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| Fujian Cuisine |
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Fujian cuisine, also called Min Cai for short, holds an important
position in China's culinary art. Fujian's economy and culture began
flourishing after the Southern Song Dynasty (1127-1279). During
the middle Qing Dynasty around 18th century, famous Fujian officials
and literati promoted the Fujian cuisine so it gradually spread
to other parts of China.
Fujian cuisine comprises three branches -- Fuzhou, South Fujian
and West Fujian. There are slight differences among them. Fuzhou
dishes, quite popular in eastern, central and northern Fujian
Province, are more fresh, delicious, and less salty, sweet, and
sour; South Fujian dishes, popular in Xiamen, Quanzhou, Zhangzhou
and the golden triangle of South Fujian, are sweet and hot and
use hot sauces, custard, and orange juice as flavorings; West
Fujian dishes are salty and hot, prevailing in Hakka region with
strong local flavor. As Fujian people emigrate overseas, their
cuisine become popular in Taiwan and abroad. Generally speaking,
Fujian dishes are slightly sweet and sour, and less salty, and
often use the red distiller's grain for flavoring.
Fujian cuisine is characterized by the following four aspects:
(1)Ingredients of seafood and mountain delicacies: Fujian cuisine
emphasizes seafood and mountain delicacies. Fujian Province has
a favorable geographical location with mountains in its north
and sea to its south. Many mountain delicacies such as mushroom,
bamboo shoots and tremella are often found here. The coastal area
produces 167 varieties of fish and 90 kinds of turtles and shellfish.
It also produces edible bird's nest, cuttlefish, and sturgeon.
These special products are all used in Fujian cuisine. The local
people are good at cooking seafood, featuring in methods of stewing,
boiling, braising, quick-boiling, and steaming, etc.
(2) Fine slicing techniques: Fujian cuisine stresses on fine
slicing techniques so much that it is reputed as sliced ingredients
are as thin as paper and shredded as slim as hairs. Everything
sliced serves its original aroma. Fine slicing techniques may
better show the aroma and texture of food. Cutting is important
in Fujian cuisine. Most dishes are made of seafood, and if the
seafood is not cut well, the dishes will fail to have their true
flavor.
(3) Various soup and broth: The most characteristic aspect of
Fujian cuisine is that its dishes are served in soup.
(4) Exquisite culinary art: Fujian dishes are tasty because of
their emphasis on a series of delicate procession: selecting ingredients,
mixing flavors, timing the cooking and controlling the heat. When
a dish is less salty, it tastes more delicious. Sweetness makes
a dish tastier, while sourness helps remove the seafood smell.
Typical dishes are Buddha-jumping-over-the-wall, flaked spiral
shell lightly pickled in rice liquor, litchi fish, and mussels
quick-boiled in chicken broth, of which Buddha-jumping-over-the-wall
is the most famous; the name implies the dish is so delicious
that even the Buddha would jump over a wall to have a taste once
he smelled it. A mixture of seafood, chicken, duck, and pork is
put into a rice-wine jar and simmered over a low fire. Sea mussel
quick-boiled in chicken soup is another Fujian delicacy. |
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