đặngvũchính

Contents

1-A

1959 Tibetan uprising / Soulèvement tibétain de 1959

2008 Chinese milk scandal 三鹿奶粉污染事件

2008 Summer Olympics torch relay

2008 Tibetan unrest

2009 swine flu outbreak

A-1 Skyraider

Aachen on Google Earth

Aalst on Google Earth

Abidjan on Google Earth

Abu Dhabi on Google Earth

Accademia di Belle Arti Firenze

Acworth, Georgia on Google Earth

Addison, Illinois on Google Earth

Addison on Google Earth

Adelaide on Google Earth

Adelaide travel guide

Aircraft carrier

Ajax, Ontario on Google Earth

AK-47

Alameda on Google Earth

Alba Iulia on Google Earth

Albany, Georgia on Google Earth

Albany on Google Earth

Albright-Knox Art Gallery

Albuquerque, New Mexico on Google Earth

Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn / Алекса́ндр Иса́евич Солжени́цын            

Alert Bay, British Columbia

Alexandria, Minnesota on Google Earth

Alexandria, Virginia on Google Earth

Algeria on Google Earth

Algiers on Google Earth

Alicante on Google Earth

Alief on Google Earth

Allen on Google Earth

Allston on Google Earth

Alte Nationalgalerie

Altenberge on Google Earth

Altes Museum

Altus, Oklahoma on Google Earth

Alviso on Google Earth

Ambler, Pennsylvania on Google Earth

American Fork, Utah on Google Earth

Amman on Google Earth

Amsterdam

Amsterdam on Google Earth and in pictures

Anaheim on Google Earth

Anchorage, Alaska on Google Earth

Anda (Heilongjiang) 安达 on Google Earth

Andover on Google Earth

Andreas Everardus van Braam Houckgeest

Angers on Google Earth

Angkor Wat on Google Earth

Angleur on Google Earth

Ānkāng (Shaanxi) 安康 on Google Earth

Ankara on Google Earth

Anna Akhmatova / А́нна Ахма́това

Annandale, Virginia

Ann Arbor, Michigan on Google Earth

Annecy on Google Earth

Ānqìng (Anhui) on Google Earth

Ānshān (Liaoning) on Google Earth

Antwerp on Google Earth

Ānyáng (Henan) on Google Earth

Apeldoorn on Google Earth

Appleton, Wisconsin on Google Earth

Arcata on Google Earth

Arc de Triomphe

Arcola, Pennsylvania on Google Earth

Arcueil on Google Earth

Argenteuil on Google Earth

Argentina

Arken Museum of Modern Art

Arlington County, Virginia on Google Earth

Arnhem on Google Earth

Artesia on Google Earth

Art Institute of Chicago I

Art Institute of Chicago II

Art museum

Arvada, Colorado on Google Earth

Asheville, North Carolina on Google Earth

A Tale of Red Guards and Cannibals

Athens, Georgia on Google Earth

Athens, Ohio on Google Earth

Athens on Google Earth

Athlone on Google Earth

Atlanta, Georgia on Google Earth

Atlas of Vietnam

Aubervilliers on Google Earth

Auburn, Michigan on Google Earth

Auckland

Aurora, Illinois on Google Earth

Austin, Texas

Austin, Texas on Google Earth and in pictures            

Australia on Google Earth

Australia travel guide

Austria

Aveiro on Google Earth

Ayer on Google Earth

B

Bắc Hà travel guide

Bada Shanren 八大山人

Báichéng (Jilin) 白城 on Google Earth

Ba Jin 巴金

Bakersfield on Google Earth

Baldwinsville on Google Earth

Baltimore, Maryland on Google Earth

Baltimore Museum of Art

Bandar Seri Begawan on Google Earth

Bandung on Google Earth

Bangalore on Google Earth

Bangkok

Bangkok on Google Earth and in pictures

Bangkok travel guide

Bǎodìng (Hebei) on Google Earth

Bǎojī (Shaanxi) 宝鸡 on Google Earth

Bāotóu (Nei Menggu)

