chinese cooking Guide

Chinese Cooking Website Section


 

Chinese Cooking Website Navigation


|

Cooking Guide Home Page
Partners
Tell A Friend about us
Ancient Chinese Cooking Kitchen |
Daawatcomindian Chinese Western Cooking |
Daawatcomindian Chinese Western Cooking |
Cooking Chinese Fried Rice Recipe |
Chinese Cooking School In New York |
Cooking With Chinese Herbs |
Chinese Cooking Oils |
Chinese Cooking Jobs In China |
Chinese Cooking Green Beans |
Chinese Cooking For Dummies Beef Broccoli |
Chinese Cooking Herb Resources |
Chinese Cooking For Beginners |
Chinese Cooking Receipy |
Chinese Cooking Book By Womens Weekley |
Chinese Cooking School Mississauga |

List of chinese-cooking Articles


Chinese Cooking Website 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 Chinese Cooking Website sponsors

 

Latest Chinese Cooking Website link added

...

Submit your link on Chinese Cooking Website!



Healing With Whole Foods: Asian Traditions and Modern Nutrition (3rd Edition)
-By: Paul Pitchford
-Price: $18.49 (New)
$18.00 (Used)

Serve the People: A Stir-Fried Journey Through China
-By: Jen Lin-Liu
-Price: $12.00 (New)
$16.75 (Used)

Land of Plenty: A Treasury of Authentic Sichuan Cooking
-By: Fuchsia Dunlop
-Price: $14.94 (New)
$21.37 (Used)

Beyond the Great Wall: Recipes and Travels in the Other China
-By: Jeffrey Alford, Naomi Duguid
-Price: $19.94 (New)
$20.04 (Used)

Shark's Fin and Sichuan Pepper: A Sweet-Sour Memoir of Eating in China
-By: Fuchsia Dunlop
-Price: $13.95 (New)
$11.95 (Used)

The Fortune Cookie Chronicles: Adventures in the World of Chinese Food
-By: Jennifer 8 Lee
-Price: $14.44 (New)
$14.40 (Used)

Revolutionary Chinese Cookbook: Recipes from Hunan Province
-By: Fuchsia Dunlop
-Price: $17.27 (New)
$17.25 (Used)

 

Welcome to chinese cooking Guide

 

Chinese Cooking Website 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.

History of Chinese Cooking

from:

The richness and diversity of Chinese cooking offers a culinary journey into one of the most heritage-centered methods of food preparation in the world. The various lo mein, stir fry, egg noodle, beef, chicken, shrimp, pork, and vegetable dishes provide a regional and historic exploration of China's legacy that spans many centuries. Today, the typical Chinese dish combines two or more carbohydrates or starch-related foods (noodles or rice) with vegetables, meat, or fish.

Nowadays, Chinese cuisine is becoming an increasingly embraced method of cooking due to the healthy dose of nutrients, vitamins, and minerals that many recipes deliver. Over the years, Chinese cooking has become deeply associated with staying fit, trim, and healthy through the many different low-fat and low-calorie recipes one may choose to explore.

Even the primary method of Chinese food preparation encourages healthy eating, as the wok – a cooking vessel with a round bottom – is used to stir fry, steam, deep fry, braise, and stew foods. The shape of the wok allows enhanced cooking of the food while at the same time, requiring less cooking oil and fats during the process. Additional advantages include an increase in safety and convenience, faster cooking times, and healthier food as a result of the curved concave construction of the wok.

Throughout history, Chinese cooking has evolved with the introduction of many different foreign food items. Prehistoric times brought about sheep, goats, and wheat from western Asia, while central Asia is responsible for many of the fruits and vegetables that shaped Chinese cooking during the Han and the T'ang Dynasties. During the Ming Dynasty, sweet potatoes and peanuts were utilized, as coastal traders made an impact on Chinese cooking styles.

Depending on the region, rice is one of the most significant components in Chinese cooking, especially in southern parts of China. In the northern regions, wheat-based noodles play an important role in preparing a Chinese meal. Most Chinese cooks follow tradition and prepare their vegetables and meat into bite-sized pieces for easy consumption and use of their primary eating utensil – chopsticks. Today, wooden chopsticks are being replaced by bamboo or plastic options in an effort to conserve trees. In the past, elaborate silver and ivory selections were known to decorate the Chinese dining room table.

Chinese cooking includes a wide-range of intriguing and delicious recipes, such as green onion pancakes (fried), orange beef, plum sauce, Chinese barbecue, and spicy peanut sauces. The Chinese have also found many different ways to serve dumplings, which uses dough as its primary ingredient. Chinese dumplings can be steamed (jiaozi), boiled (shuijiao), fried (guotie), or placed in soup (xio long bao). Noodles are also quite popular, and are included in many hot and cold dishes, fried, or added to soup.

To create the many recipes associated with Chinese cooking, an array of commonly used ingredients, spices, and herbs becomes necessary. An exploration of Chinese cooking may reveal new ways to incorporate soybeans, mung beans, Chinese cabbage, mushrooms, oranges, red peppers, carrots, ginger, garlic, spring onions, soy sauce, and cinnamon into everyday, healthy meals.

Cooking is fun and a great way to bring family together. To learn more about cooking please visit us at http://www.yourcookingnow.com/chinese/ Do you have some great cooking tips and recipes you would love to share, please visit our blog at http://yourcookingnow.com/blog/





 

Chinese Cooking Website News

Glorious garlic - Times Colonist


Times Colonist

Glorious garlic
Times Colonist, Canada - Aug 27, 2008
"It's good for cooking, you need so little of it, it goes along way. It's pretty intense," she says. Another type she grows, Spanish roja, is on other side ...

Read more...


Cooking for Your Cat: Shrimp Frozen Yogurt - Riverfront Times


Riverfront Times

Cooking for Your Cat: Shrimp Frozen Yogurt
Riverfront Times, MO - Aug 22, 2008
According to the manufacturers’ Web site, 90 percent of surveyed felines adopted Cool Claws on the first try. That same Web site reported that Cool Claws is ...

Read more...


AUGUSTA GOLD MEDALISTS: The Rufos sharing and celebrating Chinese ... - NBC Augusta


AUGUSTA GOLD MEDALISTS: The Rufos sharing and celebrating Chinese ...
NBC Augusta, South Carolina - Aug 22, 2008
We still have certain Chinese recipes I remember my mother cooking that Kathy does almost as good as my mother,” Ray said. "Doesn't quite taste the same," ...

Read more...


Back to school: Cooking classes - Chicago Tribune


Back to school: Cooking classes
Chicago Tribune, United States - Aug 13, 2008
For more complete information on schedules or locations, contact the school or check its Web site. Inclusion does not imply endorsement by the Tribune. ...

Read more...


Chinese food cooks better slowly - Danwei


Chinese food cooks better slowly
Danwei, Hong Kong - Aug 15, 2008
Chef Lau Kin-Wai laments that Chinese cooking has declined steeply since the 1950s. Kin shuns MSG, artificial flavoring and tells Thomas Crampton that he ...

Read more...


 

Warning: fopen(./cache/chinese-cooking-website.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