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The Wisdom of the Chinese Kitchen: Classic Family Recipes for Celebration and Healing | 
| Author: Grace Young Creator: Alan Richardson Publisher: Simon & Schuster Category: Book
List Price: $30.00 Buy Used: $7.11 You Save: $22.89 (76%)
New (27) Used (28) Collectible (4) from $7.11
Rating: 40 reviews Sales Rank: 111751
Media: Hardcover Pages: 304 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.8 Dimensions (in): 9.4 x 7.7 x 1.3
ISBN: 0684847396 Dewey Decimal Number: 641.5951 EAN: 9780684847399 ASIN: 0684847396
Publication Date: May 5, 1999 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Spine has a cut. Expedited shipping is not available for this item. Items are mailed via USPS media mail within 2 business days and should arrive 4-14 business days later.
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com Review Grace Young is a culinary sister to novelist Amy Tan. In The Wisdom of the Chinese Kitchen, along with sharing recipes from her family, Young immerses the reader in Chinese culture and the Chinese American experience of San Francisco's Chinatown, where she grew up. This personal book began with Young's wish to preserve the Cantonese dishes prepared by her parents and extended family. Since they cooked by instinct, the only way to record their recipes was by observing her mother, father, and aunties while they cooked, and by asking endless questions. These kitchen conversations also became a way to elicit untold family history from her deeply traditional and reticent parents. Each chapter opens with an essay intertwining biographical stories with information about Chinese food and healing. The blending of culinary information and cultural observations is powerfully realized, perhaps because Young shows old-fashioned respect along with a contemporary perspective. The result is both affectionate and enthralling. You can vividly picture the meticulous choreography as her parents make dinner in their tiny kitchen, reaching over steaming pots and rushing the steaming food to the table. Young delves into the hows and whys of Cantonese home cooking, with particular attention to technique and ingredients: Chinese broccoli with flowers should be avoided because the bright yellow blossoms indicate the stalks are too old. Steaming is valued because it draws out the intense flavors near the bone in chicken, fish, and meat, leaving them tender and moist. Many dishes are elementally simple. Hot-and-Sour Soup is fired solely by aromatic white pepper. White Chicken is perfumed just with ginger and garlic. Some choices are quick and easy, as in stir-fried Bean Sprouts, while others require long and elaborate preparation, like savory Rice Tamales stuffed with pork, Chinese sausage, and duck egg yolks and wrapped in bamboo leaves. Anyone who enjoys eating Chinese food or has experienced the generational differences in immigrant families will get lost in The Wisdom of the Chinese Kitchen. --Dana Jacobi
Product Description
The Wisdom of the Chinese Kitchen, with its 150 recipes culled from a lifetime of family meals and culinary instruction, is much more than a cookbook. It is a daughter's tribute -- a collection of personal memories of the philosophy and superstitions behind culinary traditions that have been passed down through her Cantonese family, in which each ingredient has its own singular importance, the preparation of a meal is part of the joy of life, and the proper creation of a dish can have a favorable influence on health and good fortune. Each chapter begins with its own engaging story, offering insight into the Chinese beliefs that surround life-enhancing and spiritually calming meals. In addition, personal family photographs illustrate these stories and capture the spirit of China before the Revolution, when Young's family lived in Canton, Shanghai, and Hong Kong. The first part, "Mastering the Fundamentals," provides instruction on the arts of steaming and stir-frying; the preparation of rice, panfried, and braised dishes; the proper selection of produce; and the fine arts of chopping and slicing. Part Two, "The Art of Celebration," concentrates on the more elaborate, complex, and meaningful dishes -- such as Shark's Fin Soup and West Lake Duck -- that are usually made with rare ingredients, and sweets such as Water Chestnut Cake and Sesame Balls. The final part, "Achieving Yin-Yang Harmony," explores the many Chinese beliefs about the healing properties of ginseng, gingko nuts, soybeans, dong quai, and the many vegetable and fruit soup preparations that balance and nourish the body. The stories and recipes combine to demonstrate the range of Cantonese cooking, from rich flavors and honored combinations to an overall appreciation of health, well-being, and prosperity. In addition to the recipes, Young provides a complete glossary of dried herbs, spices, and fresh produce, accompanied by identifying photos and tips on where to purchase them. Unique traditional dishes, such as Savory Rice Tamales and Shrimp Dumplings, are also illustrated step by step, making the book easy to use. The central full-color photo section captures details of New Year's dishes and the Chinese home decorated in celebration, reminding one that these time-honored traditions live on, and the meals and their creation are connections to the past.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 35 more reviews...
Most comprehensive ever Chinese cookbook December 16, 2008 CJT (Seattle, WA, USA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
How many times have you walked into an Asian market and wondered . . . what's this for? This book will make it easy to identify and understand what all those mysterious and weird "things" on the shelf are. Some of the recipes have become permanent additions to our diet; all I've tried have been wonderfully tasty. I bought the first one for myself, the second and third for my daughters and the fourth for a good girlfriend. You'll never buy a better Chinese cookbook than this one from Grace Young.
Great cookbook! September 22, 2008 J. Yip (Alhambra, CA United States) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I recently borrowed this cookbook from the local library, loved it and now I'm ordering my own copy. This book has recipes for the many dishes I grew up with, but unfortunately never learned to make. The stories the author provides is reminiscent of the memories I grew up with.
a very special cookbook January 24, 2008 debrahart (Silver Spring, MD) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This wonderful books opens the door to understanding Chinese food as medicine. It is truly full of wisdom, and very practical. A treasure!
authentic chinese recipes May 22, 2007 J. Tsui (Emeryville, CA) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
yep! it brings me back home when i read through this book and taste the recipes! glad this book was published!
The wisdom of the Chinese Kitchen January 9, 2007 Betsy Sullivan (usa) 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
The book is amazing and everything I had hoped it would be.
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