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We will have to wait in the US until Feb of 2007, but..... Fuchsia
Dunlop will have a new cookbook coming out, called "Revolutionary Chinese Cookbook: Recipes from Hunan Province". Those UK folks will have it much sooner, June 22, 2006. Ian |
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ian wrote:
We will have to wait in the US until Feb of 2007, but..... Fuchsia Dunlop will have a new cookbook coming out, called "Revolutionary Chinese Cookbook: Recipes from Hunan Province". Those UK folks will have it much sooner, June 22, 2006. Ian cool! the Sichuan one is absolutely salivating. i read it just before going to Chengdu to eat and was very impressed with *real* Sichuan cuisine. and the hotpot there is out of this world, btw. fabulous. not a fan of Chinese food [Sichuan is an exeption] but i will check out her new book in my usual UK book shop in Amstie. |
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Steve Wertz wrote:
On Wed, 10 May 2006 20:24:28 -0400, ian wrote: We will have to wait in the US until Feb of 2007, but..... Fuchsia Dunlop will have a new cookbook coming out, called "Revolutionary Chinese Cookbook: Recipes from Hunan Province". Those UK folks will have it much sooner, June 22, 2006. Her Sichuan book was remaindered and selling for $5 here at Half Price Books in Austin. I've been reading it at the dinner table for the last few weeks. It's a very good book. She apparently studied there and has some very authentic, classic recipes from the area. I wonder how good of a Hunan book she's have... -sw Wow - $5! Thats a steal. Buy two! The Kung Pao from her recipe is the absolute best you will ever taste. The dry-fried beef in Sechaun bean paste is delish. And so on - its a great book. I'm expecting that the Hunan one will be at least equally as good. ian |
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Saudades (FG) wrote:
ian wrote: We will have to wait in the US until Feb of 2007, but..... Fuchsia Dunlop will have a new cookbook coming out, called "Revolutionary Chinese Cookbook: Recipes from Hunan Province". Those UK folks will have it much sooner, June 22, 2006. Ian cool! the Sichuan one is absolutely salivating. i read it just before going to Chengdu to eat and was very impressed with *real* Sichuan cuisine. and the hotpot there is out of this world, btw. Lucky you. I picked up a China travle book at a local sale recently, and started reading about the Chengdu area. Soonr or latr, I will be visiting! ian |
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Steve Wertz wrote:
On Thu, 11 May 2006 21:41:12 -0400, ian wrote: Wow - $5! Thats a steal. Buy two! The Kung Pao from her recipe is the absolute best you will ever taste. I just made it tonight for the first time. Definitely a keeper. It combines hot/pungent, sour, salty and sweet. You can never go wrong with those 4 flavors together (and I added MSG too, for that controversial 5th flavor). That recipe doesn't make enough sauce, IMO. Double the sauce ingredients, including chicken stock. The dry-fried beef in Sechaun bean paste is delish. I'm still having trouble finding a decent hot bean-paste. Actually, any hot bean paste. Plenty of soy-based bean sauces, though. Sorry folks, I scoured the Internet looking for the Gong-Bao (Kung-Pao) recipe to post it, but couldn't find the exact recipe in the book. Send me $1 and I'll transcribe it for you. -sw I have never found a fava-bean sauce either, but the LKK Szechuan Hot Bean Sauce (Toban Djian) seems good to me. The recipe is available he http://www.leitesculinaria.com/recip.../kung_pao.html Cheers, Ian |
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ian wrote:
Lucky you. I picked up a China travle book at a local sale recently, and started reading about the Chengdu area. Soonr or latr, I will be visiting! ian a week after i returned from Tibet and China my 10kg box of spices and tea arrived. and then i unpacked the box... oooohhhhhhhhhhhh....the amazing smell of Chengdu!!! that smell took me right back to that place. the place of the good life, good food, good tea. so cheap too! [where in China can a pair of tourists eat dinner for less than a euro only knowing how to say 'thank you' in Chinese ?!] i think you'll want to go to Chengdu asap if you see my China food pix! hahah.... cheers another box from Tibet should arrive soon [i hope] |
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Halle-frickin'-luja.