Barack Obama

Barber Institute of Fine Arts

Barberton, Ohio on Google Earth

Barcelona

Barcelona on Google Earth and in pictures

Bargello

Barling, Arkansas on Google Earth

Barranquilla on Google Earth

Barreiro on Google Earth

Bartlett, Illinois on Google Earth

Basilica of St Denis

Bath, Somerset on Google Earth

Baton Rouge, LA on Google Earth

Battle of Palikao

Battle of Pungdo

Battle of Pyongyang

Battle of Red Cliffs 赤壁之战

Battle of Seonghwan

Battle of the Paracel Islands / Hải chiến Hoàng Sa 1974

Battle of the Yalu River (1894)

Bayamón, Puerto Rico on Google Earth

Bāzhōng (Sichuan) on Google Earth

Beaverton, Oregon on Google Earth

Bedford on Google Earth

Beijing

Běijīng

Beijing in 2006-2008 from satellites

Beijing on Google Earth and in pictures

Beijing Television Cultural Center fire 中央电视台新大楼北配楼            

Beijing travel guide

Bekasi on Google Earth

Belgium on Google Earth

Belgrade on Google Earth

Ben Tre on Google Earth

Bến Tre travel guide

Běnxī (Liaoning) 本溪 on Google Earth

Beppu, Ōita on Google Earth

Berlin Cathedral

Berlin on Google Earth and in pictures

Bernard Madoff

Bertem on Google Earth

Biển Đông / South China Sea

Bilbao on Google Earth

Birmingham

Birmingham, Alabama on Google Earth

Birmingham Museum & Art Gallery

Birmingham Museum of Art

Birmingham on Google Earth

Blade-dance of the Two Lovers《鸳鸯刀》            

Bloomsbury

Bode Museum

Bogotá on Google Earth

Bonn on Google Earth

Bordeaux on Google Earth

Borgerhout on Google Earth

Boston on Google Earth and in pictures

Botticelli paintings in the Uffizi

Boulogne-Billancourt on Google Earth

Brantford, Ontario on Google Earth

Brazil on Google Earth

Bremerton, Washington on Google Earth           

Brighton on Google Earth

Brisbane

Brisbane on Google Earth

Bristol City Museum and Art Gallery

Bristol on Google Earth

Brno on Google Earth

Brunei on Google Earth

Brussels

Brussels on Google Earth and in pictures           

Bucharest on Google Earth

Budapest

Budapest on Google Earth

Buddhism / Phật giáo / Bouddhisme

Buenos Aires

Buffalo, New York on Google Earth

Bulgaria on Google Earth

Buôn Ma Thuột

Butterworth, Penang on Google Earth

C

Cambodia

Cambridge, Massachusetts on Google Earth

Cambridge on Google Earth

Camp Hale

Cam Ranh

Canada on Google Earth

Canada travel guide

Canberra on Google Earth and in pictures

Cần Thơ

Cần Thơ travel guide

Cantonese cuisine

Cao Bang on Google Earth

Cao Bằng travel guide

Capua on Google Earth

Cardiff on Google Earth

Carla Bruni

Castro Valley, California on Google Earth

Centerport, New York on Google Earth

Chàm Islands travel guide

Champaign, Illinois on Google Earth

Chángchūn (Jilin) 长春 on Google Earth

Changde (Hunan) 常德 on Google Earth

Chángshā (Hunan) on Google Earth

Chángshú on Google Earth

Chángzhōu (Jiangsu) on Google Earth

Charter 08 《零八宪章》Hiến chương 08

Chaska, Minnesota on Google Earth

Chaudfontaine on Google Earth and in pictures            

Chéngdū (Sichuan) on Google Earth

Chennai on Google Earth

Chiayi on Google Earth

Chicago, IL on Google Earth

Chiến tranh biên giới Việt-Trung, 1979

China

China–France relations

