Product Description
Eileen Yin-Fei Lo, author of award-winning cookbooks, menu developer for top Asian restaurants, and cooking teacher, presents her life’s work. Reflecting on her life in food, including her childhood in Canton, China, where she learned to cook at her grandmother’s side, Eileen has created an exhaustive cookbook of extensive scope. Everything about Chinese cooking has cultural significance, and much of what Eileen talks about in this book has never appeared in print before in the English language.
There are more than 250 recipes in all, including many classic banquet-style recipes, quite a number presented for the first time in the traditional manner, from Peking Duck to Beggar’s Chicken. Dozens of the techniques for preparing these elaborate recipes are shown in full-color photographs in the color insert as well. Eileen also includes many of her own creations, such as infused oils and rich, flavorful stocks, essential for cooks who are serious about mastering the ancient art of Chinese cooking.
Everything is here: dim sum, congees, stir-fries, rice dishes, noodles, bean curd, meat dishes, and more. For anyone who loves Asian cuisines, this is the ultimate cookbook, and for cookbook lovers and aspiring food professionals, this is required reading.Amazon.com Review
In this unique book, Eileen Yin-Fei Lo delves richly into Chinese cuisine, reflecting in its complexity the nation’s culture, history, geographic diversity, and philosophies of health and living. Regardless of how many Chinese cookbooks you already own, The Chinese Kitchen is sure to bring you new information and recipes. And no one else can offer the intriguing family recipes she includes, such as her mother’s lean, steamed loin of pork marinated in ginger juice and oyster sauce.
Lo grew up in Canton (now Guangzhou). Her stories about her visits with Ah Paw, her maternal grandmother, become lessons she shares with us. Lo learned about cooking and received much wisdom from this sparrow of a woman, whose feet were bound, in the old way, when she was a child, to keep them four inches long, but who fiercely brought her daughter and granddaughter into modern times. She also taught Lo about Confucius and the ancient traditions such as the Seven Necessities of rice, tea, oil, salt, soy sauce, vinegar, and firewood.
When Lo talks about ingredients in the “Chinese Larder” chapter, she provides Chinese characters in the margin that can be photocopied so you can show them at stores to be sure you get the right ingredients. Familiar recipes in The Chinese Kitchen, from Orange Beef to Moo Shu Pork, are followed by more exotic choices such as Shrimp Stir-Fried with Garlic Cloves and Hakka Bean Curd, stuffed with dried shrimp and lightly fried. An entire chapter is devoted to Buddha Jump over the Wall, a kind of a Chinese Babette’s Feast. This special recipe from the Fuzhou region requires two days to make and calls for 28 ingredients, mercifully not including the fish lips, duck gizzards and other items used in the true Fuzhou version but which Westerners generally shun. This robust, country dish, combining chicken, duck, ham, and lamb in a kind of pot-au-feu, is so alluring that supposedly the Buddha himself, a vegetarian, could not resist it. It provides insight into Chinese cooking at its most complex.
Fans of Chinese tea will delight in the chapter devoted to this revered beverage. For everyone, simply reading The Chinese Kitchen will enhance enormously the pleasure of dining out in Chinese restaurants. –Dana Jacobi

#1 by Dwight on November 23, 2009 - 4:52 pm
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I’m very happy to have bought this book. There may be some redundant recipes but I still feel that everone should buy ALL her titles. I trust her knowledge so I am very happy that she has included a Fried Milk recipe.
Rating: 5 / 5
#2 by Anonymous on November 23, 2009 - 6:38 pm
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I’m submitting a followup review here after looking at a recipe in detail.
The example that decided things for me was the ‘Ants Climb a Tree’ (mah ngai seung seuh) traditional dish.
Frying the rice noodles first in six cups of peanut oil and the use of Sichuan pepper pickle, preserved horse beans, and sweet wine rice are points where the recipe is more involved than others that I have seen. Substitutions are suggested for some but not all of the items. The result may be more authentic but requires more effort.
Rating: 3 / 5
#3 by Yona Lu on November 23, 2009 - 9:17 pm
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To be honest, ever since I bought this book, I haven’t cooked a single dish from this book yet because since there were no pictures of the dishes, I didn’t know what the results of each recipe looked like. This has prevented me from taking the time to actually choose and cook a dish from the book. I much prefer the “Wei Chuan” series of cookbooks … they have photos with each recipe, clear instructions, and they are authentic Chinese cookbooks published in Asia. I come from Hong Kong, and I find that the recipes inside the Wei Chuan books are really good; they are really the type of food that you can find in nice restaurants in Hong Kong, yet the dishes can be cooked easily and quickly!
Rating: 2 / 5
#4 by Peggy on November 23, 2009 - 11:06 pm
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I weighed several Chinese cookbooks prefering something authentic. This book looked great in terms of its variety and introductory details. It contains many recipes I remember seeing family and guests sharing during holiday parties. However, when I met with friends to try and make a few of these recipes we found they were very time consuming. Now I know practice will speed cooking up but it just felt tedious. The ingredients also required a lot of investment in items that take a bit of effort to find and store if you don’t use regularly. I have no doubt that these recipes end in wonderful dishes but you have to be pretty dedicated.
Rating: 3 / 5
#5 by Pinkhat on November 24, 2009 - 1:24 am
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This is a great cookbook and also a wonderful read. It would be the perfect Chinese cookbook if it had more photos.
I’ve tried twenty or so recipes so far and every one of them turned out perfect.
Precise, easy to follow instructions.
Rating: 4 / 5