综合一区欧美国产,99国产麻豆免费精品,九九精品黄色录像,亚洲激情青青草,久久亚洲熟妇熟,中文字幕av在线播放,国产一区二区卡,九九久久国产精品,久久精品视频免费

chinadaily.com.cn
left corner left corner
China Daily Website

Dishes to die for

Updated: 2010-10-08 09:40
By Lin Qi ( China Daily)

Dishes to die for
Shen Mingjie has become one of the most popular chefs in Chengdu,
?Sichuan province, with a repertoire of some 30 dishes inspired by
?stories in Romance of the Three Kingdoms. Photos Provided to China
?Daily

Dishes to die for
Based on the tale "Borrowing Arrows with Thatched Boats",
?Shen Mingjie invented a dish featuring shrimp in a boat.

A Chengdu restaurant celebrates ancient China's epic Battle of Red Cliffs in a most ingenious way. Lin Qi reports

Piles of stones and grass appear on the dinner table, a row of yellow croakers sitting among them. A chef pours Chinese rice wine on the fish and sets them alight briefly. Their skins turn crispy, leaving the insides soft and smooth.

This is just one representation of the dinner version of the battle presented on screen by John Woo in the 2008 blockbuster Red Cliff.

The stones stand for the famous Red Cliffs, and the croakers, for warlord Cao Cao's warships that bond together in the Battle of Red Cliffs, the decisive campaign that laid the foundations of the Three Kingdoms period (AD 220-280).

Dishes to die for
The dish Changbanpo is based on the story of Shu general Zhao Yun fighting heroically at Changbanpo.
Shrimps can replace the croakers if diners so desire, says Shen Mingjie, creator of the dish and executive chef of the Sangu Yuan restaurant in Chengdu, Sichuan province.

"It took me some three nerve-racking months to come up with the dishes. Even now, I am not very satisfied with them. I feel the presentation should be more natural," says Shen, one of the city's most popular chefs.

"The Battle of Red Cliffs", like the other distinctive dishes in Shen's "Three Kingdoms" offering, have all been inspired by the ancient classic Romance of the Three Kingdoms.

Shen says while he has always been fascinated by Romance of the Three Kingdoms picture books, it was not until six years ago that he discovered he could re-create some of the historical events in the kitchen.

"I was experiencing a burnout then," Shen recalls. Having been a chef since 1981, he felt he had exhausted his culinary creativity.

Dishes to die for
Zhuge Liang (right) directs operations in the Battle of Red Cliffs.
Around that time, one of Shen's friends was renovating a narrow alleyway next to Wuhou Temple, which commemorates Zhuge Liang, the ingenious military adviser to Liu Bei, founder of the Shu Kingdom.

The alley became Jinli Street, where visitors can sample local snacks and admire replicas of the traditional buildings of western Sichuan.

The friend recommended Shen for work at Sangu Yuan restaurant on Jinli Street. That is when Shen got the idea of coming up with a cuisine linked to the place's history.

While the idea was not new - other restaurants were already serving such dishes - Chen was the first to come up with an entire course, complete with cold starter, main, soup and dessert.

Shen also makes sure his dishes only celebrate heroism. Thus bai zou mai cheng, an event in which Guan Yu, a righteous Shu general, is captured and killed by his enemy, has no place on his menu. Dishes based on such events may discomfort diners, Shen explains.

He uses shellfish, which is pronounced bei in Chinese, to represent Liu Bei; while Zhang Fei, another Shu general, is represented by beef, because some local tales present him as a good cook of beef, Chen says.

Even the presentation of the dishes harks back to ancient times, with Shen using a hoof-shaped stove as a table-top brazier. One wooden dish container is shaped like an ox, in a reference to the vehicle the military strategist Zhuge Liang used to transport materials to the front.

Among the restaurant's most popular dishes is Cao Chuan Jie Jian (literally, Borrowing Arrows with Thatched Boats), which has fish or shrimp baked with lemon grass served in a bamboo ship.

Cold dishes featuring Sichuan's many snacks, which are presented as the Taoist Eight Diagrams, are also much sought after.

Shen has so far invented some 30 dishes based on the Three Kingdoms theme, but says he is still not finished.

Little wonder that his cuisine has emerged as one of the most popular in Chengdu. He was even chosen by the provincial government to present Sichuan cuisine in Taipei in May and won much acclaim there.

"Only on Jinli Street and next to Wuhou Temple can people enjoy the best of both tradition and food," Shen says.

 

...
德阳市| 巴中市| 河源市| 上虞市| 南溪县| 镇原县| 天长市| 长宁县| 平度市| 广宗县| 东莞市| 遵化市| 海口市| 潍坊市| 廉江市| 洪江市| 泸溪县| 淮滨县| 新余市| 夏津县| 中山市| 百色市| 石首市| 方城县| 门头沟区| 沙雅县| 蒲江县| 恩施市| 青河县| 会泽县| 增城市| 甘谷县| 安平县| 嘉鱼县| 石柱| 武邑县| 任丘市| 洛川县| 长寿区| 东安县| 二连浩特市|