China human rights ads

China on Google Earth

China travel guide

Chinese architecture

Chinese Civil War 国共内战

Chinese cuisine

Chinese New Year

Chinese painting

Chiyoda on Google Earth

Chonburi on Google Earth เทศบาลเมืองชลบุรี

Chóngqìng on Google Earth

Cinema of China

Cinema of Hong Kong

Cinema of Japan

Cinema of Taiwan

City of London

Clamart on Google Earth

Classical sculptures in the Uffizi

Clearwater, Kansas on Google Earth

Clécy

Clerkenwell

Cloverdale, British Columbia on Google Earth

Collection of the National Gallery 2

Collection of the National Gallery, London

Collections of the Uffizi

Collections of the Uffizi 2

Cologne on Google Earth

Colombia on Google Earth

Columbus, Ohio on Google Earth

Côn Đảo travel guide

Condé-sur-Noireau

Confucianism 儒家思想

Contents of my 2nd Site

Copenhagen on Google Earth and in pictures

Corona on Google Earth

Côte d'Ivoire on Google Earth

Covington, Louisiana on Google Earth

Croatia on Google Earth

Cuc Phuong national park on Google Earth

Cúc Phương National Park travel guide

Cù Lao Chàm on Google Earth

Culemborg on Google Earth

Cultural Revolution 文化大革命

Culver City on Google Earth

Czech Republic on Google Earth

G-H

Garden City, Michigan on Google Earth

Garden Grove on Google Earth

Garland on Google Earth

Gemäldegalerie (Berlin)

Gemäldegalerie (Berlin) part 2

George Orwell

Germany on Google Earth

Giuseppe Castiglione 郎世宁

Glen Burnie, Maryland on Google Earth

Global financial crisis of September–October 2008

Goleta, California on Google Earth

Gốm Bát Tràng

Gong Li

Google Earth

Google Street View

Gothenburg on Google Earth

Great Chinese Famine 三年困难时期

Great Learning 《大学》/ Đại học

Greece on Google Earth

Green Dam Youth Escort 绿坝·花季护航

Guangdong on Google Earth

Guangzhou on Google Earth and in pictures

Guerres de l'opium

Guerre sino-vietnamienne

Guggenheim Museum Bilbao

Guìlín (Guangxi) on Google Earth

Guimet Museum

Guìyáng (Guizhou) on Google Earth

Gvarv on Google Earth

Hải chiến Trường Sa 1988 / Naval battle in Spratly 1988

Hǎikǒu (Hainan) on Google Earth

Hainan Island incident

Hainan Submarine Base on Google Earth / Căn cứ tàu ngầm đảo Hải Nam            

Hải Phòng on Google Earth

Halifax Regional Municipality on Google Earth

Ha Long Bay on Google Earth

Ha Long Bay travel guide

Hamilton, Ontario

Hándān (Hebei) on Google Earth

Hángzhōu (Zhejiang) on Google Earth

Hanoi

Hà Nội

Hanoi in Life (1900-1973)

Hanoi maps

Hanoi on Google Earth

Hà Nội travel guide

Harbin (Heilongjiang) on Google Earth

Haren (Groningen) on Google Earth

Harrisburg, North Carolina

Harry Wu 吴弘达

Héféi (Anhui) on Google Earth

Hélène Grimaud

Hénanbihen

Héngyáng (Hunan) on Google Earth

Herndon, Virginia on Google Earth

Herve on Google Earth

Héshēn 和珅

High Museum of Art

Hiroshige 歌川广重

Histoire de la Chine

History of China 中国历史

History of Japan

History of the Internet

History of the People's Republic of China (1949–1989)

History of the People's Republic of China (1989–present)

History of the People's Republic of China 中华人民共和国历史

History of the United States

History of the United States (1776–1789)

