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Invitation to a Banquet: The Story of Chinese Food Invitation to a Banquet: The Story of Chinese Food
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Marissa
Marissa is on page 33 of 480
Feb 04, 2026 12:13PM Add a comment
Invitation to a Banquet: The Story of Chinese Food

Fiona
Fiona is on page 328 of 468
"The meal was typical not only of Chongqing cooking, but of a particular style called ‘river-and-lake dishes’ ( jianghu cai), which has been wildly trendy in recent years. This is hearty folk cooking, lavish with chillies and Sichuan pepper, often served in colossal dishes, and eaten in cacophonous restaurants with wild abandon."
Feb 03, 2026 09:38PM Add a comment
Invitation to a Banquet: The Story of Chinese Food

Fiona
Fiona is on page 174 of 468
"For Cantonese poached chicken, the bird is steeped in a measured amount of boiling water and then, when it is barely cooked, shocked with an ice-water bath that arrests the juices between skin and flesh as a layer of jelly and tightens the skin, while the rest of the meat cooks in its own latent heat until perfectly done, a little pinkness still visible in the bones."
Feb 02, 2026 10:05AM Add a comment
Invitation to a Banquet: The Story of Chinese Food

Fiona
Fiona is on page 96 of 468
"Earthier greens like chards tend to be seasoned more boldly, with fermented black beans or chilli bean paste, while pale-flavoured Chinese cabbage is boosted by savoury stock, assertive sesame paste or fragrant vinegar. Fresh, perfectly tender greens are usually swiftly blanched or stir-fried so they are kissed by heat but still vibrant, with a sprightly hint of crispness, enhanced but not overcome by seasonings."
Jan 31, 2026 01:16PM Add a comment
Invitation to a Banquet: The Story of Chinese Food

Fiona
Fiona is on page 95 of 468
"Later eclipsed by cabbages, mallows have all but disappeared from modern China, except in Sichuan, where they are still boiled into rustic soups and congees, their broad, fan-like leaves folding modestly into the liquid, their mouthfeel silky and slippery, like a sigh from the distant past, a sweet breath of the Sichuanese terroir."
Jan 31, 2026 01:13PM Add a comment
Invitation to a Banquet: The Story of Chinese Food

Fiona
Fiona is on page 86 of 468
"Modern tourism, like its ancient counterpart, typically revolves around sampling local delicacies, whether they may be expensive hairy crabs from the Yangcheng Lake near Suzhou or the more affordable tofu of Xiba in southern Sichuan, made with water from a renowned limestone terroir."
Jan 31, 2026 12:50PM Add a comment
Invitation to a Banquet: The Story of Chinese Food

Fiona
Fiona is on page 69 of 468
"[Westerners] spoon oily food into their ricebowls rather than picking up pieces of food with their chopsticks and leaving the oil in the serving dish – thus consuming more oil than was ever intended. [...They] guzzle boldly seasoned dishes while neglecting the neutral fan, and then brand Chinese food as ‘salty’."
Jan 31, 2026 12:28PM Add a comment
Invitation to a Banquet: The Story of Chinese Food

Jekaterina
Jekaterina is on page 77 of 480
Jan 31, 2026 07:26AM Add a comment
Invitation to a Banquet: The Story of Chinese Food

Kathleen
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Jan 26, 2026 09:46PM Add a comment
Invitation to a Banquet: The Story of Chinese Food

Diana
Diana is on page 310 of 480
Jan 25, 2026 03:43AM Add a comment
Invitation to a Banquet: The Story of Chinese Food

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