chinadaily.com.cn
    left corner left corner
    China Daily Website

    Personal taste

    Updated: 2012-04-23 13:53
    By Ye Jun ( China Daily)
    Personal taste

    Roujiamo and yangrou paomo (below) served in Reallove Cuisine Restaurant in Beijing. Photos by Ye Jun / China Daily

    Personal taste

    The country is catching Ye Jun's passion for Shaanxi cuisine, he reports in Beijing.

    Shaanxi cuisine is personal. Well, at least it is for me. At age 19, I went to college in Shaanxi's provincial capital Xi'an. Although the school canteen was terrible, there was one thing I always looked forward to eating - yangrou paomo, (pita bread soaked in lamb soup).

    Yangrou paomo provides a chance - requires you, actually - to play with your food.

    Enjoying this dish requires you to rip apart two hard pitas made with unfermented flour, which the cook then boils in a massive wok of seething lamb soup.

    The broth is so hot that the bread is ready in just a few seconds. It's served in a bowl of soup, topped with lamb slices.

    So many years have passed, but I still remember the roaring air blowers above the wok and the long line in front of it.

    Just like many other new foods, I didn't like yangrou paomo at first. But the third time was a charm that cast its spell on me, and I became addicted to the concoction that bubbled from that cauldron.

    The rest of the canteen food was so bad that students stuck protest posters on the walls.

    The dean had to call a meeting with student representatives to negotiate. It seems dramatic, now.

    While the mutiny didn't lead to much improvement, one positive result was the introduction of a self-employed vendor who made tasty roujiamo - flour cakes split and stuffed with minced pork.

    Eventually, an entire street behind the university began to bustle with food stands and small eateries.

    One of my favorites was a street-side cold noodles stand that offered delightful rice and flour Qishan-style noodles.

    The slippery noodles are mixed with green bean sprouts and gluten, and feature a mix of sour and spicy typical of the cuisine.

    It's an amazing appetizer.

    Personal taste

    It wasn't until I left the city that I realized how many foods I missed. Oh, how I yearned for Shaanxi's noodles, flour cakes, Halal beef and lamb, and a million other snacks.

    I realized I hadn't sufficiently savored my trips to Xi'an's celebrated Muslim food street, Xidajie. I had taken for granted Jia San's juice-filled baozi, Renmin Lu's jiaozi banquet and Lao Sun Jia's hulutou (pigs' large intestines).

    So I began scouting Shaanxi restaurants in Beijing. Eventually, I found most of the foods I sought, but few were authentic.

    One of my first destinations was the restaurant affiliated with Shaanxi government's Beijing office. The dishes were a tad too refined to be like what I fell in love with in Xi'an - but not as tasty.

    Shaanxi food's public image is typically reflected in a scene from Zhang Yimou's film Story of Qiu Ju, in which the husband of Qiu Ju, a stubborn Shaanxi woman, squats on a bench to munch oil-drenched noodles out of a bowl the size of a wok.

    Like yangrou paomo, many typical Shaanxi foods are thought of as coarse, rustic fare conveniently prepared for laborers.

    Some dishes' names reflect this. Take guokui, or helmet cakes, which are believed to have first been made in ancient soldiers' helmets. Kudai mian, or belt noodles, are broad hand-pulled noodles.

    My search for a good Shaanxi restaurant in Beijing continued.

    I wound up at Huanghe Shui (Yellow River Water), a typical yet small Shaanxi eatery. Next, I visited Qin Tang Fu and Lan Hua Hua - middle-sized restaurants, offering home-style dishes and Shaanxi snacks.

    These visits made me rethink my understanding of Shaanxi cuisine as rustic rural food that comes mostly in snack form but rarely in formal dishes.

    That idea totally transformed after dining at Pinwei Chang'an. The restaurant opposite the Australian embassy offers delicately presented Shaanxi dishes. So does the recently opened high-end restaurant Reallove.

    The Beijing restaurant is Reallove Cuisine Group's 10th outlet and the first outside Shaanxi. The group's Chang'an Yihao is a popular high-end Shaanxi establishment in Xi'an.