History of Tibet / Lịch sử Tây Tạng

History of Vietnam

Hodogaya-ku on Google Earth

Hohhot (Nei Menggu) on Google Earth

Hồ Hoàng Yến

Hoi An on Google Earth

Hội An travel guide

Hokusai

Holborn

Holburne Museum of Art

Home

Hong Kong

Hong Kong Island

Hong Kong Island on Google Earth 香港岛

Hong Kong Museum of Art 香港艺术馆

Hong Kong on Google Earth and in pictures

Hong Kong travel guide

Hồ Ngọc Hà 胡玉荷

Houston

Houston on Google Earth

Huế on Google Earth

Huế travel guide

Hùizhōu (Guangdong) 惠州 on Google Earth

Hú Jiā 胡佳

Húludǎo (Liaoning) on Google Earth

Human rights in the People's Republic of China 中华人民共和国人权

Human rights in Vietnam

Hundred Schools of Thought 诸子百家 Bách Gia Chư Tử

Hungary on Google Earth

Huntington Park on Google Earth

Huntsville, Alabama on Google Earth

Húzhōu (Zhejiang) 湖州 on Google Earth

L-M-N

Láibīn (Guangxi) 来宾 on Google Earth

Láiwú (Shandong) 莱芜 on Google Earth

Lakewood, CA on Google Earth

Lántíngjí Xù 兰亭集序

Láogǎi / Laogai Museum

La Plaine Saint-Denis on Google Earth

La Specola

Las Vegas, Nevada on Google Earth

Lê Chí Quang

Les Invalides

Lê Thị Công Nhân

Lê Uyên

Le Van Khoi revolt / Cuộc nổi dậy Lê Văn Khôi

Leverkusen on Google Earth

Lewisville, Texas on Google Earth

Lhasa (Xizang) on Google Earth

Lǐ Bái 李白

Lịch sử Trung Quốc

Liège on Google Earth

Liège (texte français)

Liège 列日

Lijiang City (Yunnan)

Lín Zéxú

List of countries by GDP (nominal)

List of metropolitan areas by population

List of statues by height

List of U.S. cities with large Vietnamese American populations

List of websites blocked in the People's Republic of China

List of words censored by search engines in the People's Republic of China 防火长城关键字列表            

Lists of countries with rankings and world maps

Little Saigon

Liú Xiǎobō 刘晓波

Liǔzhōu (Guangxi) 柳州 on Google Earth

Ljubljana on Google Earth

Lleida on Google Earth

London

London/Central

London/Chinatown

London/Covent Garden

London/Leicester Square

London on Google Earth

London/Oxford Street

London travel guide

L'Origine du monde

Los Alamitos

Los Angeles on Google Earth

Louvre

Lust, Caution 

Lustgarten

Lyon on Google Earth

Lý Thường Kiệt

Macartney Embassy 乔治·马戛尔尼 / George Macartney, 1st Earl Macartney

Macau on Google Earth and in pictures

Madame Ngo Dinh Nhu / Trần Lệ Xuân

Madrid on Google Earth

Maggie Q

Makati City on Google Earth

Malaysia on Google Earth

Manila on Google Earth and in pictures

Mao: The Unknown Story 《毛泽东:鲜为人知的故事》

Marilyn Monroe in Life

Marseille on Google Earth

Martha Argerich

Marylebone

Massachusetts on Google Earth

Massacre at Huế / Thảm sát tại Huế Tết Mậu Thân

Mayfair

Melbourne on Google Earth and in pictures

Melbourne travel guide

Mexico City on Google Earth

Mexico on Google Earth

Miami FL on Google Earth

Michael C. Carlos Museum

Mǐ Fú 米芾

Milan on Google Earth and in pictures

Milwaukee WI on Google Earth

Minneapolis, MN on Google Earth

Modern art

Monterey Park

Montreal on Google Earth

Moscow on Google Earth and in pictures

Mountain Home, Arkansas on Google Earth

Mountain View, California on Google Earth

Mount Royal, Quebec on Google Earth

Mũi Né on Google Earth

Mũi Né travel guide

Munich on Google Earth

Murrysville, Pennsylvania on Google Earth

Musée de l'Histoire de la science / Institute and Museum of the History of Science

Musée d'Orsay

Musée national d'Art moderne

Musée Picasso

Musée Rodin

Musées royaux des beaux-arts de Belgique / Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium

