk this morning and bought some scallion pancakes from this really nice lady on the street

And this like """pastry""" made with scallions and eggs

, Sunday, 19 January 2014 09:49 (twelve years ago)

It's just like 100x better than what you can get in NYC Chinatown. And I was just there

Like the people are the same but the ingredients, how they cook it, what they cook it on, I think it all makes a difference

Maybe it's the heavy metals + chemicals

But every iteration is just better over here man

, Sunday, 19 January 2014 09:50 (twelve years ago)

But still, congee. What is up with that? I like lots of the pickled things, so maybe the idea is to use congee as a vehicle for that stuff? IDGI though, would rather have a nice bowl of rice.

― quincie, Sunday, January 19, 2014 5:44 PM (5 minutes ago) Bookmark

Yeah you eat the pickled salty things and drink the congee to take the edge off

It's like a chaser

It's an acquired taste

I like to just have congee plain by itself, it's really good for settling your stomach or if you're feeling queasy you know

, Sunday, 19 January 2014 09:51 (twelve years ago)

xpost: there is definitely a Taiwan breakfast thing that involves an egg and a thin pancake/crepe type thing that I will try

I've had this it's really really good

, Sunday, 19 January 2014 09:56 (twelve years ago)

scallion pancakes sound so good

mh, Sunday, 19 January 2014 16:41 (twelve years ago)

http://i.imgur.com/DgatTcJ.jpg

You know what's even better than soup DUMPLINGS!? These lil guys

, Sunday, 26 January 2014 06:44 (twelve years ago)

I have not had those lil guys, but I have had a bigger version (steam bun that gets crisped on the bottom).

Hard to imagine anything better than soup DUMPLINGS!, tho.

quincie, Sunday, 26 January 2014 09:11 (twelve years ago)

I have had "crummy" North American (Canadian) versions of scallion pancakes, for breakfast too, one of my favourite ways to start a day

Been pestering all administrative bodies to get my ass to China asap

pretty krulls make glaives (flamboyant goon tie included), Sunday, 26 January 2014 13:16 (twelve years ago)

The DUMPLINGS! I just posted are also soup DUMPLINGS! they have soup inside of them

It's darker grittier reboot of the soup dumpling

BTW some of the western food is better here than in America too

For example the fancy cheeses are imported from France where they're allowed to use unpasteurized milk

Like I have never really liked brie but my roommate bought some French brie and it was fantastic

, Sunday, 26 January 2014 13:24 (twelve years ago)

China is turning me into a food libertarian

Bathe me in gutter oil

, Sunday, 26 January 2014 13:28 (twelve years ago)

Think my heart just stopped

It's been nice, posting here

, Sunday, 26 January 2014 13:33 (twelve years ago)

Please don't die before I get to Shanghai! That rhymes, see.

quincie, Monday, 27 January 2014 01:52 (twelve years ago)

congee is nice warm comfort food. spiced with ginger and add a dash of pepper and spring onion what's not to like?

^ 諷刺 (ken c), Monday, 27 January 2014 12:14 (twelve years ago)

Surely you're being ironic

, Monday, 27 January 2014 12:39 (twelve years ago)

像你的婚禮當天的雨

^ 諷刺 (ken c), Monday, 27 January 2014 12:50 (twelve years ago)

I have a real chinese food cooking question. Say I am a real chinese home cook, and I'm making something that requires beef or chicken (or fish, or pork, whatevs) broth. What do I do if I'm not equipped to make that stuff from scratch? Do I get a can from the supermarket, or is there a frozen version, or do I go to my local brothmonger and ask for some plain broth to take home?

quincie, Tuesday, 28 January 2014 01:42 (twelve years ago)

You can totally get a can from the supermarket! #nevercookedrealchinesefoodinhislife

Neil Nosepicker (Leee), Tuesday, 28 January 2014 01:49 (twelve years ago)

Honestly have never been to a Chinese person's kitchen that didn't have this in the pantry

http://i.imgur.com/LNyVgTS.jpg

, Tuesday, 28 January 2014 01:50 (twelve years ago)

I don't think beef stock is a big part of Chinese cooking since it wasn't until recently that beef became a part of Chinese cuisine (iirc cows were too valuable in the field to use for food)

Pork bone soup is a big thing but I can't really recall if there are any recipes that call for only pork stock

, Tuesday, 28 January 2014 01:55 (twelve years ago)

Hungry now, FYI.

Neil Nosepicker (Leee), Tuesday, 28 January 2014 02:04 (twelve years ago)

I suppose this is the thread where I confess that I've eaten chicken bouillon powder by the spoonful from the can :(

, Tuesday, 28 January 2014 02:07 (twelve years ago)

Isn't that called the #highlyfe?

Neil Nosepicker (Leee), Tuesday, 28 January 2014 02:09 (twelve years ago)

Hmmmmm OK I'm think the answer is "go out for beef noodle soup, do not try to make at home." Which is fine because there are a couple of places to choose from within a ten-minute walk, and it costs like $7 USD for both of us WITH BEER.

Why would I cook this at home, is the real question.

quincie, Tuesday, 28 January 2014 02:28 (twelve years ago)


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