How do you like Chinese food?

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LPBeier,
Sorry, my bad LOL. I also love Chinese food, I am into French food (eating and cooking). Chinese is my second choice for eating, unfortunately I haven't had the chance to learn or live with someone well versed to teach me, but would love to learn it.
 
I like my Chineese food a lot. Pretty much much anything.

Of course, the question is do we really know what real chineese food is? I know russian food that you can get in some restaraunts are really not russian or hae very little in cominbg with the real thing. I'm afraid it is the same with Chinees e food too.
 
I love it all - whether I'm cooking it (I have quite a large collection of Chinese cuisine cookbooks) or dining out - although I do tend to lean more towards the spicier dishes.

For anyone interested, the New York Times recently - in honor of the Chinese New Year - had a very interesting Op-Ed piece on Chinese food in America. Here's the link:

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/02/09/o..._r=1&st=cse&sq=Chinese+Food&scp=1&oref=slogin

(And while I hesitate to provide disagreement with someone from China, the writer here claims that while it's frequently claimed that there are many culinary "regions" of Chinese cookery, there are actually just four.)
 
I love most types of Chinese foods. Usually Mom cooked a certain style (different from my grandmother, her mom) and we would often go out to eat other styles. My uncles who owned restaurants focused on various styles, one was into Sichuan, one was more Taiwanese, another more Shanghai and Cantonese. The one type that I do not like at all are the Chinese fast food places, like those in a shopping mall.

I also love other Asian cuisines, such as Thai, Vietnamese, Korean, Japanese, Filipino. Okay, okay, so I just love food. Is that so wrong?
 
I like Chinese food, although there don't seem to be a lot of "real" Chinese restaurants around here anymore, although I hear there's a good dim sum restaurant in another city nearby. I'd love to see some authentic Chinese recipes if anyone would like to share.
 
We are lucky enough to have a terrific authentic Chinese restaurant(according to a Chinese professor). Great food, very tasty. We also have a very good Thai restaurant, also very tasty. Two completely different palates for each. I love them both. The complexity of the flavors in both is a wonderful change of pace.
 
I like almost all of it, good and bad. Although I prefer Thai food, I can always go for some well cooked kung pow chicken. It is nice when it is grilled rather than fried, with plenty of peanuts and sauce.
 
GotGarlic, I find that people's interpretation of what is considered authentic Chinese food to be widely varied. I think it would help to know what style of Chinese cuisine you like (sichuan, hunan, etc.) before suggesting a recipe. There's also a category I called "homestyle" dishes because these aren't typical dishes you would find in a restaurant. To me, these aren't considered anymore authentic than those you find in a good Chinese restaurant. Kind of like chicken noodle soup. Most associate good chicken noodle soup to homemade and you don't see it on the menu that often.
 
GotGarlic, I find that people's interpretation of what is considered authentic Chinese food to be widely varied. I think it would help to know what style of Chinese cuisine you like (sichuan, hunan, etc.) before suggesting a recipe.

Well, based on the descriptions here - Chinese Regional Cooking Styles - Chinese Cuisine - Regional Cooking Styles of China - I'd say Cantonese. Are they accurate?

I like stir-fries and roasted meats and veggies, and steamed dumplings. I've been slowly getting more accustomed to hot foodsin the last few years (Thai, Mexican), so I might be ready for Szechuan :cool:
 
I have nightmares that maybe God doesn't like Chinese Food and there won't be any Chinese restuarants in Heaven. Hardly worth the trip up there in that case.
 
I enjoy most Asian foods but not the very spicy ones, although I am rather partial to Thai Green and Red curries. Japanese would be my preferred Asian cuisine but good quality Japanese and Thai is more readily available in Perth than Chinese. Very Westernised here. But that's not to say that I don't like those dishes as well. I value the dish for what it is, not for its authenicity. I am going to lunch with my Malaysian friend on Wednesday at a Chinese restaurant which should be good as she expands my horizons.

Welcome to DC too by the way!! And I hope your move to the US is a successful one.

We had Malaysian in Atlanta, very yummy. Reminded us of Thai but a little more fragrant and slightly different spices.
 
chinese good

i love chinese food a lot. don't care for too hot though. we have two sources here, a chain, panda express. very american. and one that is the real thing. i love em both.

made tahi noodles for side dish couple night ago. with shrimp in garlice butter for the protien.

babe:mellow::mellow:
 
I am still waiting to hear the OPs take on our version of Chinese food here in the States. I once asked one of the shop owners in Chinatown how close the restaurants there were to the food they ate and grew up with. He said we wouldn't even recognize most dishes they ate and that even the most 'authentic' Chinese restaurants here were not really that authentic.
I watched several shows on the Travel Channel, and they made the same comment that it was really much different.