Musée van Gogh / Van Gogh Museum

Museum Island

Museum of Applied Arts (Budapest) / Magyar Iparművészeti Múzeum

Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago

Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Museum of Fine Arts (Budapest)

Museum of Modern Art

Museu Nacional d'Art de Catalunya

Museu Picasso

My Music A-B

Mỹ Sơn on Google Earth

Mỹ Sơn travel guide

Mỹ Tâm

Nagoya on Google Earth

Nakano on Google Earth

Nanjing (Jiangsu) on Google Earth and in pictures

Nánníng (Guangxi) on Google Earth

Nantes on Google Earth and in pictures

Naples on Google Earth

National Archaeological Museum of Athens

National Gallery (London)

National Gallery of Australia

National Gallery of Victoria

National Museum Cardiff

National Museum of Art of Romania

National Palace Museum

National Portrait Gallery (London)

Navy

Na Ying 那英

Neihu District on Google Earth

Netherlands on Google Earth

Neue Nationalgalerie

Neues Museum

New Acropolis Museum

New Delhi on Google Earth

New Orleans LA on Google Earth

New Territories

New York City on Google Earth and in pictures

New York on Google Earth

New Zealand on Google Earth

Người Kinh 京族 / The Jing

Nguyễn Chí Thiện

Nguyễn Dynasty / Nhà Nguyễn

Nguyễn Huệ 阮惠

Nguyễn Văn Đài

Nguyễn Văn Lý

Nha Trang travel guide

Nho giáo / Confucianisme

Níngbō (Zhejiang) on Google Earth and in pictures

Ni Zan 倪瓒

Nōgata, Fukuoka on Google Earth

Norway on Google Earth

Norwich on Google Earth

Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek

China‎ > ‎Chinese cuisine‎ > ‎

Cantonese cuisine

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/d/d8/Cantonesecuisine.jpg

A Cantonese restaurant serving Cantonese cuisine
Traditional Chinese: 廣東菜
Simplified Chinese: 广东菜
Hanyu Pinyin: Guǎngdōng cài
Cantonese Jyutping: Gwong2 dong1 coi3
Transliterations
Mandarin
- Hanyu Pinyin: Guǎngdōng cài
Yue (Cantonese)
- Jyutping: Gwong2 dong1 coi3
Yue cuisine
Chinese: 粵菜
Transliterations
Mandarin
- Hanyu Pinyin: Yuè cài
Yue (Cantonese)
- Jyutping: Jyut6 coi3
Cantonese (Yue) cuisine comes from Guangdong Province in Southern China, or specifically from Guangzhou (Canton). Of all the regional varieties of Chinese cuisine, Cantonese is the best known outside China; most "Chinese restaurants" in Western countries serve authentic Cantonese cuisine and dishes based on it. Its prominence outside China is due to its palatability to Westerners and the great numbers of early emigrants from Guangdong. In China, too, it enjoys great prestige among the eight great traditions of Chinese cuisine, and Cantonese chefs are highly sought after throughout the country.

Background

Cantonese cuisine draws upon a great diversity of ingredients, Guangzhou (Canton) being a great trading port since the days of the Thirteen Factories, bringing it many imported foods and ingredients. Besides pork, beef, and chicken, Cantonese cuisine incorporates almost all edible meats, including organ meats, chicken feet, duck and duck tongues, snakes, and snails. Many cooking methods are used, steaming, stir-frying, shallow frying, double boiling, braising, and deep-frying being the most common ones in Cantonese restaurants, due to their convenience and rapidity, and their ability to bring out the flavor of the freshest ingredients.

For many traditional Cantonese cooks, spices should be used in modest amounts to avoid overwhelming the flavors of the primary ingredients, and these primary ingredients in turn should be at the peak of their freshness and quality. Interestingly, there is no widespread use of fresh herbs in Cantonese cooking (and most other regional Chinese cuisines in fact), contrasting with the liberal usage seen in European cuisines and other Asian cuisines such as Thai or Vietnamese. Garlic chives and coriander leaves are notable exceptions, although the latter tends to be a

mere garnish in most dishes.

