chinese cooking Guide

Basic Chinese Cooking Section


 

Basic Chinese Cooking Navigation


|

Cooking Guide Home Page
Partners
Tell A Friend about us
Chinese Home Cooking |
Chicken Chinese Cooking History In Lemon |
Eel Chinese Cooking |
Cooking The Chinese Way |
Chinese Cooking Videos |
Cookingchinesefood |
Cooking Chinese Broccoli |
Authentic Chinese Cooking |
Chinese Vegetable Cooking |
Bird Flu Chinese Cooking Spice |
Chinese Cooking Receipes |
Historyofchinesecooking |
Recipies For Chinese Cooking |
Chinese Home Cooking |
Chinese Szechuan Cooking |

List of chinese-cooking Articles


Basic Chinese Cooking Best seller

Buy it Now!





Social bookmarking
You like it? Share it!
socialize it

Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter AND receive our exclusive Special Report on chinese-cooking
First Name:
Email:



Main Basic Chinese Cooking sponsors

 

Latest Basic Chinese Cooking link added

...

Submit your link on Basic Chinese Cooking!



Quick & Easy Enjoy Chinese Cuisine (Quick & Easy (Japan Publications))
-By: Judy Lew
-Price: $6.69 (New)
$5.99 (Used)

Simple Chinese Cooking
-By: Kylie Kwong
-Price: $8.10 (New)
$7.25 (Used)

The Everything Chinese Cookbook: From Wonton Soup to Sweet and Sour Chicken-300 Succulent Recipes from the Far East (Everything Series)
-By: Rhonda Lauret Parkinson, Rhonda Lauret Parkinson
-Price: $5.40 (New)
$4.50 (Used)

Chinese Cooking for Dummies
-By: Martin Yan
-Price: $2.98 (New)
$3.10 (Used)

Chinesisches Kochen: Fur Anfanger / Chinese Cooking For Beginners
-By: Su-Huei Huang, Wei-Chuan Publishing
-Price: $10.59 (New)
$10.92 (Used)

The Modern Art of Chinese Cooking: Techniques and Recipes
-By: Barbara Tropp
-Price: $45.74 (New)
$19.75 (Used)

The Key to Chinese Cooking
-By: Irene Kuo
-Price:
$31.84 (Used)

 

Welcome to chinese cooking Guide

 

Basic Chinese Cooking Article

Thumbnail example. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.


You may also listen to this article by using the following controls.

Chinese Cooking Taro- A Dish Valued With Nutrients And Taste

from:

Chinese cooking Taro is a part of well known classical methodology of cooking, of a starchy root herb. It is used marvelously for different Chinese cuisines throughout the world. Different types of Chinese foods are accepted and enjoyed in many countries with Chinese cooking taro as fast food because of their nutrition and taste values. Different nations use this omnipresent food as their part of culinary delights by cooking them in different ways and methods.

China has a long list of foods that are influenced by the festivals and religion within China. The most well known and well accepted cuisines like Chinese cooking taro from China have evolved several dishes like Manchurian, Noodles, Spring rolls and other recipes. This starchy vegetable that grows below the ground and in water rich soil has a thick and tall stem. The stems are covered by a big leaf that has a triangular shape. The plant is rich in carbohydrates, thiamine, vitamin b-1, vitamin C, iron and potassium.

This Chinese cooking taro, a well known cuisine has dishes named after it such as stewed taro with green onions. The main ingredients of the Chinese cooking taro includes one medium taro about one pound, six cloves of garlic, chopped three to four tablespoons of peanut oil, one to two tablespoons of light soy sauce, one to two cups of hot water, two to three green onions that are cut thin and round.

Before cooking the taro, it needs to be peeled to remove its muddy skin. If the taro is not fresh or is spotted, it should be trimmed until we can see the white flesh that has purple markings on it. According to the size of the taro it has to be cut crosswise and have pieces that are at least one fourth inch thick.

The Chinese cooking taro involves the procedure in, which a wok has to be heated until it starts emitting smoke. The wok is then covered with oil to coat the surface and keep the food from sticking or burning. After cooking for about fifteen to twenty seconds, garlic can be added to flavor the pieces of taro. The taro and garlic are then stirred until the taro becomes light brown in color. Afterwards water is to be poured in the wok till it barely covers the taro. The water is then boiled and cooked on medium flame for about fifteen to twenty minutes. The taro has to be stirred continuously so that it does not stick to the wok.

Finally the Chinese cooking taro has to be served hot along with some steamed rice for a perfect eating delight.




 

Basic Chinese Cooking News

When in doubt, boil those whites - Vancouver Sun


When in doubt, boil those whites
Vancouver Sun,  Canada - 9 hours ago
The five basic flavours in Chinese cooking are represented: sweet, sour, bitter, pungent, and salty. Five-spice powder brings balance to the flavours of ...

Read more...


Community calendar - San Jose Mercury News


Community calendar
San Jose Mercury News,  USA - 42 minutes ago
Hundreds of fresh specimens on display, cooking demonstrations with local chefs, craft and food vendors, old sci-fi films featuring mushrooms gone amok. ...

Read more...


Cooking for One Guy - Washington Post Blogs


Cooking for One Guy
Washington Post Blogs, DC - Nov 18, 2008
His everyday meals revolve around a few basic items that are nutritious, quick to cook, freezer-friendly, and satisfying. His number-one go-to food? ...

Read more...


From a Chinese island, a chicken for every pot - DetNews.com


From a Chinese island, a chicken for every pot
DetNews.com, MI - Nov 18, 2008
Gently poaching a chicken and using both the meat and the resulting stock is a venerable and nearly universal cooking practice, but I recently learned a ...

Read more...


‘Top Chef’ Exit Interview: Episode One - New York Magazine


New York Magazine

‘Top Chef’ Exit Interview: Episode One
New York Magazine,  USA - Nov 13, 2008
Have you had any experience cooking Chinese cuisine? There is a “Cuisines of Asia” class that we take for three weeks a year, but in that you’re also ...

Read more...


 

Warning: fopen(./cache/basic-chinese-cooking.html) [function.fopen]: failed to open stream: No such file or directory in /home/bestcook/public_html/chinese/datas/pages.php on line 105

Warning: fwrite(): supplied argument is not a valid stream resource in /home/bestcook/public_html/chinese/datas/pages.php on line 106

Warning: fclose(): supplied argument is not a valid stream resource in /home/bestcook/public_html/chinese/datas/pages.php on line 107