Of course, Anthony Bordain is not known for going for the 'usual and customary' fare LOL.
 
Being of Chinese decent, my views on Chinese food is just slightly biased. :) In all honesty, I could not tell you the regional style some of the dishes I've eaten. Just whether I liked them or not, authentic or not. I think it's because I grew up eating all different styles. I have relatives (by marriage) that grew up in various parts of China and in Taiwan. My uncles and aunts owned restaurants that specialized in what they liked (Sichuan, Mandarin, Cantonese/Taiwanese). There were many discusssions at family gatherings about what is the best way to cook so-and-so. Me? Just put the plate and a pair of chopstix in front of me. :pig:

This reminds me of a funny story if I may digress for a moment. When I worked for a large Japanese pharmaceutical company years back, I had the pleasure of being exposed to several cuisines on my trips to Tokyo. I've had authentic Japanese meals, breakfast/lunch/dinner. Now there's a diet that I can lose weight on! :LOL: I've also had the pleasure of dining at some of the finest Chinese, French and German restaurants in Japan. Very different to what I'm used to. So to the funny story. A Japanese colleague ordered a special dimsum dish of shaomi for me at a highly acclaimed Chinese restaurant in Ginza district. He heard that I loved dimsum. The steamed shaomi was about the size of an orange, filled with what tasted like a very fishy Japanese fishball. The wrapper was thicker than traditional dimsum rice wraps than I'm used to. This was served with a side of ponzu. My colleague told me this was the most authentic Chinese dish that the restaurant served. If he hadn't told me it was a shaomai, I would have guessed it to be some kind of authentic Japanese dumpling of sorts!
 
I'm with you, Buddy, about trying authentic food out of curiosity. When we travel, we like to try what the locals like to eat just to get a better appreciation of the area.

There's still a lot of Chinese regional food that I have not tried. DH and I recently tried a small mom/pop restaurant that was highly recommended by a friend. The restaurant specializes in Chongqing (sometimes referred to as ChungKing) style Sichuan (szechuan) cuisine. I took Chongqing to mean the dishes are probably hotter than usual szechuan dishes. And I was right. Boy, they were hot, hot, hot! We had Dry Fried Beef Slivers (Gan Bian Niu Rou Si), although I prefer the version that my mom makes. We also had Twice Cooked Fish. Different. They also offered a lot of the dishes I'm familiar with but probably most Americans won't try. How about some stewed pig ear, smoked pork tongue, fish with soft jelly noodle? DH said no on all 3. But he'll eat chicken feet! :LOL:

I have found traditionally, szechuan restaurants in the States (at least the ones in CA) serve the more refined Chengdu (capital of Sichuan) style szechuan dishes. But I think that's changing, so I've been told.

That reminds me. The first time I ate at PF Chang's, I was surprised by some of their dishes. Some dishes were very close in preparation and taste like what I grew up with. Guess it surprised me that I found some dishes that taste like home at a chain restaurant. Lettuce wraps, that's something my grandmother used to make for me as a kid using leftover meat dishes. Dan dan noodles' sauce is the closest I've had to my aunt's. The mu shu pork is the closests to my Mom's, which I love but have never been able to re-create or find at a restaurant. And the Sichuan from the Sea Shrimp taste just like Mom's. Don't really mean to be a Chinese food snob but I just would have never guessed with a place with the words Bistro and China together. :LOL: The one thing I don't like about PF Chang's is when the servers try to correct my pronunciation of some words. :rolleyes: Also, their dishes are very high in calories and fat.
 
Most of the so-called Chinese dishes cooked in Western countries are too sweet and too greasy. The styles have been modified to adapt the taste of local people. The names of dishes are generally cantonese. I recently watched a movie named "shanghai kiss". When American born Liam asks for wonton in a restaurant in Shanghai, the waitress can not understand him. If he asks for Chow mien or even fortune cookie, I am afraid he will be disappointed again. My Swiss friend doesn't visit local Chinese restaurant any more after he paid a visit in China, now he knows what real Chinese cuisine tastes like.;)
 
I don't think I've ever had "authentic" Chinese cuisine. I've only had local, but good, Americanized versions. I tend to prefer Cantonese style dishes. My favorite is a Cantonese-style chicken chow mein from my local place. It's crispy fried lo mein noodles topped with chicken and lots of vegetables in a light gravy-style sauce, not too spicy yet delicious!
 
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