I've two Hunan cookbooks, by Hi-Lit and by Wei-Chuan, both publishing houses in Taiwan, and after reading, rereading them and cross-referencing them with one another and with some of Wei-Chuan's other cookbooks (Chinese Cuisine: Shanghai Style and Chinese Cuisine: Taiwanese Style), I've come to the conclusion that they express a Taiwanese rather than authentically Hunanese cuisine. It's sort of depressing especially in light of the introduction to the Hi-Lit "Chinese Regional Cuisine" Hunan book, which appears to be cribbed together from other (unknown!) sources and bears almost no relation to the recipes after it; the intro is full of tantalizing descriptions of home-style specialties, famous local baked goods, teas and unique regional ingredients (such as tea oil, and "mushroom oil") which show up NOWHERE in the rest of the book. Both books feature a lot of seafood (not a very inland-China sort of thing) and both seem to showcase the Taiwanese creations of chefs at fancy Hunanese restaurants in Taiwan. There's two strikes against that last one: on the one hand, these are special fancy dishes, in some cases of very recent invention; and on the other, the recipes as developed are calibrated to the palates of Taiwanese diners. Eg. miniscule amounts of dou ban jian are called for in Wei-Chuan's Sichuan book, compared to Dunlop and to Delf. So perhaps there is some Hunanese style, heavily filtered through Taiwanese cooking traditions and local ingredients (for example, "soy sauce", instead of light and dark mainland chinese soy sauce; and all that seafood), but not actual recipes from Hunan. I'm not an unconditional fan of Dunlop's first book, but will be delighted to see her take on Hunan. Incidentally I've been haunted for years by the memory of the specialties served by a small, junk-food-y restaurant which used to be located near Purdue University around 1990. It was in a strip mall and has long since been supplanted by several sets of other tenants; but it used to be very popular with Chinese grad students in the area and was very cheap - you paid something like $3 and got a plate with a large pile of rice, 2 dishes of your choice and an egg roll. The specialties in question - evocatively named "Chicken with Vegetable" and "Spicy Chicken" - were nothing like anything I've had in a Chinese restaurant anywhere else. Both dishes were basically long shreds of chicken with sliced onion, sliced western style cabbage, and a few long chards of carrot, drowning in slightly differing amounts of hot oil (with some sugar and salty, maybe a hint of soy, in the background). American ingredients, definitely not American style. I've long wondered what regional cuisine it represented. Best - krnntp |
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Hey! It turns out I misremembered my own cookbooks and my
dissatisfactions with them - it's a bit more mangled than I described above, and Wei-Chuan doesn't have a Hunan book (I wondered why I couldn't recall it better). It turns out that I compared Hi-Lit's Taiwanese book to Wei-Chuan's Taiwanese book, the two of them to Wei-Chuan's Shanghai book, the two of them again to Hi-Lit's Hunan book, and then the Shanghai and Hunan books to eachother. The similarities were depressing. I'm all for, and interested in exploring, Taiwanese style cooking, but it was a bit annoying to find that several books I had hoped weren't Taiwanese seemingly were, at least to some extent... an extent which for me was unknowable. I'd looked in vain for a Hunan book besides Hi-Lit's, with no luck. So Fuchsia Dunlop's newest will be doubly welcome. By the way, the Hi-Lit Taiwanese cookbook suffered from some of the split personality of the Hunan book. Once again, there was a fascinating introduction which seemed unrelated to the main text: most of the intro was a rambling paean to the many snack food specialties of different districts in Taiwan (my achilles heel, snack foods / street food and baked goods). Unfortunately, none of these recipes made it into the cookbook. Best - krnntp |
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