Elements of cooking

Sauces and condiments

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/c6/Baby_kailan_chinese.jpg
Blanched kailan (芥兰) with oyster sauce

Classic Cantonese sauces are light and perhaps bland compared to the thicker, darker, and richer sauces of other Chinese cuisines. Spring onion, sugar, salt, soy sauce, rice wine, corn starch, vinegar, sesame oil, and other oils suffice to enhance flavor in most Cantonese cooking, though garlic is used heavily in some dishes, especially those in which internal organs, such as entrails, may emit unpleasant odors. Ginger, chili peppers, five-spice powder, powdered white pepper, star anise and a few other spices are used, but often sparingly.

Sauces and condiments include:

Dried and preserved ingredients

Though Cantonese cooks pay much attention to the freshness of their cooking ingredients, Cantonese cooking also uses a long list of preserved food items. This may be an influence from Hakka cuisine, since the Hakkas was once a dominant group occupying Imperial Hong Kong and other southern territories.[1]

Some items gain very intense flavors during the drying/preservation/oxidation process. Some chefs combine both dried and fresh varieties of the same items in a dish to create a contrast in the taste and texture. Dried items are usually soaked in water to rehydrate before cooking. Not only do preserved foods have a longer shelf life, sometimes the dried foods are preferred over the fresh ones because of their uniquely intense flavor or texture. These ingredients are generally not served individually, and need to go with vegetables or other Cantonese dishes.

Includes:

Cantonese dishes

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/f2/CantonesecuisineStirfryvegetables.jpg
Cantonese stir-fried vegetables. Often, vegetables are simply stir-fried plain or with minced garlic.

Traditional dishes

A number of dishes have been a part of the Cantonese cuisine collection since the earliest territorial establishments of Guangdong province. While many of these are on the menus of typical Cantonese restaurants, some are more commonly found among Chinese homes due to their simplicity. Home-made Cantonese dishes are usually served with plain white rice.

Includes:

Deep fried dishes

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/68/Zhaliang.jpg
Zhaliang, a popular Cantonese breakfast

There are a small selection of deep fried dishes in Cantonese cuisine, and can often be found as street food. As they have been extensively documented throughout Colonial Hong Kong records in the 19th to 20th century, most are considered essential part of the Cantonese diet, as a few are synonymously associated with Cantonese breakfast and lunch..[2] Though these are also expected to be part of other cuisines.

Includes:
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/ca/WintermelonSoup.jpg
Winter melon soup

Slow cooked soup

Another notable Cantonese speciality is slow-cooked soup, or lo foh tong (老火湯) in the Cantonese dialect (literally meaning old fire-cooked soup). The soup is usually a clear broth prepared by simmering meat and other ingredients for several hours. Sometimes, Chinese herbal medicines are added to the pot. Ingredients vary greater depending on the type of soup. The main attraction is the liquid in the pot, although the solids are eaten too. A whole chicken may simmer in a broth for six hours or longer. Traditional Cantonese families have this type of soup at least once a week. In this day and age many families with both parents working cannot afford this tradition due to the long preparation time required. However, wealthy families with servants and a cook still enjoy the luxury every day. Because of the long preparation time, most restaurants do not serve home made soup or opt for a soup du jour.

Includes:
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/35/CantoneseRestaurantSeafood.jpg
Cantonese seafood section

Seafood

Due to Guangdong's location on the southern coast of China, fresh live seafood is a specialty in Cantonese cuisine. Many authentic restaurants maintain live seafood tanks. From the Cantonese perspective, strong spices are added only to stale seafood to cover the rotting odor. The freshest seafood is odorless, and is best cooked by steaming. For instance, only a small amount of soy sauce, ginger, and spring onion is added to steamed fish. The light seasoning is used only to bring out the natural sweetness of the seafood. However, most restaurants would gladly get rid of their stale seafood inventory by offering dishes loaded with garlic and spices. As a rule of thumb in Cantonese dining, the spiciness of a dish is usually inversely proportional to the freshness of the ingredients.

