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Chinese Soul Food

A Friendly Guide for Homemade Dumplings, Stir-Fries, Soups, and More

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Any kitchen can be a Chinese kitchen with these 80 easy comfort food recipes—plus tips and techniques for cooking with a wok, stocking your pantry, making rice, and more.

Chinese food is more popular than any other cuisine and yet it often intimidates North American home cooks. Chinese Soul Food draws cooks into the kitchen with accessible recipes that bring comfort with a single bite or sip. These are dishes that feed the belly and speak the universal language of "mmm!"
 
In Chinese Soul Food, you’ll find:
 
• 80 approachable recipes for homestyle Chinese dishes
• Essential tips for Chinese cooking, including wok care, rice preparation, and more
• Basic Chinese pantry staples, plus acceptable substitutions for busy cooks
 
Recipes include:
 
• Red-braised porky belly
• Dry-fried green beans
• Braised-beef noodle soup
• Green onion pancakes
• Garlic eggplant
• Hsiao-Ching Chou’s famous potstickers
• And much more!
 
Recipes are streamlined to minimize the fear factor of unfamiliar ingredients and techniques, and home cooks are gently guided toward becoming comfortable cooking satisfying Chinese meals.
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  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      November 20, 2017
      In her first book, Chou, a food writer and cooking instructor, provides 80 sturdy recipes for dishes that have stood the test of time, along with tips and brief lessons on topics such as “understanding soy sauce.” The daughter of immigrants, Chou was raised in Columbia, Mo., where her parents ran a Chinese restaurant. Many of the dishes in the book could be on the menu at any Chinese eatery in the American heartland: the book includes recipes for fried rice, Kung Pao chicken, orange beef, and hot and sour soup. There are five dumpling choices, along with instructions on how to boil, steam, or panfry them. Soup dumplings get an entry of their own. Chou thickens her fillings not with gelatin but with the natural collagen from simmered pork skin. A chapter on Chinese New Year entrées includes lively options such as saucy Dungeness crab and fragrant crispy duck breast. In a nod to Chou’s Midwestern childhood there is cauliflower stir-fried with country ham, while a chapter titled “Guilty Pleasures” celebrates non-Chinese classics such as General Tso’s chicken. Photographer Barboza showcases the cuisine, often with bright green vegetables offset by the warm, brown tones of meats, sauces, and noodles. This is a fun guide to creating favorite restaurant recipes at home.

    • Booklist

      December 15, 2017
      Devotees of Chinese food weary of having to turn to carryout and delivery to satisfy their cravings will find plenty here. Some dishes will be familiar to anyone who grew up on the products of old-time Chinese American restaurant kitchens. Chou's several dumpling choices let the cook mount a dim sum banquet at home. Chou keeps recipes as genuine and unadulterated as possible. Her ma po tofu retains the original's pork and doesn't pour in so much soy sauce that its chili base turns brown. Fried rice and all sorts of noodle dishes offer much appeal. Sweet-sour favorites have been downsized to just one version with pork ribs. Really ambitious cooks will find instructions for making the currently faddish soup dumplings with their surprise of steaming broth inside tender spheres of dough. Even the old standby of carryout Chinese eats, egg rolls, sneaks in, although crispy, lighter spring rolls have eclipsed this favorite.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2017, American Library Association.)

Formats

  • Kindle Book
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  • EPUB ebook

Languages

  • English

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