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How Chinese Dishes Were Named |
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Written by China dot com
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Monday, 07 February 2005 02:50 |
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China is a country that attaches great importance to names, honor, and prestige. The set phrase, to âââ¬Ã
âachieve both fame and wealth,âââ¬Ã gives the true meaning of the word âââ¬Ã
âfame.âââ¬Ã Only when people are famous worldwide have they laid the foundation to achieve great wealth.
The owners of many famous restaurants throughout the dynasties won praise from their customers for their good service and became famous. This, in turn, brought them more customers and still better business. Among them are the Donglaishun, Quanjude, and Hongbinlou restaurants in Beijng, the Songhelou Restaurant in Suzhou, the laozhengxing Restaurant in Shanghai, the Goubuli Restaurant in Tianjin, and the Juchunyuan Restaurant in Fuzhou. Of course, the pre-requisites for the restaurants being well known were their delicious food, fair prices, and honesty, or they would not have been famous.
During the period of the Qin and Han Dynasties dishes were named for their major ingredients and cooking methods, During the Southern and Northern Dynasties, some dishes received fancy names.
When ordinary dishes were given beautiful names, it raised the attractiveness of the dishes and made diners happy. For example, sliced fish mixed with orange was called âââ¬Ã
âpowdered gold and minced jade,âââ¬Ã camelsâââ‰â¢ foot simmered with hearts of rape was called âââ¬Ã
âdesert boat sails on green,âââ¬Ã quail and its eggs cooked together was called âââ¬Ã
âmother and children get together,âââ¬Ã chicken cooked with bearâââ‰â¢s paw was called âââ¬Ã
âpalm controls the land,âââ¬Ã a dish of shrimp, sliced tender bamboo shoots and mushrooms was called âââ¬Ã
âleaves of wind, frost and snow,âââ¬Ã a dish of sea cucumber, prawns, chicken breast, white fungus, and water chestnuts was called âââ¬Ã
âbutterflies swarm the peonies,âââ¬Ã and a dish of chicken and soft-shelled turtle was called âââ¬Ã
âXiang Yu the Conqueror says goodbye to his concubine.âââ¬Ã Fancy names reminded people of other things during the banquets and created a pleasant dining atmosphere.
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Last Updated on Thursday, 09 February 2006 22:11 |