Includes:
  • Steamed fish (蒸魚)
  • Steamed scallops with ginger and garlic (蒜茸蒸扇贝)
  • White boiled shrimp (白灼蝦)
  • Lobster with ginger and scallions (薑蔥龍蝦)
  • "Urinating shrimp" (a type of slipper lobster) (拉尿蝦)

Noodle dishes

A number of noodle dishes are part of the Cantonese cuisine. These are commonly available at dai pai dong or dim sum side menus.

Includes:
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/5/54/HKloumei.jpg
A section dedicated to Siu mei and Lou mei

Siu mei

Siu mei is essentially the Chinese rotisserie style of cooking. Unlike most other Cantonese dishes, Siu mei consists only of meat, with no vegetables. It creates a unique, deep barbecue flavor that is usually enhanced by a flavorful sauce, a different sauce is used for each meat.

Includes:
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/4/4b/HongKongstreetloumei.jpg
Street lou mei

Lou mei

Lou mei is the name given to dishes made out of internal organs, entrails and left-over parts of animals. It is grouped under Siu laap (燒臘) as part of Cantonese cuisine. It is widely available in Southern Chinese regions. It should be noted that many people who consume Cantonese dishes regularly are not interested in eating lou mei dishes due to personal preference.

Includes:
  • Beef entrails (牛雜)
  • Beef stew (牛腩)
  • Duck gizzard (鴨腎)
  • Pig tongue (豬脷)
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/7/76/CantoneseSiuLaapStore.jpg
Siu laap store front

Siu laap

Just about all the Cantonese-style cooked meat including siu mei, lou mei and preserved meat can be mixed together under the generic name (燒臘, Siu laap). Siu laap also includes foods such as:

A typical dish may consist of some organs and half an order of multiple varieties of roasted meat. A large majority of siu laap consists strictly of white and red meat.

Includes:
  • White rice with Chinese sausage and cha siu(叉烧饭)
  • White rice with goose entrails and roasted goose (烧鹅鹅肠饭)
  • White rice with white cut chicken, duck gizzards, and beef stew (白切鸡鸭肾焖牛肉饭)
  • Siu mei platter (燒味拼盤)
  • Siu lap platter (燒臘拼盤)
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/7/74/Littlebowlrice.jpg
Little pan rice

Little pan rice

Little pan rice (, bou1 zai2 faan6) are dishes that are cooked and served in a flat-bottomed pan (as opposed to a round-bottomed wok). Usually it is a saucepan or braising pan (see Clay pot cooking). Such dishes are cooked by covering and steaming, making the rice and ingredients very hot and soft. Usually the ingredients are layered on top of the rice with little to no mixing in between. Quite a number of ingredients are used with many standard combinations.

Includes:
  • Layered egg and beef over rice (窩蛋牛肉飯)
  • Layered steak over rice (肉餅煲仔飯)
  • Tofu pot over rice
  • Pork spare ribs over rice (排骨煲仔飯)
  • Steamed chicken over rice (蒸雞肉煲仔飯)
  • Preserved chinese sausage over rice (蠟味煲仔飯)
  • Pork "pastry" over rice
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/25/CantoneseTofuwithShrimp.jpg
Fried tofu with shrimp

Night dishes

There are a number of dishes that are often served in Cantonese restaurants exclusively during dinner. Traditionally dim sum restaurants stop serving bamboo basket-dishes after yum cha hour and begin offering an entirely different menu in the evening. Some dishes are more standard while others are quite regional. Some are customized for special purposes like Chinese marriages or banquets. Salt and pepper dishes are one of the few spicy dishes.

Includes:
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/6a/CantoneseHybridRedbeansoup.jpg
Hybrid red bean soup with taro

Dessert

After a night meal or dish, Cantonese restaurants usually offer tong sui, or sweet soups. Many of the varieties are shared between Cantonese and other Chinese cuisines. Some desserts are more traditional, while others are more recent with local chef creativity. Higher end restaurants usually offer their own blend and customization of desserts.