    Reallove's executive chef Wu Zumin says the restaurant's founders wanted to provide tourists a place to taste true Shaanxi fare.

    "Shaanxi was where 13 Chinese dynasties set up their capitals during a span of more than 1,000 years," Wu says.

    "Shaanxi cuisine was then another name for Chinese cuisine. That was long before the eight major Chinese cuisines ever existed."

    While traditional snacks are refined and beautifully presented, the restaurant offers some typical dishes. Hulu Ji (gourd chicken) is boiled and deep-fried until tender. The secret is the chicken is a free-range chick that weighs 750 grams.

    There are many dishes on the menu you won't see elsewhere.

    Reallove has done its homework and went to the library to discover the stories surrounding some historical dishes. It then put these on the menu to provide visitors food for thought.

    Chang'an (Xi'an was called Chang'an in ancient times) roast beef is said to have originated from a famous banquet of Emperor Taizong of Tang Dynasty (618-907). Marinated chicken feet, pork skin and bamboo originated from Tang-era's traveling merchants, who worked up mighty appetites trudging the international Silk Road.

    A formal dinner at Reallove costs about 300 yuan ($48) - six times more than the average bill at smaller spots like Huanghe Shui.

    Wu says it's becoming more difficult to find Shaanxi chefs, because restaurants devoted to the cuisine are proliferating and restaurants of other styles are including more Shaanxi fare on their menus.

    Beijing gourmet Dai Aiqun says he wishes Reallove would stick to Shaanxi cuisine and ditch the Cantonese add-ons its menu offers.

    He also believes the proliferation of restaurants will help people rediscover Tang-era delicacies like camel hoof.

    Dai suggests developing new dishes with traditional flavors.

    "For example, they can make sea cucumber with Shaanxi's typical sour and spicy flavor," he says.

    If Reallove cuisine restaurant can pull it off, it could do to Shaanxi cuisine what South Beauty did to Sichuan fare - that is, kick its profile and taste up a notch nationwide.

    That would be good news for Beijing's gourmands, because they would have quite a few new dishes to try. And it would be good news for me, because I can indulge in more of the classic favorites of my youth.

    Related Stories

    Hangzhou cuisine becomes a work of art 2012-03-21 14:38
    Authentic Sichuan cuisine 2012-03-04 16:51
    Guangxi cuisine 2012-04-13 10:31
    Heng Shan Hui Cantonese Cuisine 2011-07-22 11:57
    ...
    ...
    ...
    毛片无码免费无码播放| 国产中文欧美日韩在线| 欧美激情中文字幕综合一区| 亚洲成A人片在线观看中文| 国产乱人无码伦av在线a| 区三区激情福利综合中文字幕在线一区| 免费无码VA一区二区三区| 无码粉嫩小泬无套在线观看 | 亚洲高清中文字幕免费| 无码人妻视频一区二区三区| 无码人妻丝袜在线视频| 亚洲欧美中文日韩在线v日本 | 国产精品中文字幕在线观看| 天堂无码久久综合东京热| 无码国产福利av私拍| 亚洲中久无码永久在线观看同| 欧美日韩中文国产va另类电影| 亚洲VA中文字幕无码一二三区| 亚洲av无码国产精品色在线看不卡| 黄A无码片内射无码视频| 亚洲AV综合色区无码一区爱AV| 无码八A片人妻少妇久久| 欧美成人中文字幕在线看| 最近免费2019中文字幕大全| 亚洲色成人中文字幕网站| 亚洲无码日韩精品第一页| 直接看的成人无码视频网站| 中文字幕久久欲求不满| 精品久久久久中文字幕日本| 无码中文人妻视频2019| 亚洲AV无码专区在线播放中文| 亚洲熟妇中文字幕五十中出| 免费A级毛片无码A∨中文字幕下载| 日韩高清在线中文字带字幕| 久久国产高清字幕中文| 在线中文字幕一区| 亚洲伊人久久综合中文成人网 | 欧美日韩中文国产va另类| 中文字幕在线看日本大片| 人妻系列AV无码专区| 亚洲成a人片在线观看无码|