Includes:
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Cantonese bao yu

Delicacies

There are some dishes that are prized within the culture. These dishes range from being medium price to very expensive. Most of these have been around in the Far East for a long time, while some are just barely becoming available around the world. Many of these prized animals have serious animal rights controversial issues such as finning of Shark cartilages due to increasing price demands.

Includes:

Comparison

Sometimes in the US, the term "Hong Kong Style" is used to distinguish this style of cooking from the more Americanized version most Americans are familiar with. Note that actual Hong Kong cuisine has evolved somewhat from traditional Cantonese cuisine served in Guangzhou.

Stereotypes

There is a level of complexity associated with the cooking style and ingredients that fascinate westerners as well as bring stereotypes and misunderstandings. An example is the western commentary by Prince Philip commenting on Chinese eating habits to the World Wildlife Fund conference in 1986. "If it has got four legs and it is not a chair, if it has two wings and it flies but is not an aeroplane, and if it swims and is not a submarine, the Cantonese will eat it."[3] Despite having the quote presented to a notable organization, it has also appeared in books such as "The most stupid Words Ever Spoken" as it is deemed by some Westerners as a showcase of "lack of understanding" in foreign culinary traditions in the Western world[3]. However, this is a modern Chinese saying used by the Northern Chinese with reference to southern Chinese cuisine, especially Cantonese.[4]

One subject of controversy amongst some Westerners is the raising of dogs and cats as food in some places in mainland China centering in the Cantonse-speaking region. Eating dogs were common and fiercely defended by the nationalist-leaning Chinese people, even from non-Cantonese parts of the country, in the first half of the 20th century. However, as time goes it is becoming a custom going out of fashion. In Hong Kong and Taiwan as of early parts of the 21st century serving dogs as food is illegal and risks social ostracism especially from those under the age of 50 courtesy of the increasing awareness of animal-welfare issues, and even within mainland China an increasing number of young mainland Chinese have called for its abolition as well.[5]

Some Westerners have defended the practice of Chinese serving dogs as food by putting forth claims of eating dogs as a survival tactic in times of famine[6]. Chinese historical records show serving dog as food does have a history going as far back as the Shang dynasty as one of the nine varieties of animals that could be eaten. Dogs were raised as food as pigs and chickens were.

References

  1. ^ Barber, Nicola. [2004] (2004) Hong Kong. Gareth Stevens Publishing. ISBN 0836851986
  2. ^ Wordie, Jason. [2002] (2002) Streets: Exploring Hong Kong Island. Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press. ISBN 962-2095631
  3. ^ a b Ward, Laura. [2003] (2003). Foolish Words: The Most Stupid Words Ever Spoken. Sterling Publishing Company. ISBN 1856486982
  4. ^ Olszewski, Wiesław. [2003] (2003). Chiny - zarys kultury. Wydawnictwo Naukowe Uniwersytetu im. Adama Mickiewicza w Poznaniu. ISBN 83-232-1272-4. p.177 (in Polish)
  5. ^ 伴侣动物保护网络(CCAPN)-拒吃猫狗肉网络签名活动
  6. ^ Bonner, Arthur. [1997] (1997). Alas! What Brought Thee Hither: The Chinese in New york, 1800-1950. Fairleigh Dickinson University press. ISBN 0838637043

External link: Chinese recipes

















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Tasting clean, light, crisp and fresh, Guangdong cuisine, familiar to Westerners, usually has fowl and other meats that produce its unique dishes. The basic cooking techniques include roasting, stir-frying, sauteing, deep-frying, braising, stewing and steaming. Steaming and stir-frying are most frequently used to preserve the ingredients' natural flavors. Guangdong chefs also pay much attention to the artistic presentation of their dishes.
Typical menu items: Shark Fin Soup; Steamed Sea Bass; Roasted Piglet
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